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Che Wictoria Ibistory of the 
Counties of England 


EDITED BY WILLIAM PAGE, F.S.A. 


A HISTORY OF 
LANCASHIRE 


VOLUME VII 


THE 


VICTORIA 


\ 


HISTORY 


= 


OF THE COUNTIES 


OF ENGLAND 


LANCASHIRE 


LONDON 
CONSTABLE AND COMPANY LIMITED 


h.269083 
This History 1s issued to Subscribers only by 


Constable &F Company Limited 
and printed by Il’. H. Smith & Son 
London 


INSCRIBED 
TO THE MEMORY OF 
HER LATE MAJESTY 


QUEEN VICTORIA 


WHO GRACIOUSLY GAVE 
THE TITLE TO AND 
ACCEPTED THE 
DEDICATION OF 
THIS HISTORY 


THE 


VICTORIA HISTORY 
OF THE COUNTY OF 


LANCASTER 


EDITED BY 
WILLIAM FARRER, D.Lirr., anp J. BROWNBILL, M.A. 


VOLUME SEVEN 


LONDON 


CONSTABLE AND COMPANY LIMITED 
IQg1I2 


CONTENTS OF VOLUME SEVEN 


PAGE 
Dedication . ; ‘ : 4 ‘ ‘ i : : : : ‘ : . v 
Contents : : . : : ‘ : : ; F ‘ : : : 3 ix 
List of Illustrations . ‘ : 5 . 5 : , : ‘ : , . F xi 
List of Maps . ‘ 7 . é . ; j é ; : : . 3 - xi 
Editorial Note : A . . : ; : ‘ : d ; : ; . xiii 
Topography . 5 a é : . General descriptions and manorial descents by 
W. Farrer, D.Litt., and J. Brownsgity, M.A. 
Architectural descriptions by F. H. Cuzrruam. 
Heraldic drawings and blazon by the Rev. E. E. 
Doruine, M.A., F.S.A. 
Blackburn Hundred (continuation)— 
Mitton (Part of) . . . : . i ‘ ‘ : ; : . I 
Chipping ; ‘ 4 : ‘ F : : F : : : cer Xe) 
Ribchester 5 : 5 a 5 7 7 ‘ : 3 5 A . 36 
Amounderness Hundred— 
Introduction . : . r : : . ‘ : : : . - 68 
Preston . j ‘ ‘ . . é . E : ‘ ‘ ‘ ay 


Kirkham . . . . . . : : : . ‘ : . - 143 


Lytham . : . . 7 : : s : , 2 A : + 213 
Poulton-le-Fylde . ‘ : : ‘ . . F : . . + 219 
Bispham . ‘ ; : é 5 Fi ‘ : ‘ ‘ : . - 242 
Lancaster (Part of) . : . . ; : : ‘ : ; ; . 251 


St. Michael-on-Wyre . ‘ 2 ; : : . . : : . 260 


Garstang ‘ ‘ ‘ - ‘ ‘ : . . ; i : - 291 

Index to Volumes VI and VII. 3 3 r : ‘ ‘ ‘ ; i F » 337 

Corrigenda , . ‘ : . : : : . : : . : . - 435 
iy b 


LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 


PAGE 
Lancaster Castle j F ‘ ‘ ‘ : . j . Fi fs . frontispiece 
Mitton : Cross of St. Paulinus on the Fells, Aighton ’ ‘ : ; 2 
4 Stonyhurst : Principal Front : : Sull-page plate, facing 4 
3 $3 First and Ground Floor Plans . ‘ ‘ ‘ , ‘ Sacing 6 
a5 0 in 1808 ; 
; Geuih: eat i - . full-page plate, facing 8 
9 5 The Quadrangle = a 10 
‘ ee Gateway Tower ” ” ” 12 
a Shireburne Almshouses : : : 5 : : : is % 20 
Chipping Church from the South d 
oe » The Nave looking East pe ° : : : a " m a 
3 >» The Font . : ; ‘ s F ‘ é #3 3 5 24 
sy Hesketh End: South Front Z E 7 : a ‘s 5 30 
Thornley with Wheatley : Thornley Hall . : j 5 5 35 5 34 
Ribchester Church: Plan : : 2 . . ; . : ' : ‘ - 38 
, The Nave lokng Eas + Alpe ple, fing 38 
Dutton Hall: South Front’. . : . Z 2 ‘i , 3 3 “i 54 
53 » The Gateway : : : : ‘ Fi a 3 i 5 58 
»,  Stidd Chapel: Plan. : ; j é , ‘ ‘ 3 60 
yy Nave and Chan = + Sitges pln fing 60 
3 + a South aus a 
4 - e The Font . aM fe a 
Preston : South Prospect in 1728 , . * 5 5 74 
oi Church c. niet ee 
. » C1796 ss is m 
a5 Parish Church from the South-east a 3 55 5 82 
5 Fishergate with Town Hall in distance 
i Harris Free Library, Market Place } : : ag 4 fe 
Grimsargh and Brockholes: Red Scar, North-west Front . F F - Sy » 106 
FS y +5 5 South-east Front ¥ $5 Rs 108 
‘ : 33 The Dining-room . ‘ . : ‘ . ro 


” re ‘3 Higher reel 


Lower Brockholes 7 - full-page plate, facing 112 


” ? ” 
Broughton Church : Plan before 1823 ; ‘ . ‘ Fi ‘ : ; : . 122 
es eo SEE a . . - full-page plate, facing 122 
Barton Cross 


Myerscough Lodge : Inscribed Stone over Stable ee me 
. : 2 ” ” ” 


Kirkham Church from the North-west 
Clifton with Salwick : Lund Church, Roman Altar used as Font . . 3 5 » 166 
xi 


LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 


PAGR 
- 186 
Singleton: Muiins Hall . . . ‘ : . ‘ é ; 5 : . i 
Goosnargh : Bulsnape Hall 1. ; : ; . ; ; full-page plate, facing 194 
5 Ashes, Old Doorway ) 
* Inglewhite Village ) - . a: RGR 
Pe Hospital yo . . 
ss Church: Plan. < ‘i . . ‘ ‘ F e 7 . - 202 
35 » from the South-west 


7 ‘ . full-page plate, facing 202 
The Nave looking East } a aa 


” ” 


Whittingham : Chingle Hall, Bridge over Moat . - F ‘ i iy 3 » +206 
+ Dun Cow Rib Farm . : * ‘ . 7 - +5 » +208 
Lytham Hall : : ; : - es : . : : : : . & 2G 


Church from the South-east d . 
e ‘ ‘ ; ‘ . . ‘ull-page plate, facing 226 
Poulton-le-Fylde : Stocks and Cross ) a) 


Bispham Church : Norman Doorway . ‘ 7 A $5 - » (244 
Preesall with Hackinsall : Parrox Hall, North Front 
ar - =» os ‘The Hall } : a> ee TY 
4s a gs Hackinsall Hall d ae 
St. Michael-on-Wyre Church from the North-east ) i e i - . 

s 7 5 Plan . ‘ : i ‘ ‘i és : - - 2.62 
Upper Rawcliffe : St. Michael’s Village. : s : . : . . . + 268 
Great Eccleston : Raikes Road . : : ; . . . . . . . «297 
Woodplumpton Church: Plan . ‘ : ‘ . - . ‘ P A . - 289 

, the Nave toting Bae | * ++ Shon at fig 90 
Garstang Church: Plan . : ‘ ; , : ‘ = «4 ‘ ‘ . + 294 
: ; ae eee } - P ‘i . full-page plate, facing 294 
Nateby : Bowers House . : . : : F : z 3 . F ‘ + 310 
Kirkland : Churchtown Cross : 
Barnacre with Bonds: Greenhalgh Castle : : : Sai Kall ate 


Claughton Hall. ‘ : . : 4 é . ‘ A i » oo» 328 


LIST OF MAPS 


Index Map to Chipping, Leagram, Aighton and Ribchester . a 3 z 7 . s 21 


» 99-9 FAundred of Amounderness ' 3 : 5 A ; ‘ P . 68 
3» -9),~—S«9y-: Parish of Preston : 4 P A . . . : : . we 9 
» 99 99 Parishes of Kirkham and Lytham is . 3 . : 3 ‘ - 143 
ee eee »» 9) Poulton and Bispham F . % ‘ : 7 7 . 220 
9-99-99, Chapelry of Stalmine ; ; é . : : ; - ‘ - 252 
9» 99 99 Parish of St. Michael-on-Wyre  . 3 ; ‘ ‘ . z F . 261 
” oy ony, Garstang . . . é . 6 é . is ‘ - 292 


xii 


EDITORIAL NOTE 


Tue Editors desire to acknowledge the assistance and information 
given by the Rev. S. E. Collinson, Mr. E. Dickson, Mr. J. T. Fair, 
Mr. W. J. Fitzherbert-Brockholes, D.L., J.P., Mr. Joseph Gillow, 
Mr. D. Howsin, Mr. A. Jobling, the Rev. J. Keating, Dr. J. A. Laycock, 
Mr. #. A. toe Gendre Starkte, J.P., the Rev, E. T.. Millard, the Rev. 5. 
Nightingale, M.A., Mr. James Openshaw, M.A., the Rev. J. F. H. 
Parker, Mr. W. Parker, Captain C. B. Petre, the Rev. D. Schofield, 
Mr. W. W. Simpson, J.P., Mr. R. Trappes-Lomax, J.P., and Miss 
Weld, also the Town Clerks of Blackpool and Preston and the Librarian 
of Preston. 

They also wish to tender their thanks to Mr. J. P. Rylands, 
F.S.A., for revising the heraldry. 

For illustrations and information regarding the architecture of the 
county the Editors are indebted to Sir George F. Toulmin, M.P., the 
Editor and Proprietors of ‘ Country Life’ (for photographs of Shireburne 
Almshouses and Stonyhurst Gateway Tower), the Society of Antiquaries, 
Messrs. Austin & Paley, the Rev. W. Bodkin, S.J.. Mr. W. Ellison 
Fenwicke, and Mr. T. Harrison Myres. 


xi 


A HISTORY OF 
LANCASHIRE 


TOPOGRAPHY 


THE HUNDRED 


OF BLACKBURN 


(CONTINUATION) 


MITTON (Parr oF) 


AIGHTON, BAILEY AND CHAIGLEY 


Acton, Dom. Bk.; Aghton, 1274; Aighton, 
modern. Occasionally an H was prefixed, e.g. Hacton, 
1235. 

Bailegh, 1257; Bayley, 1284; Bayleye, 1291. 

Cheydeslega, 1246 ; Chaygeslegh, 1331 ; Chaddes- 
legh, Chaddesley, 1346 ; Chageley, c. 1440. 

This composite township is bounded on the north 
and east by the Hodder, which separates it from 
Yorkshire, in which county is situated the greater 
part of the parish of Mitton. On the south the 
Ribble is the boundary. The dominant physical 
feature is Longridge Fell, projecting eastward into 
the township a little north of the centre. Its highest 
point, 1,149 ft., lies just within the border. From 
the ridge the ground falls rapidly to the north and 
east, and more gently to the south, many outlying 
spurs breaking the surface into hills and cloughs, the 
latter often watered by rapid brooks, formerly supply- 
ing motive power to numerous bobbin mills. Trees 
are abundant, and along the Hodder are many 
beautiful views. 

Aighton and Bailey lie to the south of the Fell, to 
the east and west respectively, being parted by Dean 
Brook, while Chaigley or Chaigeley occupies the 
north-east slope. Stonyhurst,! which as the residence 
oi the lords of the manor has for centuries been the 
dominant house in the township, lies near the centre 
of Aighton, with Winkley or Winckley to the south- 
east, in the corner formed by the confluence of Hodder 
and Ribble, and Woodfields to the north-east. Hurst 
Green, the principal hamlet, is about a mile south- 
west of Stonyhurst. Chilsey Green is to the north, 
under the Fell; near it are the Shireburne alms- 
houses. Morton House lies to the east, while Craw- 
shaw and Hudd Lee are near the western border. 


In Chaigley, Chadswell and Chapel House are central, 
the houses known as the hall and the manor lying 
to the east and Wedacre to the west. 

The principal road is that from Longridge to 
Mitton and Clitheroe, through the southern part of 
the township. The portion of this road from Hurst 
Green to the lower Hodder bridge was made by 
McAdam in 1826, teing one of the first attempts to 
apply his system.? The new Hodder bridge, of three 
arches, was built at the same time ; the old one, still 
standing a few yards to the south, was provided by 
Sir Richard Shireburne in 1562.5 There is no 
bridge across the Ribble, but a ferry is maintained 
to Hacking on the south bank. ‘The older road from 
Longridge is higher up, passing through Chilsey 
Green and Stonyhurst, but this is now little used. 
North of the Fell is another important road, from 
Chipping and Thornley to Clitheroe, crossing the 
Hodder by the higher bridge. 

The area of the township is 6,3004 acres,5? 
Aighton measuring 2,867 acres, Bailey 1,418} and 
Chaigley 2,015. A detached part of Aighton called 
Lennox’s Farm was in 1883 transferred to Dutton, 
within which township it lay. In 1gor the popula- 
tion numbered 1,310. 

Aighton was in 1066 in the hundred of Amounder- 
ness and apparently in the parish of Preston ; its 
double transference to the hundred of Blackburn and 
to the parish of Mitton was no doubt a consequence 
of the early grants to the Lacy and Mitton families 
respectively, as narrated below. 

To the ancient ‘fifteenth’ 38s. was contributed, 
when the hundred in all paid £37 15. 7d.,9 and to 
the county lay a proportionate sum. 

The township is now governed by a parish council, 


1 Two fields near the hall are called 
Great and Little Stonyhurst. 

2 J. Gerard, Stonyhurst Coll. 124. 

3 Ibid. 57. Sir Richard provided the 
stone and paid £70 to the mason. In 
the appended note is a statement by the 
rector of Mitton in 1331 that the bridge 
over the Hodder—probably a wooden one 


7 


—was frequently broken down, the river 
being liable to floods. 

‘An aqueduct carries the Blackburn 
Corporation water-pipes across the river, 
but there is no public footway by it. 

57 The Census Rep. of 1901 gives 
6,289 acres, including 108 of inland 
water. 


I 


8 Transferred under the Divided Parishes 
Act, 1882, The land is at the north 
end of Dutton. The farm may have 
taken its name from a Lynalx, related to 
the old lords of Ribchester. A Thomas 
Lenox had land in 1524; see below. 

® Gregson, Fragments (ed. Harland), 
19 


I 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Tumuli at Winkley!° are supposed to mark the 
scene of some ancient struggle for the passage of the 
river, but the chief historical event is the stay of 
Cromwell at Stonyhurst on two occasions in August 
1648.11 The Jacobite rising of 1715 caused some 
excitement. In Chaigley there are remains of a 
barracks in which soldiers were then stationed in order 
to quell the country.!? 

Apart from the Shireburnes the most distinguished 
native was Henry Holden, D.D., a Roman Catholic 
divine born in 1596 at Chaigley. He took part in 
the controversies of the time, and was himself sus- 
pected of Jansenism, unjustly as it appears. He lived 
abroad for the most part and became vicar-general of 
Paris. He died in 1662.38 

In 1836, apart from agriculture, the industries 
were hand-loom weaving of cotton, wood-bobbin 
making, lime burning and stone quarrying.!! At 
present little corn is grown, the land being mostly 
pasture ; the areas are thus returned for Aighton, 
Bailey and Bowland with Leagram: arable land, 
32 acres; permanent grass, 7,2624; woods and 
plantations, 6414.15 Oxen seem to have been used as 
draught animals down to recent times.16 

The deer park at Stonyhurst existed till 1855.17 
There are remains of a number of ancient crosses.!8 
At Aighton there seems to have been a St. Michael’s 
Well.1® In Chaigley is St. Chad’s Well. 

In 1086 4IGHTON, assessed as one 
MANORS plough-land, was recorded among the 
king’s manors in Amounderness which 
twenty years earlier had been held by Earl Tostig as 
appurtenant to Preston, and after him by Roger of 
Poitou.?° Afterwards it belonged, for a time at least, 
to Warine Bussel, one of Roger’s knights and ancestor 
of the lords of Penwortham. Again coming into the 
king’s hands, it was in 1102 given by Henry I to 
Robert de Lacy, and from that time onward formed 
part of the great fee or honor of Clitherve.”! 

Robert immediately bestowed Aighton, together 
with Great Mitton and other manors, upon Ralph le 
Rous, who was to hold them by the service of half a 
knight’s fee.?? This grant was between 1135 and 
1141 confirmed by Ilbert de Lacy, who in his charter 
styled Ralph ‘my brother.’ Ralph was ancestor of 
the Mitton family, who retained possession for some 
t§o years, though there is little to record of their 
tenure.23 In 1204 Stephen de Hamerton claimed 


10 Lancs. and Ches. Antig. Soc. xii, 30 5 
xiii, 27. 

11 Cromwell and his force, hastening 
to meet the Duke of Hamilton, on 
16 Aug. ‘came at night to Mr. Shire- 
burne’s house called Stonyhurst, about 
Hodder Water, where the general lodged 
that night, and his army encamped within 


li, 56, 127. 


30-4. 


of Engl. Cath. iii, 332-8 3 Pal. Note Bk. 


M4 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1836), tii, 370. 
5 Statistics from Bd. of Agric. (1905). 
16 Gerard, op. cit. 98. 
18 Lancs. and Ches. Antig. Soc. xviii, 
There are eight ancient crosees 
named and several modern ones. 


a plough-land in Aighton against Hugh de Mitton, 
but released his right in 1208 on receiving 14 marks 
from Hugh.** Ralph son of Robert de Mitton in 
1235 secured from Jordan de Wheatley the acknow- 
ledgement of his title to half an oxgang of land in 
Aighton,” and seven years later Ralph was holding 
the fourth part of a knight’s fee in Aighton, &c., 
being part of the dower of the Countess of Lincoln.*® 
He was party to various suits in 1246 respecting 
tenements in Aighton,*’ and his widow Margery was 
claiming dower in certain lands there as late as 
1291.78 

Before 1300 Aighton was either sold or reverted to 
the Earl of Lincoln as lord of Clitheroe, or else a 
mesne manor had been created in favour of Margaret 
de Holland, whose second husband Robert de Hephale 
held of the earl the eighth part of a knight’s fee 
there.2* Robert granted his manor cf Aighton with 
various lands to Ralph son of Sir Ralph de Mitton for 


Cross or Sr. Paurinus on THE FeLis, 
AIGHTON 


life.20 It appears that Ralph de Mitton held some 
lordship in Aighton as early as 12765); in 1284 he 
claimed a tenement there against Anabil widoa of 


22 Thid. 385. 

23 Whalley Couch. (Chet. Soc.), iii, 680. 
The succession—Hugh, d. 1709 -s. 
Robert -s. Sir Ralph -s. Jordan, ~s. John 
—is shown by the Cockersand Chartul. 
(Chet. Soc.), ii, 520-3. 

Cur. Reg. R. 333 Final Conc. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 34. 


W Ibid. 80. 


The 


the park. Had a council of war that 
night in which it was concluded to fight 
the duke if he abode’; War in Lancs. 
(Chet. Soc.), 65. After his victory over 
the Scots he again stayed at Stonyhurst 
for a night ; ibid. 67. 

There are several allusions to it in 
Cromwell's Letters (ed. Carlyle, 63, 64). 
He crossed the Hodder probably by the 
old higher bridge (predecessor of the pre- 
sent one), at which point a council of 
war was held ; Gerard, op. cit. 62. The 
second stay was probably on 24 Aug. 

12 T. C. Smith, Longridge, 31. : 

13 Dict, Nat. Biog. ; Gillow, Bibl. Dict. 


oldest, perhaps, is that known as St. 
Paulinus’ Cross, of peculiar form ; it is 
placed at Kemple End, high up on the 
Fell. 

Another ancient socket has had a new 
cross shaft inserted by Mr. W. W. Simp- 
son of Winkley. 

19In 1540 John Gill of ‘Aghton’ 
(? Aighton) was charged with putting his 
hemp into St. Michael’s Well, near a cer- 
tain stream called the Stone Brook. The 
place may be Aughton near Ormskirk. 

20 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 288. 

21 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 3823 five 
plough-lands in all were given. 


2 


3 Ibid. i, 60. 

6 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 150. 

27 He successfully resisted a claim for 
an acre of wood put forward by Osbert de 
Daniscoles, while Vitalis de Hope with- 
drew a claim against him; Aasize R. 
404, m. I, 11. 

28 De Banco R. go, m. 98d. 

9 Lancs. Inz. and Extents, i, 319. For 
Margaret de Holland see the accounts of 
Bolton and Chorley and Final Conc. ii, 
80. 

* Kuerden MSS. iii, A 3, no. 60. 

31 Assize R. 405, m. 3a. 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED  wirron carr on) 


Jordan de Mitton,®? and was in 1292 called to warrant 
lands.33 In 1304 Ralph gave his manor of Aighton, 
Bailey and Chaigley to Margery widow of Robert de 
Hephale and received it from her for life.34 Margaret 
afterwards married Adam Banastre, who in 1311 was 
recorded as holding of the Earl of Lincoln a plough- 
land in Aighton by the service of the eighth part of a 
knight’s fee and a rent of g¢.2° In 1313-14 the 


lords of the place were Adam Banastre, Margaret then — 


his wife, and Denise widow of Ralph de Mitton.36 

John son of Richard son of Henry de Clitheroe in 
1323-4 claimed common of turbary in Aighton 
against Margaret widow of Adam Banastre,’7 and 
similar claims were put forward by others against her 
in conjunction with (her son) John son of Robert 
de Hephale, Denise widow of Ralph de Mitton and 
Bernard son of Thomas de Gressingham.38 After 
Margaret’s death her manors were divided among her 
daughters—Alice wife of Robert de Shireburne, 
Agnes wife (1) of Henry de Lea and (2) of Robert 
de Horncliff, but apparently childless, Joan wife of 
Thomas (or Robert) de Arderne, who left a son 
Thomas, and Katherine wife of John de Harrington.*® 
The heirs of Margaret Banastre held Aighton in 
1346-5 5.4 

Robert de Shireburne appears to have acquired as 
owner or tenant the shares of his sisters-in-law, so 
becoming lord of the whole manor.*! There are, 
however, occasional traces of the other lordships, for 
a fourth part of the manor of Aighton was included 
in the Horncliff estate in 1331.4? In July 1352, 
when John son of Hugh de Hacking claimed two 
messuages, &c., in Aighton against William de 
Yarrowdale, the defendant called the representatives 
of Margaret Banastre to warrant him—viz. Alice 
widow of Robert de Shireburne, John de Harring- 
ton the elder and his wife Katherine and Thomas 
de Arderne (son of Joan).43 Of these John de 
Harrington of Farleton, in right of Katherine his 
wife, in 1359 hada rent of 60s. from tenements in 
Aighton held for life by John de Bailey,#4 and the 


*” Assize R. 1268, m. 12. 

33 Ibid. 408, m. 32d. 

4 Kuerden, loc. cit. Robert de Shire- 
burne was a witness to Margery’s charter. 

35 De Lacy Ing. (Chet. Soc.), 17. At 


the same time John de Daniscoles held cited later. 


89 See the account of Chorley. 

40 Feud, Aids, iii, 88. 
to have been John de Harrington, Thomas 
de Arderne and John de Bailey. 

41 As in the Inq. p.m, of John de Bailey 


Harrington interest in the manor continued to be 
recognized in the inquisitions of the family and their 
successors the Mounteagles until 1576, when Sir 
Richard Shireburne compounded with Lord Mount- 
eagle for the 60s. free rent which had till then been 
paid.4? In 1409 Thomas de Chamber son and heir 
of Elizabeth daughter and heir of Joan daughter and 
heir of Sir Thomas de Arderne released to John de 
Bailey and Robert de Towneley all his title in the 
fourth part of the manor of Aighton with lands, &c., 
formerly belonging to Sir Thomas.** 

The Shireburne family had had the manor of 
Hambleton in Amounderness 
from the early part of the 
13th century.47 Robert son 
of John de Shireburne occurs 
in 1292,*8 and later became 
seneschal of Clitheroe, being 
so described in the attestations 
of charters,#® &c. In 1313 
he was pardoned for his share 
in the execution or murder of 
Piers Gaveston, having been 
an adherent of the Earl of 
Lancaster,*° and about 1326 
he was made a knight.5! He 
received from Margaret widow of Adam Banastre in 
1329 her manor of Aighton,*? and four years later, 
in conjunction with Alice his wife, granted a fourth 
part of the manor of Aighton, Bailey and Chaigley 
to their son Robert.5? Sir Robert and Alice his wife 
were living in 1338,°4 but Alice was a widow in 
1342 5 she in 1353 granted to Sir John Tempest 
and Katherine his wife the crops growing on certain 
of her lands.*8 

Sir Robert appears to have been succeeded by his 
son Sir John de Shireburne,*” who fought at Crecy and 
Calais 58; but another son, William, had half the 
manor of Aighton in 1349, and in 1351 John 
Boteler and others were charged with abducting 
Ismania wife of William de Shireburne.®° Sir John 


Suirzgurne. Argent 
a lion rampant vert, 


13353 Pink and Beaven, Parl. Repre. of 
Lancs, 25. He seems to have died about 
that time without issue, and in 1336 John 
de Shireburne appears ; ibid. 

54 Kuerden MSS, ii, fol. 260, 

55 Thid, 


They appear 


zo acres in Daniscoles, paying 6s. rent ; 
ibid. 18. 

36 Assize R.424,m. 7d. Adam Banas- 
tre alone was defendant in 1312 to a 
claim for a messuage and land put for- 
ward by Henry son of Robert Atte Hall 
of Aighton ; De Banco R. 195, m. 150d. 

37 Assize R. 425, m. 1. 

38 Ibid. m. 4d. The plaintiffs were 
Roger son of Richard Nowell and Ellen 
his wife and Richard son of Gilbert the 
Harper. In the following year, as Mar- 
garet widow of Robert de Hephale, she 
was again defendant; Assize R. 426, 
m.1d. Richard de Hephale was plain- 
tiff in 13323; De Banco R. 288, m. 334. 

In 1334 Sir Richard de Holland 
claimed a messuage, mill, two plough- 
lands, &c., in Aighton against William 
de Livesey, Alice his wife, Adam the son 
of William, Avice his wife and Richard 
de Bury. The defence was that there 
was only one plough-land, and that Sir 
Richard had been convicted of felony ; 
Coram Rege R. 297, m. 128. This case 
incidentaliy exhibits the custody of the 
Assize Rolls at that time. 


42 Final Cone. ii, 80. 

48 Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 2, m. vd. 

44Ing. p.m. 36 Edw. III, pt. i, 
No. 99. 
4 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 38, 
m. 59; and the Shireburne Abstract Bk. 
at Leagram Hall. This book gives notes 
of two payments in the time of Henry V 
and later. 

46 Dep. Keeper’s Rep. xxxiii, App. 10. 

47 See the account of that township, 
Carleton, &c. John de Shireburne occurs 
in 1262 (Final Conc. i, 136); John and 
Eva his wife in 1281 ; De Banco R. 43, 


m. 3. 

48 Assize R. 408, m. 59d. 

49 E.g. Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 375. 

50 Palgrave, Parl. Writs. 

§1 At the beginning of that year he 
was excused knighthood till Whitsuntide ; 
ibid. 

52 Kuerden MSS, iii, A3, no. 64. 

58 Ibid. no. 67. Robert son of Robert 
de Shireburne had in 1331 ‘put in his 
claim’ in a settlement of the manors ; 
Final Conc. ii, 8t. He was probably the 
Robert who was knight of the shire in 


3 


56 Ibid. ili, A3, no. 69. 

57 Sir Robert gave lands in Much Hoole 
and Formby to his son John in 1338, and 
in 1345 Sir John de Shireburne made a 
grant of lands in Hoole ; Kuerden MSS. 
ii, fol. 260. 

In 1343 Sir John de Shireburne and 
John de Charnley were charged with 
killing a servant of Nicholas Bagot at the 
Cartford on Ribble Sand, but were found 
not guilty ; Assize R. 430, m. 31 d. (32). 

58 Crecy and Calais (Will. Salt Soc. 
xviii), 35, 100, &c. 

Sir John had a wife Margaret, who 
afterwards married William de Dransfield 
and was living in 1391; Final Conc. iii, 
38. 
59 Kuerden MSS. iii, A3, no. 66 ; the 
seal bears a lion rampant. Robert de 
Shireburne and William his brother are 
mentioned in 1323 ; Coram Rege R. 254, 
m. 42. 

60 Assize R. 434, m. 2. Ismania may 
have been a widow then, as she was in 
1354, when claiming dower in Hamble- 
ton; Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 3, 
m, iij. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


left two sons Robert and Richard ; the former was in 
1349 married to Emma daughter of Sir William de 
Plumpton,®! but must have died shortly afterwards, for 
in 1351, on being betrothed to Alice, sister of Emma, 
Richard was described as son of Sir John de Shire- 
burne and heir-apparent of Alice widow of Sir Robert 
de Shireburne.®? Sir Richard de Shireburne in 1361 
granted to Richard de Bailey and others the moiety 
of the manor of Aighton lately belonging to his 
uncle William.® He died in or before 1370, when 
his widow Alice claimed the custody of his son 
Richard.®4 Of this son nothing further is known, and 
his sisters Joan and Margaret succeeded, the latter 
becoming sole heiress. Margaret was by 1377 married 
to Richard son of John de Bailey,° and her son 
adopted Shireburne as his surname. 

John de Bailey, ancestor of the later Shireburne or 
Sherburne family, was seated at STONY HURST. 
This was the name of some land in Aighton granted 
before 1209 by Hugh son of Jordan de Mitton to 
Ellis son of Alexander de Winkley,®® who obtained a 
confirmation from Hugh’s son Robert.§7 The new 
owner probably took Stonyhurst for a surname, several 
of the family attesting local charters. About 1290 
Henry de Wath and Margaret his wife granted to 
Walter son of Jordan de Bailey the land called the 
Stonyhurst which they had acquired from Thomas 
Loucoks of Stonyhurst 8 ; a fine of 1292 appears to 
be in confirmation of it. John son of Walter de 
Bailey made in 1323 an exchange of lands in Aighton 
with William de Winkley,” and acquired other lands 
there in 1330 and later.’! He in 1349 obtained a 
moiety of the manor from William de Shireburne, 
and this was settled upon him and his male issue in 
1361.77 John son of Walter de Bailey was still 
living in 1370 and 1371,"3 being probably the John 


de Bailey the elder who attested a deed in the latter 
year.”4 He is said to have died in 1372.” 

John son of John de Bailey appears in 1364 as 
making a feoffment of lands in Dutton received from 
John son of Walter de Bailey 7° ; he acquired lands in 
Aighton in 136777 and 1376,"8 while in 1372 he 
obtained licence for an oratory at Stonyhurst.’® At his 
death in 1391 John de Bailey held the Shireburne 
manor of Aighton, either as trustee for his grandson 
Richard or by purchase. One fourth part was said to 
be held of the Duke of Lancaster in chief, another 
fourth by knight’s service, another of Sir Nicholas de 
Harrington by a rent of 60s. and the other of the 
heirs of Sir Thomas de Arderne by 635. 4¢. a year! 

Sir Nicholas de Harrington was the guardian of 
Richard de Bailey and Agnes his wife.8? Mabel the 
widow of John in 1403 demised her dower lands in 
Aighton to Richard son and heir of Richard son and 
heir of John de Bailey.8 In 1414 the same Richard 
held a fourth part of the manor of Sir Thomas de 
Arderne, ‘rendering 4 marks a year to John de 
Bailey, which yearly rent, together with the rever- 
sion of the said fourth part, &c., the aforesaid John 
lately had of the gift and grant of William Mountford 
and Elizabeth his wife, daughter and heir of Joan 
daughter and heir of the said Sir Thomas.’ * Richard 
was knight of the shire in 1420,°5 and died in 1441 
holding the manor of Aighton of the king as Earl of 
Lincoln in socage ; with manors and lands elsewhere, 
as in Hambleton, Poulton, Freckleton, Longton, 
Chorley and Bolton-le-Moors.®° By his will he pro- 
vided for the inclosing of St. Nicholas’ chapel in 
Mitton Church,®” to which Agnes his widow, who 
died in 1445, was al.o a benefactor.58 

His son Richard, as appears from his monumental 
inscription,® had died a few days before him, so that 


61 Kuerden MSS. ii, ful. 260. 

62 Ibid. iii, A 3, no. 68. 

63 Tbid. no. 72; the seal shows six 
fusils in fesse charged with escallops. 

®4 De Banco R. 440, m. 20 ; the defen- 
dant was Robert son of William de 
Clifton. Alice afterwards married Sir 
John Boteler, and in 1373 released her 
right to dower in lands in Aighton for- 
merly belonging to William son of Sir 
Robert de Shireburne ; Kuerden MSS. 
ii, A 3, no. 70. 

6 Dods. MSS, cliii, fol. ror; an in- 
denture between Sir John Boteler and 
John de Bailey. 

66 Stonyhurst Coll. D.; the bounds, 
which at several points were indicated by 
oak trees, began at an alder trunk in the 
Stonyway by the arable land in Stony- 
hurst, went east to Thuvicarr, then north 
to a strip of land round Ellis’s houses, 
and by it to Stony Brook, running west ; 
then south and east to the starting-point. 

67 Tbid. 

68 Robert de Hephale, seneschal of 
Blackburnshire, was one of the wit- 
nesses. 

Jordan de Bailey is named in 1257; 
Lanes. Ing. and Extents, i, 204. Jordan 
son of Jordan de Bailey was plaintiff in 
1292; Assize R. 408, m. 4. 

Amice widow of Jordan de Bailey, 
William de Edisforth and Margaret his 
wife were in 1312 defendants to a claim 
by Thomas de Bradhurst in right of his 
wife Agnes ; De Banco R. 195, m. 153 d.; 
199, m. 60 

89 Final Conc. i, 1763 a messuage, 8 
acres of land, &c. 


70 Towneley MS. DD, no. 644. 

71 Christiana widow of William Pye of 
Clitheroe and daughter of Adam son of 
Roger de Clitheroe in 1330 released to 
him the Aighton lands of Richard son of 
William de Edisforth; deed cited in 
Duchy of Lance, Assize R. 7,m. 5d. In 
1346 John de Bailey claimed messuages 
and land in Aighton against Adam son of 
Henry Harrison of Aighton, and appears 
as plaintiff or defendant two years later ; 
De Banco R. 348, m. 1943 354, m. 82 d.; 
355, m. 124. 

™ Kuerden MSS. iii, A 3, no. 65-6. 
In the same year, as stated in the text, 
Sir Richard de Shireburne granted a 
moiety of the manor to Richard son of 
John son of Walter de Bailey, Jordan de 
Bailey chaplain and Ralph son of Robert 
de Bailey ; ibid. no. 72. 

73 Add. MS. 32107, no. 888, 872. 

74 DD, no. 658. 

7 Gerard, Stonyhurst Coll. 44. The 
seal of John de Bailey, 1365, bore an 
eagle displayed; Towneley MS. C8, 13 
(Chet. Lib.), 563. 

76 Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 260. 

77 Final Conc. ii, 173; from Adam son 
of John de Blackburn and Alice his 
wife. 

7 DD, no. 670; Adam de Winkley 
granted a toft, &c., adjoining Stonyhurst 
to John son of John de Bailey in exchange 
for three plats of land and wood called 
the Pighle, Hodderford ridding and the 
Foxholes adjoining Winkley. The seal 
bore an eagle displayed. 

79 Gerard, op. cit. 45. 

81 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 44. 


4 


The last-named rent is probably an error 
for 535. qd., i.e. 4 marks. John de Bailey 
in 1391 made provision for the singing of 
300 masses for his soul and the souls of 
his parents, &c., by one or more honest 
chaplains within two years; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 195. 

82 Final Conc. ili, 38. 

83 Kuerden MSS. iii, A 3, no. §9. 

%4 Ibid. no. 74. See note 46 above. 
Bailey was probably trustee for Richard. 

% Pink and Beaven, Parl. Repre. of 
Lancs. 51. In 1423 he acquired from 
Richard son of William del Riddings land 
at Winkley which had in 1331 been 
granted by John del Riddings to his 
brother William to be held of the chief 
lords by a rent of 7d.; Add. MS. 32305, 
no, 1026, 1136. The Shireburne seal 
appended to a feoffment of the manor of 
‘Wiswell in 1429 bears quarterly 1 and 4, 
a lion rampant; 2 and 3, an eagle dis- 
played ; Kuerden MSS. ili, A 3, no. 76. 

Richard Shireburne and Agnes his wife 
in 1421 obtained the pope’s licence for a 
portable altar; Cal. Papal Letters, vii, 
330. 

8€ Lancs. Rec. Ing. p.m. no. 30, 31 3 
the clear annual value of the manor of 
Aighton was £20. 

8’ Test. Ebor. (Surtees Soc.), ii, 75. 
This bequest reads: ‘Also I will that a 
closet be made honestly at the said altar 
of St. Nicholas upon my cost.’ He 
bequeathed vestments, &c., for the priest 
saying mass there and desired to be buried 
in the chapel. 88 Ibid. ii, 105. 

89 Whitaker, Whalley, ii, 493, refer- 
ring to Harl. MS. 804, fol. 994 


LNOUY TVdIONIYG + LSHAHANOLG + NOLLIJAT 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED wirron crarr of) 


the heir was a grandson named Robert, son of the 
younger Richard by his wife Alice Hamerton,” 
and only six years of age. Little is recorded of 
Robert’s fifty years’ tenure of the manor.” He died 
in 1492 holding Aighton of Sir Edward Stanley, 
successor of Harrington, by the rent of 60s. ; also 
various other manors and lands. Provision had been 
made in 1489 for Thomas and Roger, younger sons, 
and in 1491 for Anne daughter of Sir Thomas 
Talbot, who was to marry Hugh grandson of 
Robert. The heir was Robert’s son Sir Richard 
Shireburne, then thirty years of age.” He died in 
1513 holding the manor as before, and leaving a 
son Hugh, thirty years of age, to inherit.°* Hugh’s 
son Thomas of full age succeeded in 1528," but did 
not long continue, dying in 1535-6,° during his 
term of office as sheriff. 

Richard the son and heir of Thomas was said to 
be ten years old at his father’s death.” He held the 
manor for nearly sixty years, and for most of the 
time was one of the leading men in the county. In 
1544 he was made a knight during the invasion of 
Scotland in that year, Edinburgh being captured.°® 
He was a member of the Parliaments of Mary’s time,” 
but not later; nor was he ever sheriff. Religion 
probably kept him from these employments after 
1559, for such as he was he favoured Roman 
Catholicism.’° Towards the end of his life, about 
1$g1, it was reported to the queen’s ministers that 
Sir Richard and his family ‘are recusants and do not 
go to church, or if they do, stop their ears with wool 
lest they should hear ; that he kept a priest.in Queen 
Mary’s time ; had one brought to confess his wife 
when ill; relieves Richard Startevant, who is con- 
versant with Dr. Allen and other Jesuits and is 


suspected to be a Jesuit, and for that reason he 
put Roger Startevant out of the book for payment 
of this subsidy ; that he says he could apprehend 
massing priests but will disturb no man for his 
conscience ; that he threatens revenge, with death, 
against those that preferred the articles against him ; 
that he has several times, from 1585 to 1588, laid 
upon the inhabitants of Lancashire too high taxes for 
soldiers, and kept the money in his hands and refuses 
to account for it ; that he threatens to hang constables 
by martial law unless they collect the sums so taxed ; 
that he retains sundry sums due to people on the 
end of the last lottery ; that he threatened vengeance 
on Simon Haydock, who refused to sell him lands at 
Chorley, if he continued in his lieutenancy ; that he 
has been guilty of incest and adultery ; and_ has 
never lent the queen money by privy seal, though 
worth more than {1,000 a year.’ He was at 
one time a member of the Ecclesiastical Commission 
of the North, the object of which was to exterminate 
Roman Catholicism.'* He was master forester of 
Bowland, a deputy-lieutenant of the county and the 
Earl of Derby’s lieutenant of the Isle of Man." He 
married Maud Bold, and had several children by her, 
as well as illegitimate offspring by various mistresses ; 
one of these he married immediately after his wife’s 
death in 1588.' ‘Though involved in a great num- 
ber of lawsuits'® he prospered, adding much to the 
family wealth; he rebuilt the Shireburne aisle in 
Mitton Church,” and began a new hall at Stony- 
hurst,'® which his son continued. 

Sir Richard died 26 July 1594 holding the 
manors of Aighton, Wiswell, Dutton, Carleton, 
Hambleton, Longton, Bispham, Norcross and 
Whittingham ; a moiety of the manor of Chorley, a 


90 In 1422 an agreement was made by 
which Richard son of Richard Shireburne 
was to marry Maud daughter of Lawrence 
Hamerton ; Towneley MS. HH, no. 101. 

1 Sir John Boteler in 1447 released to 
Robert Shireburne the younger all right 
in various lands ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13 
(Chet. Lib.), 145. In 1467 a covenant 
was made that ‘an honest secular priest’ 
should celebrate mass four times a week 
at ‘the chapel of the manor of Stony- 
hurst’ for various persons deceased 3 
Foley, Rec. S. J. v, 401, from the Shire- 
burne Abstract Bk. at Leagram. 

92 Duchy of Lance. Inq. p.m. iii, no. 92 5 
the tenure of the manor of Aighton seems 
to be imperfectly recorded. 

A papal dispensation for the marriage 
of Richard Shireburne to Joan Langton 
was granted in 1472; Test. Ebor. iii, 341. 

98 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iv, no. 46 
His will (1508) is recited. 

Hugh Shireburne was accused of 
adultery in 15173 Whalley Act Bk. 
(Chet. Soc.), 55, 66. 

Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. vi, 
no. 65; the tenure of Aighton was 
recorded as ‘of the king as of his earldom 
of Lincoln’ in socage by a rent of gd. 
Dower was in 1537 assigned to Anne 
widow of Hugh Shireburne ; ibid. viii, 
no, 27. For the administration of his 
estate see Whalley Act Bs. 119. 

% Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. viii, no. 33; 
the manor of Aighton was held of the 
king as Earl of Lincoln, a rent of 9d. 
being due for castle ward. In addition 
to the manors and lands in his possession 
Thomas Shireburne had the reversion of 
others held for life by his uncle Roger 


Shireburne in Carleton, &c. ; by Richard 
Shireburne in Wiswell, &c.; by Thomas 
bastard son of Sir Richard in Leyland, &c. ; 
and by Robert son of Hugh Shireburne 
in Aighton, 

In 1529-30 Thomas Shireburne was 
accused of poaching in the forest of Bow- 
land ; C. D. Sherborn, Family of Sherborn, 
25. 

96 P.R.O. List, 73. 

97 The age may have been understated. 
Special licence of entry was granted him 
in 1544; Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxix, App. 
559. He was married at Farnworth in 
Widnes on 26 Oct. 1539, but his wife’s 
name is not given; Reg. 

88 Metcalfe, Bk. of Knights, 76. 

99 In 1553, forthe county ; Nov. 1554, 
Preston; 1555, Liverpool; 1557-8, 
Preston ; Pink and Beaven, op. cit. 63, 
143, 181, 144. 

100 He may be the ‘ Master Shireburne’ 
of George Marsh's story who was at 
Lathom when this Protestant preacher 
was examined there by the Earl of Derby 
in 1554, He did not argue with Marsh, 
professing himself ignorant of the Scrip- 
tures, but lamented that ‘a well-favoured 
young man and one that might have good 
living and do good would so foolishly cast 
himself away, sticking so hard to such 
foolish opinions’ ; Foxe, Acts and Monum, 
(ed. Cattley), vii, 43-4. 

101 Ca/, S. P. Dom. 1591-4, p. 159. 
Richard Startevant was a confidential 
servant of Cardinal Allen’s in 1583; 
Knox, Douay Diaries, 193. About ten years 
later he seems to have begun his studies for 
the priesthood ; Foley, Rec. S. J. vi, 194. 

102 He was said to use his position to 


5 


be ‘an intelligencer to the Papists of 
Lancashire’ ; Gibson, Lydiate Hall, quot- 
ing S. P. Dom. Eliz. ccxl. Dodsworth is 
given as authority for the assertion that 
Elizabeth winked at his recusancy. 

103 M.I. at Mitton ; Whitaker, Craven 
(ed. Morant), 24. 

104 A pedigree was recorded in 1567 ; 
Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 58. The second wife 
was Isabel Wood. For the wills of Sir 
Richard and Dame Isabel see Raines, 
Chantries (Chet. Soc.), 267 5 Wills (Chet. 
Soc. new ser.), ii, 179. 

Sir Richard’s portrait in oils and 
several other family pictures are preserved 
at Leagram Hall; Sherborn, op. cit. 35. 

105 See Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), ii, 
212 (Paradise in Aighton) ; iii, 11 (Dani- 
scoles in Aighton), 102 (Chaigley), &c. 

106 The fines show a large number of 
purchases made by him in the Aighton 
district ; for instance, in 1556 he pur- 
chased two messuages, &c., in Aighton 
and Hambleton from Sir Thomas Hesketh 
and Alice his wife; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F, bdle. 16, m. 15. Lands in Aighton 
were held by Thomas Hesketh of Rufford 
in 1523, but the tenure was unknown ; 
Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. y, no. 16. 

A purchase from John Grimshaw of 
Clayton is recorded in Add. MS. 32105, 
no, 877. 

A settlement was made in 1579; Pal. 
of Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 41, m. 199. 

107 Whitaker, Craven, quoting Dods. 
MSS. v, 41. Sir Richard in his will desired 
to be buried ‘in the midst of my new 
quire.’ The same expression occurs in 
his sen Richard’s will, 1627. 

108 Gerard, op. cit. §3-4. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


fourth part of that of Bolton-le-Moors ; the hundred, 
bailiwick and view of frankpledge of Leylandshire ; 
with messuages, lands, &c., in Aighton, Chaigley and 
Bailey and some thirty other townships ; fisheries in 
the Ribble, Hodder, Douglas and Wyre; also the 
manor of Wigglesworth and other estates in York- 
shire.109 Richard his son was thirty-seven years of 
age on succeeding." He was captain of the Isle of 
Man for fifteen years,!2! and in 1596 obtained from 
the Crown a lease of the barony of Bangor Sabell in 
Dalby there, which lease was renewed to his des- 
cendants.!!2 Perhaps more compliant in religion than 
his father,!13 he acted as sheriff in 1613-14.4 A 
pedigree was recorded about the same time.!§ He 
added to the family estates and died in 1628, leaving 
as heir his son Richard, thirty-seven years of age, the 
eldest son Henry having died before his father.!!® 

Richard Shireburne, though lax in his religion at 
one time,” was prepared to suffer for it when he 
came into his inheritance, and in 1632 compounded for 
the two-thirds of the estates liable to sequestration for 
his recusancy by an annual payment of £48 135. 4.18 
He took the king’s side in the Civil War,!® and on 
his monument is described as ‘an eminent sufferer for 
his loyal fidelity to King Charles I of ever-blessed 
memory.’!?9 His estates were of course sequestered 
by the Parliament, and at last his sufferings broke his 
spirit, for there is evidence that he recovered pos- 
session by renouncing his religion.!*!_ He lived to 
see the Restoration, dying in 1667.12 A pedigree 
was recorded in 1664.18 

His son Richard, founder of the Shireburne Alms- 
houses and other charities, was under suspicion at 
the time of the Oates Plot. He, his wife Isabel and 
his sons Richard and Nicholas were indicted as 
recusants in 1678,}°4 while Stonyhurst was denounced 
as the centre of ‘a damnable Jesuit plot.” An account 
of it was published in 1679 by Robert Bolron, one 
of Lord Shaftesbury’s agents, under the title of The 
Papists Bloody Oath of Secrecy. He had been sent 


down to search the house, and ‘in the chamber of 
the chaplain . . . he found a copy of the constitu- 
tions of the common fund for the Lancashire secular 
clergy, a charity still existing for the relief of infirm 
and decayed members. This document, written in 
Latin, dated 28 February 1675, and bearing the 
names of the members and officers,’ was denounced as 
a plot ‘ for the destruction of his most sacred Majesty 
and the Protestant religion.’ 125 At the Revolution 
Richard Shireburne was ar- 
rested as loyal to James II, 
and died in prison at Man- 
chester in 1689.16 His elder 
son Richard dying without 
issue in 1690 !?” was succeeded 
by the younger son Nicholas, 
who had been created a 
baronet in 1685-6.198 A 
settlement of Aighton and 
other manors was made by 
him on succeeding.!?9 Sir 
Nicholas remained faithful to 
the Stuarts and was accused 
of complicity in the alleged 
‘Lancashire Plot’ of 1694.!8° He was probably too 
infirm to take part in the rising of 1715, and was 
not even charged as an accomplice, though in 
November, in readiness for the Jacobite incursion, a 
supper party at Stonyhurst spent the night in casting 
bullets and next morning took with them four of his 
coach horses, with guns and pistols.!8!_ He carried 
out his father’s charitable designs by building alms- 
houses and in other ways ; but his plans for improving 
the hall were checked by the sudden death of his 
only son Richard Francis in 1702.'8? His other 
child Mary in 1709 married Thomas the eighth 
Duke of Norfolk. Sir Nicholas registered his estates 
as a ‘Papist’ in 1717, the annual value being set 
down as £1,150.1%3 He died in the same year,!4 
and his daughter recorded his character as a man of 


Suirepurne of Stony- 


hurst, baronet. Argent 
a lion rampant guardant 
wert. 


Richard the son occurs in a list of 


09 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xvi, no. 3; 
the manor of Aighton was said to be held 
of the queen as of the earldom of Lincoln 
in socage. 

M0 Livery was granted on 17 Feb. 
1594-5; Dep. Keeper’s Rep. xxxix, App. 
559. A feoftment by Richard Shireburne 
in 1597, mentioning his former wife 
Katherine and his then wife Anne, is in 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 773. The will of 
Anne Shireburne may be seen ibid. no. 
104.3. 

11 Whitaker, Whalley, ii, 490, quoting 
his epitaph. His wife Katherine Stourton 
was niece to Henry Earl of Derby, lord 
of Man. She died at Kirkmalee, near 
Castle Rushen, leaving three surviving 
children, Henry, Richard and Katherine; 
four had died ; Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

12 Thid. ; renewals in 1669 and 1698 
are recorded, 

113. In the epitaph quoted is a prayer for 
the dead. 4 P.R.O. List, 73. 

1s Visit, of 1613 (Chet. Soc.), 27. 

M6 Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. xxvi, no.4. 
His will is in Wills (Chet. Soc. new 
ser.), ii, 199. He had an illegitimate 
daughter; Cal, S. P. Dom, 1619-23, 
PP. 239, 362. 

117 He was godfather to one of Sir 
Ralph Assheton’s children (a Protestant) 
in 1617; Assheton’s Journal (Chet. Soc.),16. 

N8 Trans, Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xxiv, 
178. 


In 1642 he desired permission ‘to go 
to the waters of Bourbon’ with his wife, 
daughter and servant ; Hist. MSS. Com. 
Rep. v, 63. The journey probably related 
to the education of his children on the 
Continent, as Richard his son was at 
St. Omers in 1643-6 ; Gerard, op. cit. 64. 

9 A Mr. Shireburne of Stonyhurst 
was taken prisoner at Rowton Heath in 
1645; Ches. Sheaf (Ser. 3), v, 18. This 
was perhaps not the head of the family. 

120 Whitaker, Whalley, ii, 491. 

171 Cal. Com. for Comp. iii, 19963 Cal. 
Com. for Advaacing Money, iii, 1362. It 
appeared that Richard Shireburne himself 
was not a convicted recusant, but his wife 
was; and ‘his children were educated in 
popery.’ The doubt arises from the 
appearance of more than one of the name. 
Richard of Stonyhurst had refused to come 
and take the oath of abjuration in 1651. 

A settlement of his manors of Aighton, 
Bailey, Chaigley, Wiswell, Dutton, Ham- 
bleton and Longton, with extensive lands, 
two water-mills, two windmills, three dove- 
cotes, &c., was made by him in 1647; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F, bdle. 145, m. 4. 

122 An abstract of his will is printed by 
C. D. Sherborn (op. cit. 45). It records 
the alienation of £4,000 from his son’s 
wife’s settlement on account of the alleged 
dishonesty of his son Richard. 

128 Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 263. 

M4 Hist, MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 


- 


9 


109. 
*Papists fled from justice’ in 1680 ; ibid. 
xi, App. ii, 240. 

125 J, Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath, 
iv, 326 ; ‘in the document which he prints 
the wretched informer has cut out every- 
thing which would denote the real object 
of the association.’ See also Pal. Note Bk. 
ii, 8, 41. 

126 M.I. in Mitton Church. A mortu- 
ary list of his time (copied 1724) shows 
that the priest at Chipping was ‘to cele- 
brate three times a week, offering up one 
mass for Richard Shireburne of Stony- 
hurst, esquire, and Isabel his wife,’ &c. ; 
Foley, Rec. S. J. v, 339- 127 ML. 

12 G.E.C. Complete Baronetage, iv, 138. 

129 Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 452, m. 7. 

180 Jacobite Trials (Chet. Soc.), 3, &c. 

181 Payne, Rec. of Engl. Cath. 145-6. 

182 He was only eight years old. The 
tradition is that he died of eating some 
poisonous berries in the garden at Stony- 
hurst. 

133 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Carh, 
Non-jurors, 114, 200, 309. He had large 
estates in Yorkshire and Northumberland 
as well as in Lancashire. A catalogue 
of the Shireburne deeds, made for him in 
1715, is preserved at Leagram Hall. He 
compiled a pedigree of his family, now at 
Lulworth. 

134 M.I. in Mitton Church ; Whitaker, 
Whalley, ii, 491-2. 


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great humanity, sympathy and concern for the good 
of mankind . . . He particularly set his neighbour- 
hood a-spinning of Jersey wool and provided a man to 
comb the wool and a woman who taught them to 
spin, whom he kept in his house and allotted several 
rooms he had in one of the courts of Stonyhurst for 
them to work in, and the neighbours came to spin 
accordingly . . . from April 1699 to August 1701. 
When they had all learnt he gave the nearest neigh- 
bour each a pound or half a pound of wool ready for 
spinning, and wheel, to set up for themselves ; which 
did a vast deal of good to that north side of Ribble 
in Lancashire.’ 185 

The Duchess of Norfolk occasionally resided at 
Stonyhurst in her husband’s lifetime, and it became 
her home in her widowhood, 1732 to 1754.138 She 
held the estates in fee simple and bequeathed them 
to the next-of-kin, the issue of her aunt Elizabeth, 
sister of Sir Nicholas, who had married William 
Weld of Lulworth in Dorset. Their grandson, 
Edward Weld, who died in 1761, became lord of 
Aighton, but did not reside there,!8’ and his son 
Thomas ¥8 in 1794 gave the hall and 44 acres of 
land around it tothe Jesuits of the Liége Academy,}89 
the successor of St. Omers, founded in 1592; and 
they established the school there. Thomas Weld 
had been a pupil of the college while it was stationed 
at Bruges, 1762 to 1773, and had the satisfaction of 
seeing his old school beginning to prosper in the 
place he had given ; he died suddenly at Stonyhurst 
1 August 1810, having travelled thither to be present 
at the opening of new buildings.“? His son Thomas 
Weld, left a widower, was ordained priest in 1821 
and was appointed a cardinal in 1829. He sold 
considerable parts of the Aighton estates and died in 
1837.!41 His trustees and heir sold the manor of 
Aighton to the college in 1841, subject toa rent- 
charge of £6 for the poor of Leagram.4? The 
college also acquired various parts of the estates as 
they were sold. 


135 Whitaker, Whalley, ii, 491-2. Sir 


of the hundred of Leyland; the manors 


In 1836 courts for Aighton and Chaigley were 
held by Cardinal Weld,'* and the Aighton manor 
court continued to be held down to 1900 by the 
rector of Stonyhurst and the college trustees.!44 

Situated on the lower slope of Longridge Fell ‘ the 
turrets of princely STONYHURST | rise amid a 
pleasantly wooded country. Of the house !4° that 
existed prior to the time of Sir Richard Shireburne 
no portion now remains except a few fragments, here- 
after referred to, which have been preserved. There is 
enough evidence, however, in old prints and from other 
sources to give some idea of the mediaeval mansion, 
the principal part of which seems to have stood 
somewhere about the north-east corner of the present 
quadrangle. On this site there were standing well 
into the 19th century a number of quaint and 
ancient buildings !47 which when taken down revealed 
traces of a structure said to have been of late 14th or 
early 1sth-century date.148 The destruction of the 
buildings known as the old infirmary, or Sparrow’s 
Hall,° on the north side of the quadrangle in 1856 
brought to light what were thought to be traces of 
the chapel for which a licence was obtained in 1372, 
including some carved oak spandrels similar in style 
to those in the roof of Mitton Church, which date 
from the late years of the reign of Edward III,!° 
and in a further demolition in the kitchen court in 1861 
a portion ofan old window with moulded oak mullions, 
said to have been of late 14th-century date, which 
had been hidden by an 18th-century structure put 
up in front of it, was discovered. 

These fragments, though revealing very little as to 
the size or appearance of the mediaeval house, seem 
to indicate that a building of some importance 
occupied part of the present site some 200 years or 
more before the present building was begun by Sir 
Richard Shireburne. To these buildings, whatever 
they were like, Hugh Shireburne, the grandfather of 
the Elizabethan builder, seems to have made con- 
siderable additions about the year 1523, some 


M45 Grindon, Lancs, 207, 331. 


Nicholas and his lady, among their other 
charities, used to give ‘on All Souls’ Day 
a considerable deal of money to the poor ; 
Lady Shireburne serving them with her 
own hands that day.’ 

The ‘Stonyhurst Buck Hunt,’ an old 
ballad naming Sir Nicholas, the Duke of 
Norfolk, Mr. Penketh and others, is 
printed in N. and Q. (Ser. 1), x, 503. 
Many interesting details of Sir Nicholas’ 
life and character will be found in Gerard, 
op. cit. 40, 69-75. A note of Lady 
Shireburne’s nuncupative will is printed 
in Payne’s Rec, of Engl. Cath. 26. 

186 A settlement of the manors of 
Aighton, Bailey, Chaigley, Dutton, Wis- 
well, Carleton, Hambleton, Leagram and 
Ribchester, with other Shireburne estates, 
was made in 1719 by Thomas Duke of 
Norfolk and Mary his wife; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 284, m. 81. In 
1737 there was a recovery by Mary 
Dowager Duchess of Norfolk; Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R. 544, m. 13. An estate 
map of 1733 showing the Shireburne 
lands at that time is now at Stonyhurst. 

The duchess married her kinsman the 
Hon. Peregrine Widdrington, a Jacobite 
who was ‘out’ in 17153 G.E.C. Com- 
plete Peerage, vi, 56. 

187 For the later descents see Burke, 
Commoners, i, 198-9 and Landed Gentry. 

138 Thomas Weld in 1777 was tenant 


of Aighton, Bailey and Chaigley, Chorley, 
Longton, Great Carleton, Hambleton, 
Dutton, Ribchester, Wiswell, Howath 
and Stidd; the advowson of Mitton ; 
lands, &c.; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 625, 
m. 10d, 16, 40 (recovery). 

139 He afterwards gave Hodder Place 
and lands there. A formal deed of gift 
was executed in 1809. See Gerard, op. 
cit. 39, 91, 115, 136. 

It appears that Mr. Weld had in 1772 
offered it to Bishop William Walton for 
a residence, on condition that the Jesuit 
chaplain should remain, but the offer was 
declined. Afterwards in 1793 he would 
have given it to the English students 
expelled from Douay by the French 
Revolution, again on condition that the 
Jesuits should have charge ; Gillow, Bidl. 
Dict. of Engl. Cath. iv, 327. 

M40 Gerard, op. cit. 136. 

141 [bid. 137 (there is a portrait, ibid. 
92); Dict. Nat. Biog. He hada daughter 
Mary Lucy, who married Lord Clifford 
of Chudleigh. His brothers were Joseph 
Weld of Lulworth and George Weld of 
Leagram. 

142 End. Char. Rep. for Whalley (White- 
well), 1902, p. 3. 

143 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1), ili, 371 5 the 
dependency on Clitheroe was still recog- 
nized. 

144 Information of Fr. J. Keating. 


7 


146 In the following account of Stony- 
hurst Hall use has been made of the 
Rev. John Gerard’s Stonyhurst College 
Centenary Record, 1894, and also of the 
articles by the Rev. C. S. Beauclerk in 
the Stonyhurst Mag. 1885. ‘The editors 
also wish to put on record their thanks 
to the authorities at the college for in- 
formation and help most readily given. 

147 Gerard, op. cit. 47. 

148 “One of these relics is still to be 
seen, though removed from its original 
position, in the shape of a round-headed 
stone doorway, through which was the 
passage from the house to the back pre- 
mises. . . . It isnow (1894) in the inner 
dairy’ ; ibid. 48. 

M9 Sparrow's Hall (so called after 
Mr. Sparrow, Mr. Weld’s steward, who 
resided there) was externally a building 
of later and uncertain but probably 
16th-century date, of little or no archi- 
tectural interest. 

150 “When the ceiling was pulled down 
an oaken roof was laid bare, the spandrels 
of every panel being carved with roses. 
At one end of the room was a recess’ ; 
record of an eye-witness of the demolition 
printed in the Sronyhurst Mag. i, 286. 
All these spandrels have disappeared ex- 
cept one, which, however, is not carved 
with roses; Stonyhurst Mag. (1885), 
Tol. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


portions of which, at the east end of the old south 
front, stood until 1807 and others till as late as 1861. 
The portion taken down in 1807 was entirely of 
wood and plaster, but had been refaced in the 
18th century with stone and sash windows introduced. 
Standing to the south-east of the Elizabethan house, 
its north side fronted what is now the kitchen court, 
and the other fragments of the older house occurring 
on the north and north-east side of the present 
quadrangle suggest that the whole of the pre- 
Elizabethan mansion occupied a site more or less 
covered to-day by the buildings, the quadrangle and 
the kitchen yard. The minstrels’ gallery at the 
bottom of the great hall, now the boys’ refectory, 
constructed in 1857 out of timber from Hugh 
Shireburne’s buildings, bears the inscription in black- 
letter characters ‘Quant je puis Hugo Sherburn 
Armig . me fieri fecit Ao. Dni. MCCCCCXXIII. 
Et sicut fuit sic fiat,’ 151 and the external walling of 
Sparrow’s Hall, already referred to, may have been 
Hugh Shireburne’s work. Built into it were a number 
of carved stones which are supposed to have come 
from Whalley Abbey, but if this were so it would 
place the erection of the front after Hugh Shireburne’s 
death in 1528. The most interesting of these stones 
were two corbel angels bearing shields with the 
emblems of the Passion and above them an inscription 
‘Sicut fuerit voluntas in coelo sic fiat Factum est hoc 
capellum anno. . .,’ not, however, in its original 
situation, as the words were misplaced.52_ There were 
also five stones in this part of the building carved 
with devices, two of which were evidently the arms 
of the Lacys, the founders and patrons of Whalley 
Abbey, viz. a lion rampant, which was their family 
cognizance, and three garbs which they bore as 
Constables of Chester.153 

The exact date when Sir Richard Shireburne com- 
menced rebuilding the house is not known, though 
it is pretty certain that it was somewhere about the 
year 1590. In his will dated 1593 Sir Richard 
leaves to his eldest son ‘all his iron to build with, 
that he may finish the buildings therewith now already 
begun, also his lead provided to cover his house now 
in building at Stonyhurst, so that he may cover the 
same as far as it will go, also all his building stone 
and wrought timber at Stonyhurst.’!54 At his death 
in the following year the walls of practically the 
whole of the Elizabethan part of the house were 
probably not far from completion, at any rate as far 
as the great drawing-room at the south-east corner, 
beginning from the gateway tower. The plaster 
chimney-piece in that room, which is now destroyed, 
bore the date 1596 together with the initials of 
Sir Richard and his son. ‘If this room was ready for 


151 Father Gerard also mentions another 153 Ibid. 100. 
piece of woodwork which bore the inscrip- 
tion ‘Factum est hoc opus per Hug’ 
Sherburn Arm. A°® Dni mpxin.’ From 
this it would appear that Hugh Shireburne 
began building operations of some descrip- 
tion as soon as he succeeded to the pro- 


155 Thid. 


the date 1599. 


154 Quoted ibid. 31. 


156 Tt bears the arms of Shireburne and 
Probably the great hall 
was completed about this time. 

157 The Rev. C. S. Beauclerk has dis- 


the plaster work in 1596 it looks as if the Building 
had well progressed at Sir Richard’s death in 1594, : 
and there is the further evidence of a stone, now in 
the great hall, the original position of which is 
uncertain, but which was probably over the fireplace 
there when the room was first built, that another 
portion of the mansion was completed three years 
later.156 The building of the new house may have 
started a few years before 1590, but the evidence of 
the masons’ marks shows that a very large number of 
workmen were employed and the progress of the work 
would be therefore rapid.1°7 

The new mansion as conceived, and as partly carried 
out, by Sir Richard Shireburne was to be built round 
a central quadrangle measuring about 81 ft. by go ft., 
the sides facing approximately south-west, north-east, 
south-east and north-west !°*; but in the present 
description the south-west or entrance front, following 
the custom at Stonyhurst, is termed the west side, 
and the south-east or old garden front the south side. 
The design is one of considerable merit and of much 
regularity both in plan and elevation, and if com- 
pleted would have been one of the finest examples 
of early Renaissance architecture in the country. As 
it is, the existing portions of Sir Richard’s buildings, 
more especially the great entrance tower on the west 
front and the south and east sides of the quadrangle, 
are exceedingly good specimens of late 16th-century 
work, and merit far moreattention than has yet been paid 
to them by writers on English domestic architecture. 

The building seems to have been begun at the 
entrance tower and continued along the west side of 
the quadrangle southwards, followed by the south 
and east wings as far as a point on the east side about 
opposite to where it began, no doubt there abutting 
against some of the older buildings already mentioned, 
others of which may have been demolished to make 
way for it. A considerable portion of the house 
(probably the whole of that built about seventy years 
before), however, was left standing to the east of the 
south wing, and the north side of the quadrangle 
was partly occupied, as has been already stated, by 
older buildings. No doubt Sir Richard originally 
intended them to make way for his completed quad- 
rangular mansion, but for some unknown reason the 
building was never finished according to what is 
supposed to have been the original plan, and the 
whole of the north wing and the northern ends of 
the east and west wings remained unbuilt. The 
gate-house tower, therefore, stood detached on its north 
side for something like 250 years, and is so shown in 
all old drawings and prints of Stonyhurst. 

The plan of the building here reproduced is taken 
from one dated 1694,!° but whether this is a copy 


fifty masons and increased this number to 
perhaps seventy as the work progressed. 
The evidence of the marks goes to show 
that the whole of the building was exe- 
cuted at onetime. Facsimiles of sixty-one 
marks are given ibid. 33. The ‘new 
choir’ built by Sir Richard at Mitton 


petty. 

13? Sronyhurst Mag. (1885), 100-1, 
where a sketch of the angel corbels is 
given. They are now, together with the 
inscription, built into the walls on the 
east side of the quadrangle. The inscrip- 
tion is very similar to that of Hugh 
Shireburne already mentioned. The form 
‘capellum ’ is unusual. 


cussed very fully the question of the 
masons’ marks at Stonyhurst (ibid. 30-7), 
and has noted the marks of over sixty men. 
There were probably more, many no doubt 
having been lost, parts of the walling 
being very much weather-worn and other 
parts are hidden or have been destroyed. 
Father Beauclerk assumes, therefore, that 
Sir Richard started his work with fully 


8 


Church bears the marks of six men, five 
of which correspond with marks at Stony- 
hurst. 

155 Strictly speaking the entrance front 
is W.S.W., the other sides of the house 
facing the corresponding points. 

159 The copy of this plan at Leagram 
Hall bears the name and date, ‘ Mr. Dudell 
1604,’ but Father Gerard has pointed out 


Mirron : Sronynurst, In 1808 


(From a water-colour drawing by J. Buckler) 


Mirron : SronyHurst : SourH Fronr 


(From an old print) 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED  wrrron (PART OF) 


made in Sir Nicholas Shireburne’s time of an older 
plan showing the building as originally projected, or 
whether it depicts a scheme of Sir Nicholas’ own for 
completing the unfinished mansion, is uncertain. 
There is unfortunately no scale attached to the plan, 
and the dimensions of the actual building do not fit 
it exactly !°° in every respect ; but generally speaking 
it is correct as far as the existing buildings are con- 
cerned, the positions of doors and windows being 
rightly shown.18 

This plan, whatever its original date, is of great 
interest as showing the completed plan of the house 
as intended, at any rate, in the 17th century. In 
what is certainly the original part of the plan the 
great hall occupies the larger part of the east wing, 
with the dais at the south end flanked by large bay 
windows, and the south wing contained the long 
gallery. Between these two principal rooms, and 
forming a south-east projecting wing, was the great 
withdrawing-room, which had a large bay window 
facing the east. These rooms are all on the first 
floor, the bottom story following the early type and 
being cut up into a number of small rooms, the 
purpose of which can now only be conjectured. The 
great hall was approached directly from the courtyard 
by a wide stone staircase opposite the entrance gate- 
way, and the entrance itself seems to have been 
originally approached by a rather steep incline by 
which carriages and horses entered the courtyard.1® 

The south end of the west wing seems to have 
been occupied by the chapel, which went up two 
stories, and in the angle between which and the 
narrow south wing was a picturesque projecting bay, 
with a small room on each floor and a circular stone 
staircase. A corresponding but smaller projection in 
the opposite angle carried up above the parapet seems 
to have contained a flue or ventilating shaft. The 
south or garden elevation was therefore very well 
broken up, and with the older buildings of Hugh 
Shireburne at its east end presented a very picturesque 
appearance. It is of course now hidden by the later 
school buildings which have been erected in front of 
it, and the whole of its eastern end destroyed. The 
kitchen and offices of the Elizabethan house would 
doubtless be located in the older buildings, the new 
mansion terminating at the north-east at the screens 
of the great hall or a little beyond. 

The north wing as shown in the plan of 1694 was 


intended to be more than double the width of the 
south or long gallery wing, and is shown divided down 
its centre by a thick wall with five passage rooms on 
the first floor on the south side and a large central 
staircase with two rooms on each side on the north. 
This part of the plan has more the appearance of a 
late 17th-century design for the completion of the 
Elizabethan structure than of an original 16th-century 
project, though no positive conclusion can easily be 
arrived at. 

After Sir Richard Shireburne’s death his son con- 
tinued and completed the building as far as it had 
then gone, the work apparently not being finished till 
about the year 1606.'%8 It was thus, and remained 
till the 19th century, a ¢ halfhouse,’ !“4 the comple- 
tion of the quadrangle on something like the plan 
originally intended only having been finally carried 
out in 1856.6 The buildings as completed by 
Richard Shireburne the son remained as he had left 
them at his death in 1628 till nearly the close of the 
century, when Sir Nicholas Shireburne began the 
laying out of the grounds and that embellishment of 
the fabric which has given it some of its most charac- 
teristic features. The great avenue leading up to the 
west front, with the ponds or canals on either side, 
together with the gardens and summer-houses on the 
south, were in course of formation in 1696, and some 
buildings were erected on the north side of what is 
now the kitchen court in 1701.16 Sir Nicholas, if 
not exactly a great builder, was lavish in his expendi- 
ture on the house and gardens, and he is said to have 
resolved to complete the mansion. The idea may 
have been abandoned soon after the death of his son 
in 1702. He did not, however, cease ‘improving’ 
the house, as in 1703-4 he paved the quadrangle and 
refashioned the staircase on its east side leading to the 
great hall in a grander manner. The steps were 
adorned with lions and figures of eagles and the door- 
way at the top with his helm and crest.1” He also 
paved the great hall with white marble, put his 
escutcheon over the fireplace, and erected the door- 
way at the south side of the quadrangle at the bottom 
of the bay window. But perhaps the most notable 
piece of his work was the erection of the tall cupolas 
on the tops of the two staircase turrets, on the east 
side of the gateway tower. These were added in 
1712. They are covered with domes of oak bricks 
and surmounted by lead eagles.18° The gardens came 


(op. cit. §3) that this must be an error 
for 1694. Sir Nicholas’ own accounts 
and those of his steward Dalton show 
that there was at Stonyhurst in Sept. 
1694 a Mr. Duddell who apparently came 
from London (Lulworth MSS.). This was 
the year that the spouts were put up in 
the quadrangle. 

160 For example, taking the gateway 
tower and the south-west wing as correct, 
both measuring about 30 ft. on the west 
front, we get the length of the wall 
between in the plan as about 45 ft. 
instead of 51 ft. 6 in., which is its actual 
length. 

161 There are one or two curious dis- 
crepancies. Thus the bay window at the 
south-west end of the great hall is not 
shown going up to the first floor, though 
the evidence of the building seems to 
prove that it always went up both stories 
as on the other side of the hall. The bay 
also in the middle of the south side is 
shown to the ground floor only. 


7 


162 The present steps to the west 
entrance seem to be a later insertion. 
Sir Nicholas, when he constructed the 
ponds and gardens on the south side of 
the house, moved large maases of soil, 
which he may have used in altering the 
level of the ground on the west side. 
See Stonyhurst Mag. (1885), 59. 

163 That date, with the arms of James I, 
was formerly on the mantelpiece in the 
great hall. 

164 Cromwell is said to have described 
Stonyhurst as ‘the finest half-house he 
had ever seen.’ 

165 The conjecture that Thomas Holt 
of York was the ‘architect’ of Stony- 
hurst seems to be based on the assumption 
that Holt was also the architect of the 
schools at Oxford and of Merton and 
Wadham Colleges, and also on the state- 
ment of Gwilt (Ency. of Archit. 414) that 
he ‘was the first to introduce the classical 
orders in series above each other.’ Holt, 
however, was reported in the University 


9 


of Oxford as aged forty in 1618 (see 
Dict. Nat. Biog.), which would make him 
about twelve years old when the work at 
Stonyhurst was in progress. Apart from 
this, if Holt’s claim to be the designer of 
the Oxford buildings named is disallowed, 
as it now generally is, his claim fails also 
at Stonyhurst. 

166 The gabled building which still 
stands there bears this date in Roman 
numerals. Above one of the doorways is 
also the date 1699, but the doorway was 
brought to its present position from the 
old kennels which stood in the field to the 
north-west of the house ; Gerard, op. cit. 


40 

167 These steps remained in position till 
1856, when they were taken away. They 
are now in the college grounds. 

168 Turner, in his drawing of Stony- 
hurst, using the privilege of his imagina- 
tion and deeming them more in keeping 
with a Jesuit college, put crosses in the 
place of the eagles. 


2 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


right up to the house on the south side, and were in 
the then prevalent Dutch style, with yew hedges, 
flights of stone steps, labyrinths, fountains and lead 
statues. They were entered at the south-west corner 
of the building through a great iron gate,'®* the stone 
piers of which are now in front of the west entrance. 
The ponds on the west side were enlarged to their 
present dimensions in 1706, and ‘in the centre of 
each a group of mythological figures formed foun- 
tains.’ 179 The west entrance probably took its 
present form at this time, the steps being then intro- 
duced and the carriageway to the quadrangle done 
away with. The inner or middle arch, though 
replacing an older one in the same position with a 
smaller doorway on the left-hand side, bears evidence 
of later date, and is most likely Sir Nicholas’s work.17} 

There were in Sir Nicholas’s time, though it is not 
known when they were erected, large coach-houses to 
the north-west of the mansion, on the site of the 
present infirmary building.!7? 

As left by Sir Nicholas Shireburne the house re- 
mained till its abandonment as a residence, the only 
structural alteration of importance being the facing in 
stone, already noted, of Hugh Shireburne’s building 
by the Duchess of Norfolk during the time of her 
residence between 1732 and 1754.!73 After the 
duchess’s death the house was abandoned, the new 
owners never caring to occupy it, and during the 
forty years between 1754 and 1794 it fell into such 
a state of disrepair that there were serious thoughts of 
taking it down altogether.!7! From this fate it was 
saved by Thomas Weld’s action in handing over 
the building to the Jesuit refugees from Li-ge in 1794, 
and since that date the history of Stonyhurst is the 
history of the great public school which bears its 
name. 

When the Jesuit Fathers arrived at Stonyhurst they 
found the building in parts roofless and the greater 
part of it uninhabitable. “They immediately set about 
putting the house in repair, but in so doing, while 
preserving the building, wrought no little damage to 
the gardens, which had suffered less than the house 
itself in the lapse of years. Trees were felled, and 
the greater number of the lead statues melted down 
to provide the new roofs.!7® The house, too, suffered 
in some degree, the long gallery being divided into 
two stories. 

The later history of the fabric resolves itself into a 
mere list of the various building operations carried 
out by the authorities of the College. In 1796 the 
great hall was turned into the refectory, in 1797 the 
old stables on the south-west of the house were con- 
verted into a church, and two years afterwards the 


169 The ‘ieran gates’ cost £190 and 
were made at Winslow, Bucks. ‘ For the 


4 Rev. Joseph 
(1909), 14. 


building known as ‘Shirk,’ which still stands between 
the church and the south-east wing, was erected.!76 
The west front was completed northward by the 
erection of a plain building, since removed, in 1800, 
and in 1809-10 the old playground front on the 
south side, a plain classic building, was set up, the old 
great drawing-room and Hugh Shireburne’s building 
being demolished to make space for it.!77 A new 
church was built in 1832-5 on the site of that 
previously formed out of the stables, and the 
infirmary, on the site of the old coach-houses, was 
erected in 1842-4. In 1843-4 the present north 
end of the west front took the place of the building 
erected in 1800, and in 1856 the old pre-Shireburne 
buildings on the north side of the quadrangle were 
cleared away and the quadrangle completed on that 
side, Sir Nicholas Shireburne’s carved staircase being 
removed at the same time. Many internal alterations 
were effected during the middle years of the century, 
a new domestic chapel (now part of the library) 
being opened in 1857 and the Sodality chapel }7*° in 
1859. New kitchens and offices were built in 
1861-z. The present college buildings, replacing 
the old playground front, took shape between the 
years 1877 and 188g, the west wing being completed 
first in 1879, the east wing in 1881 and the middle 
block in 1883. The boys’ chapel block was begun 
in 1884 and completed in 1888, and the Angels’ 
chapel block, the final block of the new college 
buildings, in 1889.18 

It remains to describe briefly those portions of the 
Elizabethan mansion which remain. Externally the 
west front and the elevations to the quadrangles are 
substantially unchanged, but the house inside has 
been necessarily very much altered to suit it to its 
present requirements. It is of three stories and built 
throughout of stone with ashlar facing, with mullioned 
and transomed windows, straight parapets and flat 
lead roofs. The quadrangle as now completed 
measures 79 ft. 6 in. from west to east and gt ft. 
‘rom north to south, the former dimensions being 
the width of the original building between its west 
and east wings. The present west front is about 
195 ft. in length, with the central gateway tower 
and end wings each projecting 7 ft. 6 in. The 
length of wall between the gateway and the south- 
west wing is 51 ft. 6 in., but the modern northern 
end of the front is 2 ft. longer. The three projecting 
blocks each measure about 30 ft. on the face. The 
elevation, as already stated, is one of much merit, 
combining picturesqueness and dignity, the large wall 
spaces between the windows helping materially to 
set off the architectural features of the gateway tower. 


Keating, Svonyhurst east wing (demolished in 1808) were, 


however, utilized in the new building, 


two flower-pots, festoons, and cornishes at 
the ieran gates, £35.’ 

0 Ibid. 70. The water for the foun- 
tains was brought from Longridge Fell 
through wooden pipes. The gardens are 
said to have been designed by Beaumont, 
who was once in the employ of James II, 
and who was responsible for the gardens 
at Levens Hall and a portion of those in 
Hampton Court ; Gillow, Haydock Papers, 


51. 
171 Stonyhurst Mag. (1885), 35. 
9 Gerard, op. cit. 74. 
3 This part of the house then became 
known as the Duchess’s Rooms. 


5 Father Chas. Wright, the procura- 
tor, who was in charge of the reparations, 
is described as having been ‘not a man of 
artistic or zsthetic taste.’ He laid hands 
on any materials he could and when 
remonstrated with replied, ‘Stuff and 
nonsense ! I want the money’; Gruggen 
and Keating, ibid., 54. 

6 The building is described as ‘an 
extremely ugly but very useful piece of 
debased Renaissance’; Keating, ibid. 
(1909), 14. It was called Shirk, ‘as the 
ordinary residence of veteran Fathers past 
work’ ; Gruggen and Keating, «p. cit. 61. 

7 Parts of the walls of the old south- 


i fe) 


178-9 Designed by Chas. E. Buckler. It is 
on the first floor and measures 61 ft. by 1g ft. 

160 The old south front of 1809-10 
was 300 ft. in length, the centre and two 
wings being each roo ft. The new front 
measures §60 ft. in a straight line, the 
end wings projecting each 100 ft., forming 
a courtyard open on the south side. The 
middle block is 280 ft. long and each 
wing 140 ft. The style of the building 
is modelled on that of the Elizabethan 
mansion, with two towers with cupolas 
each 100 ft. high, in the middle block. 
The architects were Messrs. Dunn & 
Hansom of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 


ZTONVYAWVA() aH], + ISYQHANOLG > NOLLIJAT 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED  wirron carr oF) 


The tower is of four stories, divided by entablatures 
and with a round-headed archway flanked by coupled 
Doric columns on the ground floors, and a mullioned 
and transomed window of four lights on each of the 
floors above flanked by coupled columns of the Ionic, 
Corinthian and composite orders, the whole crowned 
by an embattled parapet. The detail is refined 
and ornament sparingly used; the columns are set 
well back from the angle and are fluted. On the 
ground floor stage there is a middle string linable 
with the impost moulding of the arch and with the 
hood moulds of the windows on either side, and the 
spandrels of the arch are occupied by circular 
medallions containing heads. There is no keystone 
to the arch, but over the cornice is set the escutcheon 
of Sir Nicholas Shireburne with helm, crest, mantling 
and motto, the arms being those of Shireburne 
quartering Bailey. The entrance to the quadrangle 
is by a passage-way 18 ft. 3 in. wide, with an inner 
or middle doorway, and doors on either side leading 
to the house. The inner archway to the quadrangle 
is flanked by octagonal staircase turrets rising above 
the lines of the parapet and crowned with the tall 
17th-century cupolas erected by Sir Nicholas Shire- 
burne. From whatever point of view the building is 
seen these cupolas now form its most distinctive 
feature, and though differing in style from the early 
work harmonize very well with it and materially help 
the composition by giving it height. The first-floor 
windows throughout both to the west and former 
south fronts and to the quadrangle, with the excep- 
tion of those to the great hall, are tall openings 
divided by double transoms and of three or more 
lights, those of the ground and second floors being 
low and without transoms. All the windows have 
hood moulds. 

The west wall of the south-west wing was originally 
unpierced its full height, and was sometimes known 
as the Blind Tower. The effect of this externally 
on the west elevation was unusual, but some time in 
the 18th century the present 14th-century pointed 
window, which was brought from the ruins of 
Bailey chapel in the neighbourhood, was inserted. 
The four upper windows above were inserted in 
modern times, the upper pair in 1888. 

To the quadrangle the old elevations are somewhat 
similar in character to those already described. The 
removal of the curved steps on the east side has 
deprived the courtyard of one of its most distinctive 
features, but the view from the entrance towards the 
south-east corner, embracing the great bay of the 
hall and the smaller and more elegant one to the 
long gallery, is one of much picturesqueness. Both 
bays go up the full height of the house, but that to 
the long gallery appears to be of later date and 
probably belongs to the early years of the 17th 
century. It is very refined in detail, with pilasters 
at the angles, and is further distinguished from the 
rest of the buildings round the quadrangle by the 
still later pedimented doorway inserted by Sir 
Nicholas Shireburne and bearing his cypher. ‘There 
are four built-up doorways on the south side of the 
quadrangle and a fifth, different in character and 
referred to later, in the south-west corner. The 


181 Cent, Rec. 54. 
182 Thid. 53. 
183 Father Beauclerk has discussed very 


fully the problem of the ‘Blind Tower’ 
in the Stonyhurst Mag. for 1885, pp. 92-99. 
His conclusions, without necessarily being 


II 


lead down pipes were set up by Sir Nicholas in 1694 
and bear his cypher together with the eagle’s and 
unicorn’s head crests, and various shiclds of arms on 
the ears, 

The location of the chief apartments has already 
been mentioned. The great hall was 60 ft. long by 
27 ft. in breadth and 1g ft. 6 in. high. It was ex- 
tended northwards in 1856-7 to its present length of 
go ft., but the other dimensions remain unaltered. 
It is lit by a range of mullioned windows with single 
transom on the west side towards the quadrangle and 
by a bay window 165 ft. 6 in. wide by 12 ft. 6 in. 
deep on either side of the dais at the south end. 
There were originally windows on the east side to the 
north of the fireplace, the mullions of which may be 
seen in the store rooms above the kitchens. The old 
fireplace opening, 11 ft. 6 in. wide, still remains in 
the east side, but is now used as an alcove, from which 
access is gained to the pantry. Above the segmental 
arch is the escutcheon of Sir Nicholas Shireburne carved 
in white marble, with helm, crest, mantling and motto, 
and bearing the date 1699. The minstrels’ gallery 
at the north end has already been referred to as being 
constructed from timber taken from the demolished 
building of Hugh Shireburne. The royal arms of 
James I are now placed above it, and underneath is 
preserved an oak table on which, according to tradi- 
tion, Cromwell slept on the occasion of his visit to 
Stonyhurst in 1648. The present white marble pave- 
ment replaced that of Sir Nicholas Shireburne in 1862. 
The heraldic stained glass which originally filled 
the windows, being much damaged, is said to have 
been removed in college times with a view to repair, 
and to have been put away and lost.'*' The bay 
windows are now filled with the coats of arms of past 
students. 

The long gallery is 88 ft. long by 18 ft. wide and 
19 ft. high, and was originally lit by windows on both 
sides. Those on the south are now blocked by the 
later college buildings, the room which is used as a 
picture gallery and museum being lit only from the 
quadrangle and the west end. At the east end the 
gallery originally opened into the great drawing-room, 
which occupied the destroyed south-east wing, and 
was an apartment 46 ft. long from north to south and 
24 ft. 6 in. in width, with a large bay window to the 
south-east. A door on its north side communicated 
with the dais of the great hall. The chimney-piece 
is described as having been ‘a large handsome struc- 
ture in stucco with the arms of Shireburne and Bailey 
quarterly in the centre and the motto “Quant je 
puis,” and on either side the same arms impaling 
Stourton on one side and Kighley on the other, the 
two wives of Richard Shireburne, Sir Richard’s son and 
successor.’ ‘The fireplace was dated 1596. 

There remains the room in the south-west tower 
now known as the Bailey room, but probably originally 
the chapel. This room presents several interesting 
problems and shows architectural features different 
from those in any other part of the building.’ As 
shown on the plan of 1694 the room measures 565 ft. 
in length from north to south, with a breadth at the 
north end of 21 ft. and 29 ft. at the south within the 
‘wing’ proper. It was lit by a pointed window of 


accepted, are worthy of attention and 
consideration. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


five lights and late Perpendicular tracery at the south 
end, and by a smaller pointed window of three lights 
at the south end of the east wall.!* The northern 
end of the room is lit by two of the ordinary square- 
headed mullioned windows on the west front. There 
was a door at the north-east corner leading to the 
quadrangle, and another near the south end of the 
east wall leading to a small room 12 ft. by g ft. with 
a vice in its eastern side giving access to a smaller 
room above. Apart from the ‘ecclesiastical’ appear- 
ance of the two pointed windows,!* the arrangement 
and peculiar features of the room certainly suggest 
that this was originally meant to be a chapel, though 
there are certain difficulties to be faced in accepting 
the conclusion, more especially Sir Richard’s reason for 
constructing a chapel of such importance at this time.'®6 
The southern part of the room, that contained in the 
south-west wing proper, goes up two stories and was 
34 ft. 6 in. in height. The northern end is of one 
story only 11 ft. high, the floor of the long gallery 
being continued over it to the west front. The two 
parts are divided by a lofty pointed arch, which still 
remains, though built up and partly hidden, which 
carried the south wall of the long gallery forward to 
the west. This arch is of two chamfered orders, dying 
into the wall at the springing, 3 ft. thick and 2g ft. 6 in. 
in height, the span being the full width of the north 
end of the room. The upper part of the arch, there- 
fore, opened into the west end of the long gallery. 
Assuming this to have been the chapel, with the altar 
below the window at the south end, we have the 
somewhat unusual arrangement of part of the long 
gallery itself being used as a tribune or gallery for the 
family during service, while the servants would occupy 
the floor below, entering from the door in the court- 
yard. The arch shows no sign of there ever having 
been a screen, but the stones cease to be smoothly 
faced at a point 3 ft. from the floor of the long gallery, 
suggesting that there was originally a balcony or gallery 
front of some sort in that position.!®” The small room 
on the east side would be the sacristy, from which the 
vice gave access directly to the long gallery itself, and 
from there by a second doorway to the small chamber 
over. From the sacristy there was an opening 4 ft. 
long by 3 ft. high divided by mullions, which from 
the slant of its jambs seems to suggest it was so built 
as to afford a direct view of the altar. There is also an 
opening from the chamber above. To the north of 
the ‘chapel,’ and between it and the gateway tower, 
was a room 21 ft. 6 in. by 21 ft., which has been 
termed the ‘priests’ room,’ but with what evidence 
to support it is not very apparent. The plan of 1694 
does not show any communication between the two 
rooms. ‘The ‘chapel’ is now divided into two rooms 
below the arch, the so-called ‘sanctuary’ now forming 
what is known as the Bailey room, and internally, 


18: It must be remembered that the 


except for the pointed windows, shows no architectural 
features of interest. 

The formation of the boys’ playground in front of 
the new college buildings on its south side has 
necessarily meant the loss of a large part of the 
17th-century gardens. The playground itself, which 
measures 580 ft. by 300 ft., was lowered from the 
level of the garden terrace before the new buildings 
were begun.!® Such parts of the old gardens as are 
left retain all the original charm of clipped yew 
hedges and well-ordered design. The two pavilions 
erected by Sir Nicholas Shireburne are exceedingly 
good examples of the garden architecture of the time. 
They are built of stone, and measure 17 ft. square 
outside with walls 2 ft. thick, and square-headed 
barred sash windows. The roofs form a graceful 
curve rising from a strongly-marked cornice, and are 
surmounted by gilded eagles in Portland stone. Of 
the leaden statues which formerly adorned the grounds 
only three remain, one of which, supposed to repre- 
sent Regulus under torture by the Carthaginians, 
now occupies the centre of the ‘ Observatory’ pond. 

The school was a great institution, formed by a 
distinguished history of two centuries, when it settled 
here, and, speedily recovering from its temporary mis- 
adventures, has added to its fame continually. New 
buildings have consequently been required, and have 
been added from time to time; the latest block, 
as above stated, was added piecemeal from 1877 to 
1889. The library is richly stored,! its nucleus 
consisting of books brought over from Lidge, which 
include a manuscript of St. John’s Gospel found in 
St. Cuthbert’s tomb in 1105, and not improbably 
transcribed by the saint himself !9!; also a printed 
book of Hours, supposed to have belonged to Mary 
Queen of Scots. The tenth Lord Arundell of 
Wardour, an ‘old boy,’ in 1834 left his library to 
the college,!®2 and Dr. John Vertue, Bishop of Ports- 
mouth (d. 1900), gave it a collection of early printed 
books. The buildings contain a large collection of 
paintings, old prints, medals, stuffed animals and 
miscellaneous curiosities. 

The Observatory, in the gardens, was begun in 
1838 ; a telescope was mounted in 1845, and in the 
same year the series of meteorological observations 
was begun. An underground chamber for magnetic 
observations was added in 1866. In 1865 a new 
room had been built for the larger telescope then 
mounted, and the station acquired some fame through 
the solar observations of Fr. Stephen Perry, who had 
charge of the place from 1868 to 1889. 

In addition to the college buildings proper, which 
include the Jesuit community house, there are a school 
for junior boys at Hodder House, some distance away, 
and a seminary called St. Mary’s Hall, devoted to philo- 
sophical studies of members of the Society of Jesus.!%3 


expressions ‘ south,’ ‘east,’ &c., are here 
approximate, following the usual custom 
of calling the south-west front ‘ west.’ 

185 The window now in the west wall 
is of course, as already mentioned, a later 
insertion, brought from elsewhere. 

186 Beauclerk, Stonyhurst Mag. (1885), 


94. 

1S" Thid. 97. 

153 Keating, Stonyhurst (1909), 51. 

189 For history and description see Foley, 
Rec. S. J. viiy p. xxxvi, &c.3; Baines, 
Lancs. Dir. 1826, ii, 560; P. Fitzgerald, 


Saxonhurst (illustrating the school life 
about 1850), and Stonyhurst Memories 
(1895); A. Hewitson, Svonyhurst; A. 
Rimmer, Stonyhurst IIllus.; J. Gerard, 
Stonyhurst Coll., 18943; G. Gruggen and 
J. Keating, Stonyhurst : its Past History and 
Life in the Present, 1901. Books of views 
have been issued. The Stonyhurst Mag., 
begun in May 1881, contains not only 
news of the school, but many articles 
upon the history and condition of the 
district ; e.g. a description of the fishery 
rights, with map ; i, 177. 

1” The collections are described in 


12 


Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. ii, 143 3 iii, 3343 
viii, App. i; x, App. iv. 

4191 Tt was owned by Thomas Allen of 
Oxford about 1620; N. and Q. (Ser. 6), 
vi, 486, 

192 His collection includes one volume 
of an early 15th-century MS. of Froissart ; 
the other volume is in the B.M. 

195 The paragraphs as to present-day 
Stonyhurst are derived from a notice pre- 
pared for the British Association visit in 
1903. Fuller accounts will be found in 
Fr. Gerard's Stonyhurst Coll., frequently 
quoted in these notes, 


Mirron: Sronynurst Gateway Tower 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED  wirron (PART OF) 


The following is a list of the rectors, who have 
since 1841 been lords of the manor also: 1794, 
Marmaduke Stone; 1808, Nicholas Sewall ; 1813, 
John Weld (son of the donor of the site) ; 1816, 
N. Sewall (2) ; 1817, Charles Plowden ; 18 19, Joseph 
Tristram ; 1827, Richard Norris ; 1832, Richard 
Parker ; 1836, James Brownbill ; 1839, Francis 
Daniel ; 1841, Andrew Barrow ; 1845, R. Norris (2) ; 
1846, Henry Walmesley ; 1847, Richard Sumner ; 
1848, Francis Clough; 1861, Joseph Johnson ; 
1868, Charles Henry; 1869, Edward Purbrick ; 
1879, William Eyre ; 1885, Reginald Colley ; 1891, 
Herman Walmesley ; 1898, Joseph Browne ; 1906, 
Pedro Gordon ; 1907, William Bodkin.!% 

WINKLE?V was part of the Hospitallers’ estate in 
Aighton and Bailey, which was treated as part of their 
manor of Stidd.!% There appear to have been 
several families surnamed Winkley. Adam son of 
Alexander de Winkley gave lands in Aighton to the 
Knights of St. John,!*° and Robert de Manneby, 
prior of the order in England, gave to Adam son of 
Richard de Winkley all the land they had of the 
gift of Adam de Winkley and others,!? and the re- 
mainder of their land in Winkley they gave to Robert 
son of John de Winkley ; each of the grantees was 
bound to render 2s. a year and the third part of their 
chattels at death.19° These estates appear to have 
been consolidated later, a rent of 4s. being paid. 

The descent can be traced only with uncertainty. 
In 1246 Ralph son of Robert de Mitton sued John 
de Winkley and his son Robert for 10 acres in 
Aighton which they had had from Simon de Green- 
hurst,'®° and a Richard de Winkley complained that 
a roadway had been interfered with by Richard de 
Daniscoles, Osbert his son and others.2% Robert de 
Winkley was living in 1278, holding land in Aighton 
which was claimed by Ralph de Mitton,2% and 


possibly it was the same Robert who appears in 
1292.7? Richard son of Robert de Winkley and 
Amery widow of William de Winkley were concerned 
in other pleas of the same year 03; but Robert was 
dead in 1294, when his widow Cecily and his sons 
Adam, Richard and Henry were accused of having 
disseised Nicholas son of William of messuages, land 
and rent in Aighton. Nicholas, a minor, alleged 
that his father was Robert’s eldest son, but it was 
found that the plaintiff was born out of wedlock.2™ 

Adam de Winkley was in 1318 pardoned for his 
adhesion to Thomas Earl of Lancaster.2%° John de 
Winkley in 1321 granted all his manor of Pleasington 
and his lands in Aighton to Adam his son and heir 
on marriage with Maud daughter of Gilbert de 
Scarisbrick.2°° Two years later Adam son of John 
de Winkley and Maud his wife exchanged a messuage, 
&c., in Winkley with John son of Walter de Bailey.2°7 
In 1332 Adam headed the subsidy list in Aighton.”8 
John son of Adam de Winkley gave land at Stonyhurst 
to John de Bailey for life in 1352,20 and in 1354, 
in conjunction with his son Adam, he had to defend 
his title to land in Aighton claimed by his brother 
or half-brother Adam, son of Adam de Winkley the 
elder by Margery, then deceased.2! Isabel widow of 
John in 1371 granted her son Adam the third part 
of lands and mill in Aighton.?!! 

Adam de Winkley seems to have been a minor in 
1371 but of full age in 1373.2 As Adam son of 
John son of Adam de Winkley he was party to an 
exchange of lands in 1376.75 He may have been 
the same Adam whose widow Margery in 1436 
released her lands in Aighton to John the son and 
heir of Adam.?# In the next year John Winkley 
granted lands to his son Thomas, who married 
Margaret daughter of Henry Holden of Bowland.?® 
John died in or before 1443,2!° and in 1447 Thomas 


14% Taken from Stonyhurst Chronology. 

195 Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 375. 
A list of the tenants in 1609 has been 
preserved by Kuerden (MSS. ii, fol. 1324). 
It includes in Aighton Thomas Winkley 
paying 4s., Edward Loude 6¢.; in 
Chaigley, Richard Aughton 12¢.; in 
various places, Richard Shireburne, pay- 
ing 11s. 6d. in all, of which sum 6d. was 
for a moiety of Bailey Hall. 

1% Winkley Family (1863), by William 
Winkley, jun., quoting ‘title deeds of 
Mr. Weld, 1861.’ Ellis son of Alexander 
de Winkley, probably Adam’s brother, has 
been mentioned in the text (at Stony- 
hurst) as living before 1209; Adam de 
Winkley and John his son are named in the 
charter to Ellis. Robert de Mitton early 
in the 13th century gave lands to John 
and to Adam sons of Adam de Winkley, 
viz. to the former all the land of Haracks 
(Horrocks) at arent of 12d., the rent 
paid in later times for Woodfields ; and 
to the latter land adjoining, Bradhurst 
and its brook occurring in each charter, 
and Ackhurst clough being named ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 672, 654. 
Geoffrey Dean of Whalley and Robert his 
son attested the former charter ; Ralph 
tector of Mitton and Jordan his son the 
latter. 

Eva daughter of Ralph de Aighton 
released to Richard son of Adam de 
Winkley all her claim in half an oxgang 
of land which Ellis son of Alexander had 
formerly held; ibid. no. 651. Among 
the witnesses were Jordan son of Ralph 
the rector and Nicholas his brother. This 


release was probably the close of a long- 
standing dispute, for as early as 1231 Eva 
daughter of Ralph de Aighton made claims 
against Adam de Winkley and others; 
Cal. Pat. 1225-32, pp. 446, 522. 

197 DD, no. 656. The bounds began 
at the head of Radwell ford, followed the 
thread of Ribble as far as the middle of 
Longflat, and by various lines to the 
starting-point. Land called Thuwes and 
Morton brook are named. 

Robert de Manneby was prior in 1251 
and 12623; Dugdale, Mon. Angi. vi, 799. 

195 DD, no. 655. The bounds began 
at Horrockford and went down the 
Hodder and Ribble to Longflat, across the 
meadow to Blakeayke and the lower head 
of Hesceteley, then by the carr and 
Simonscroft to Hamelin’s land and Raven 
ridding as far as the Stony way ; by this 
to the Hodder. 

199 Assize R. 404, m.§d. John de 
Winkley (perhaps the son of Adam) gave 
lands to his son Robert, the mill on the 
Hodder being mentioned ; DD, no. 671. 

200 Assize R. 404, m. 6d. Other 
Winkleys are named ibid, m.2, 11, 11 d., 
14. The name has many spellings— 
Winkedelega, Wynkydele, &c. Winckley 
was the usual form of the surname in 
the 17th century. 

201 Assize R. 1238, m. 353 also De 
Banco R. 31, m. 93- 

20? Assize R. 408, m. 32, 94. 

203 Ibid. m. 6, 32d. Richard son of 
Adam de Winkley is also named ; ibid. 
m. 77d. 

204 Assize R. 1299, m. 14; Adam had 


13 


been in the service of Robert de la Garde 
at Warwick. William’s widow was named 
Amery. She was plaintiff in 1304 (De 
Banco R. 149, m. 63 d.), and against the 
widow and daughter of Henry de Winkley 
in 1311; ibid. 189, m. gd. In 1321 
Margaret widow of another William de 
Winkley and of Robert Atte Hall claimed 
a messuage, &c., against Margaret widow 
of Adam Banastre ; ibid. 240, m, 20. 

205 Cal. Pat. 1317-21, p. 230. 

206 DD, no. 64.9, 663. Though Adam 
was heir of John de Winkley, another 
son John succeeded to Pleasington (see 
the account of that manor), and in 1344 
there was some disputing between the 
brothers ; Assize R. 1435, m. 34. 

207 DD, no. 644. Adam son of John 
de Winkley was defendant in a Great 
Mearley claim in 1331 ; Assize R. 1404, 
m. 18, 

08 Exch. Lay Subs. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), 79. 

209 DD, no. 648. In the same year 
John de Winkley was defendant in a 
Great Mearley claim; Duchy of Lance. 
Assize R. 1, m. iij ; 2, m. vj. 

210 De Banco R. 381,m.110d.; Duchy 
of Lanc. Assize R. 3, m. ij. William de 
Boston, vicar of Mitton, was called to 
warrant. 311 DD, no. 658. 

°1? Cf, De Banco. R. 444, m. 9 d.; 450, 
m, 214. 

213 DD, no. 670. 

215 Tbid. no. 660-1. 

16 Thid. no. 6733 his widow Joan 
agreed with her son as to dower, Margery, 
widow of Adam, being still alive. 


M4 Thid, no, 662. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


his son and heir made a feoffment of all his lands and 
the reversion of those held by his mother Joan.?!’ 
Thomas Winkley was still living in 1479, when he 
allowed Richard Catterall to 
make an attachment (perhaps 
for a mill stream) over his 
land to the water of Ribble 
near its junction with the 
Hodder 218 ; but his son and 
heir Geoffrey had in 1463 
married Isabel daughter of 
Alice and Alexander Nowel,?!9 
and was living some time 
later, when he demised land 
called Horrockfields.?*” 

Next appears Roger Wink- 
ley, with Margaret his wife, 
in 1508.7! He lived on till 
1556, when by his will he 
left his ‘capital or manor house called Winkley 
Hall’ to his then wife Jane for her life.°? His 
son Anthony had in 1546 demised Woodfelds in 
Aighton to his brother Roger.*** Anthony died 
in 1566 seised of the capital messuage called Winkley 
Hall in Aighton and 30 acres of land, held of the 
queen as of the late monastery of St. John of Jeru- 
salem in England by a rent of 4s. for all services ; 
also half an oxgang of land and a messuage called 
Woodfields, held of Sir Richard Shireburne by the 
fortieth part of a knight’s fee and }¢. rent and by 
12d. rent respectively. Nicholas Winkley the son 
and heir was forty years of age.**4 A pedigree was 
recorded in 1613,7*> but the main line of the family 
was extinct by 1664.?° Roger Winkley, son of Thomas 
son of Nicholas, seems to have succeeded to the estates 
before 1615, when Toby Archbishop of York gave him 
licence to construct a pew in Mitton Church adjoining 
the old quire of Richard Shireburne.?** William 
Winkley of Winkley, occurring 1641 to 1652, appears 
to have been the last of the name in possession.?*8 


Wingtey of Wink- 
ley. Per pale argent 
and gules an eagle dis- 
played counterchanged. 


Winkley was held in 1696 by Sarah widow of 
Thomas Lacy, and she sold it to Sir Nicholas Shire- 


_burne.?29 It descended like Stonyhurst until 1828, 


when Thomas Weld sold it to James Wilkinson. 
Farms called Jumbles and Boat-house, parts perhaps 
of the original Winkley, had become included in the 
Walmsley of Dunkenhalgh estate and were in 1827 
sold by George Petre to the same James Wilkinson. 
His daughter married a Macdonnell, and her son 
James in 1879 sold the estate to Mr. William 
Walmsley Simpson, the present owner.” 

Winkley Hall, now a farm-house, stands in a low 
situation on the right bank of the Hodder im- 
mediately above its junction with the Ribble, but 
is a house of no architectural interest, having been 
entirely modernized and altered from its original 
appearance. It is a two-story stone building with 
thick walls facing east to the river, but its only ancient 
features are two windows of 17th-century date at the 
back, of five and three lights respectively with tran- 
soms and hood moulds, and a low one of the same 
date in the northern end gable. 

CRAWSHAW in Aighton was part of the estate of 
the Clitheroes of Bailey.?8! It was in the 17th 
century tenanted by Richard Holden, younger brother 
of John Holden of Chaigley, probably the recusant of 
that name who had his lands sequestered by the 
Commonwealth ; on his death in 1652 the trustees 
for his infant children desired a discharge.?°? The 
place comes into note through an outrage illustrative 
of those days. A priest was beheaded at Chapel House 
Farm in Chaigley whilst in the act of saying mass 
there. The head was thrown over the fence into an 
adjoining field and Mrs. Holden of Crawshaw 
gathered it into her apron and took it into her house, 
and secured also the objects in the chapel at the time— 
missal, altar cloth, vestments, candles, &c.—and they 
have been preserved as relics by the family.?94 

Morton, an early place-name, seems to have been 
in Aighton.?*4 A local family used Aighton itself as 


217 Towneley MS. DD, no. 653. 

1\5 Thid. no. 650. 219 Tbid. no. 763. 

£" Thid. no. 665. 

=! Thid. no. 674, 647. In the re 
corded pedigree Roger is said to have 
been a son of Thomas. 

22 Winkley Family. 
proved in 1557. 

23 DD, no. 669. 

24 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xi, no. 28. 
A settlement of the manor of Winkley 
with various messuages and land:, a 
water-mill and a free fishery in the Hodder 
and Ribble was made by Nicholas Winkley 
in 1567 ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 29, 
m. 12. Only a year later a similar settle- 
ment was made by Thomas Winkley the 
younger (son of Nicholas, according to the 
pedigree), with remainders to his uncles 
Henry and Thomas; ibid. bdle. 30, 
m. 146. Another was made in 1586, the 
deforciants being Thomas Winkley, Cecily 
his wife, Henry Winkley, Jane his wife, 
and Nicholas son and heir of Henry; 
ibid. bdle. 48, m. 114. 

In 1589 Anthony Isherwood of Chaig- 
ley and Anne his wife, a daughter of 
Nicholas Winkley, complained that the 
legacy due to her was withheld by Henry 
Winkley and other feoffees ; Duchy of 
Lane. Plead. Eliz., cl., I 1. 

The will of Henry Winkley (of Wood- 
fields), dated 1589 and proved 1590, is 
printed in Wintley Family, no. 3. 


The will was 


3% Visir, of 1613 (Chet. Soc.), 383 
deeds are referred toin the margin. Roger 
Winklry, the son and heir of Thomas, 
was thirty-eight years old. 

2-8 Dugdale, /isit, (Chet. Soc.), 334. 

237 UN inkley Family. 

32° He was a creditor of Gabriel Hes- 
keth of Goosnargh ; Royalist Comp. Papers 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 188. 
According to a pedigree in the Shireburne 
Abstract Bk., Roger Winkley, living in 
1649, had a granddaughter Martha 
(daughter of his son Roger) and a nephew 
William Winkley of Billington, no doubt 
the William named in the text. 

29 Shireburne Abstract Bk. ; the brief 
details given do not show how she came 
to own it. She had a son John Mitchell 
by another husband, and Thomas Lacy 
had a son Roger. 

330 Information of Mr. Simpson and 
his solicitor, Mr. S. Sandeman. 

Myles Macdonnell occurs (either as 
purchaser or trustee) in 1836, while in 
1843 Miss Wilkinson was the daughter 
and representative of James; End. Char. 
Rep. Her children in 1875 were James 
Macdonnell and Mary Jane Nelson, 
widow. 

*81 Robert de Clitheroe, clerk, granted 
a pasture called Crawshaw in Bailey to 
Richard son of Henry de Clitheroe and 
John his son ; Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

32 Royalist Comp. Papers iii, 236. George 


14 


Holuen, killed at Usk, when in the king’s 
service in the war, is supposed to have 
been of this family ; Gillow, Bid/. Dict. of 
Engl. Cath, iii, 330, 340. Richard 
Holden, a descendant, registered an estate 
in 1717 a8 a ‘Papist’; Estcourt and 
Payne, op. cit. 102. 

288 Pal, Note-bk. ii, 127 5 from family 
traditions. It is not known who the 
priest was. The relics were kept with 
great secrecy at Crawshaw until the 
establishment of the Jesuits at Stonyhurst, 
when they began to be shown. They 
were in 1887 in possession of the Holdens 
of Hill House in Woodplumpton, and an 
elaborate description is printed in the 
Stonyhurst Mag. of that year (Nov.). A 
stained altar-cloth has the initials E H 
(or P H) embroidered on it. One of the 
chasubles is inscribed: ‘Orate pro ani- 
mabus Oliveri Wastlei et Ellene uxoris 
ejus.’ The missal (1570) once belonged 
to Dt. Henry Holden; it bears the 
words: ‘Dieses gehirt unserm Marter 
und unserm lieben Pfilp.’ The Wastleys 
appear to have been a Chorley family. 

334 Almarica daughter of Siward de 
Morton complained in 1276 of disseisin 
of her free tenement in Morton and 
Aighton by Godith de Riddings and 
others; Assize R. 405, m. 43 1238, 
m.31d.; De Banco R. 27, m. 26d. As 
heir of her aunt Sibyl daughter of Gamel 
de Morton she in 1284 claimed 2 acresin 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED | yprron (PART OF) 


a surname.255 The Reads were long connected with 
this part of the township.”% 

CHAIGLEY was originally included in the manor 
of Aighton, the lords of the latter holding it.°87 
Thus in 1347 Roger son of John de Mitton claimed 
five messuages, &c., in Chaigley against Sir John de 
Harrington, Katherine his wife, Sir Thomas de Arderne, 
Agnes widow of Sir Robert de Horncliff, Robert 
son of Robert de Shireburne, Robert de Morley and 
Hugh de Bradford. It appeared that Margaret 
Banastre was formerly in possession and that her four 
daughters had succeeded, viz. Katherine, Alice, Agnes 
and Joan ; also that one Thomas Talbot had held a 
moiety of the property in dispute, but had died. 
The estate included rents of two pairs of white gloves 
and two barbed arrows.?°8 

The principal family was that of Holden,”%® and 

their estate was regarded asa manor. Amabel widow 
of Jordan de Mitton granted lands in Aighton to her 
daughter Cecily, the rent being a pair of white 
gloves and the bounds extending to Longridge on 
the west.749 John son of Jordan de Mitton con- 
firmed to the said Cecily his sister the lands of his 
mother’s gift, they being described as in Chaigley in 
Aighton.”4! Cecily married Henry de Holden,? 
but the descent cannot be clearly traced. The above 
Roger de Mitton in 1347 claimed various messuages 
and lands in Aighton against Henry de Blackburn, 
Mary his wife, Ralph de Holden and John his son.?4% 
In 1365 the feoffees granted certain lands to Ralph de 
Holden and Maud his daughter, with remainder to 
John his son,*4* while John soon afterwards released 
to his father and sister lands in Bailey near the 
Daniscoles.?4° 


Elizabeth daughter of John de Holden and heir of 


widow in 1393 ; she afterwards married a Richard de 
Holden, by whom she had sons John, Henry and 
Geoffrey and three daughters, settlements being made 
in 1405 and 1420.48 Richard Holden of Witton 
in 1445 released to John Holden all right to lands 
in Aighton, Bailey and Chaigley formerly owned by 
Ralph de Holden and Mand his daughter.*47 John 
Holden the elder?® occurs in various deeds from 
1468 to 1491; in the latter year he set apart lands 
for the use of Elizabeth daughter of Lawrence 
Asshaw, who was to marry Thomas son and heir of 
John Holden the younger.” 

Thomas’s heir in 1514 was his brother John, 
rector of St. Mary’s, Cricklade, who granted lands to 
his brother and heir Ralph husband of Elizabeth 
daughter of Richard Hancock. Ralph in 1522-3 
made a settlement on his son John’s marriage with 
Alice daughter of Thomas Grimshaw,”! and Ralph 
and his son John occur again as late as 1557, when 
they granted an annuity of 20s. to Henry and 
William, other sons of Ralph.%? John Holden 
succeeded soon afterwards, selling land in Aighton 
and Bailey to Sir Richard Shireburne in 1560 7° and 
in the next year arranging for the marriage of his son 
Richard.?54 

Richard Holden, Jane his then wife and Richard 
his son and heir in 1596 agreed to the levying 
of a fine of certain lands in Aighton, Bailey and 
Chaigley ° ; Richard Holden was a freeholder in 
1600.8 John Holden of Chaigley, son and heir of 
Richard and Isabel his wife, in 1623 sold Clough 
House a/ias Grubbe Hall in Grindleton to Richard 
Shireburne of Stonyhurst.257 John died in 1637 
holding a capital messuage in Chaigley and other 
lands, &c., of the heirs of Amabel de Mitton in 


her brother, another John, occurs in 1379 and as 


Aighton against William son of William 
atte Hall, and he called Ralph de Morton 
to warrant him; Assize R. 1265, m. 4d. 
She afterwards married Robert de Spend- 
low of Morton, and they were engaged in 
various suits in 1292; Assize R. 408, 
m. 21 d. 32 d. From one it appears 
that her brother was Jordan de Aighton ; 
ibid. m. 67. 

35 Ralph son of Nicholas de Aighton 
was plaintiff in 1253; Cur. Reg. R. 148, 
m. 44. Maud the widow and Thomas 
the son of Ellis de Aighton claimed dower 
and land in Aighton in 1274 against Ralph 
de Mitton; Assize R. 1341, m. 6d, 5. 
John son of Alan de Aighton summoned 
Ralph de Mitton to warrant a charter in 
12923 Assize R. 408, m. 32d. 

236 In 1292, John de Read of Aighton 
claimed common of pasture against Henry 
son of Robert del Ash, but it was shown 
that Margery widow of Ralph de Mitton 
held part in dower, and plaintiff was non- 
suited ; Assize R. 408, m. 35 d. 

Robert Read died in 1610 holding 

“lands in Aighton and Bailey of Richard 
Shireburne by a rent of 45.3; Lancs. Ing. 
p.m. (Rec, Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 176. 
His son and heir Richard, then aged 
twelve, died in 1638, leaving a son Robert, 
sixteen years old, to inherit ; Towneley 
MS. C8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 1000. 

237 Ralph de Mitton in 1246 had 
20 acres in Chaigley, claimed by Jordan 
son of Ralph; Assize R. 404, m. 5d. 
After 1290 Ralph son of John de Mitton 
confirmed to Thomas le Sureys (Southron) 
various lands in Chaigley for life; Dods. 


MSS. xci, fol. 161. 
was a witness. 

Robert de Shireburne, Robert de Horn- 
cliff, John de Harrington the younger 
and Thomas de Arderne were plaintiffs 
against various persons in 1331, a house 
in Chaigley having been broken into; 
De Banco R. 286, m. 159. 

238 Assize R. 1435, m. 18. 

239 A collection of Holden deeds is 
preserved in Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. 
Lib.), 562-78. Some of the family deeds 
are in the possession of Mr. Fitzherbert- 
Brockholes of Claughton. 

240 Tbid. 875. The ‘land of William 
Loud’ is named. 

241 Thid. ; Robert and Adam de Holden 
were witnesses. Amabel was living in 
1284 and 12913; Assize R. 1268, m. 12. 

242 De Banco R. 91, m. 34. d.5 92, m. 
67. 24 Ibid. R. 351, m. 23d. 

24 C 8, 13, Ps $73- 

245 Thid, 563. 

246 Thid. 563-6. Geoffrey, bastard son 
of the younger John, is named. The 
1420 deed names ‘Loud’s lands,’ Green- 
gore in Bailey and Harrelegh in Aighton. 
Some Loud family deeds may be seen 
ibid. 798 and Add. MS. 32106, no. 1190, 

Elizabeth's husband may have been the 
Richard son of Richard de Holden who 
made a feoffment of his lands in 1383 ; 
C8, 13, p. 562. Adam son of Randle 
de Bailey in 1412 gave to trustees lands 
which he had had of the feoffment of 
John son of John son of Randle (Ralph) 
de Holden ; ibid. 144. 

%7 Thid. 566. John Holden of Aigh- 


1s 


Henry de Holden 


socage by the rent of a pair of white gloves. 


Mary 


ton occurs in 1443 and 1465; Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R.. 5, m. 66; 27, m. 22, 

248 In 1468 Robert Shireburne the 
younger of Stonyhurst regranted to John 
Holden the elder lands in Aighton, &c.; 
C8, 13, p. 567. Four years later John 
son of Richard Holden and Margaret his 
wife (daughter of Richard Loud) granted 
Mickle Greengore to John Holden the 
elder ; ibid. John Holden the elder in 
1488 confirmed Little Greengore in 
Bailey to Robert, Henry, Richard, Wil- 
liam, Thomas and Katherine, children of 
Richard Holden lately deceased; ibid. 568. 

249 Thid. 569. 250 Thid. 570. 

261 Ibid. 253 Thid. 575. 

*68 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 22, 
m. III. 

254 C 8, 13, p. 5713 Richard was to 
marry Anne daughter of Roger Nowell 
of Read. John Holden, Margaret his 
then wife and Richard his son occur in 
1584; ibid. 575. Thomas was a younger 
son ; ibid. 576. : 

255 Tbid. 578 ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 59, m. 233. Jane afterwards mar- 
tied John Shireburne of Bailey ; C8, 13, 
p- 577- Richard the father made a lease 
of land in Stonyhurst Park to younger 
sons Thoma’ and John, but they resigned 
to their brother Richard in 1598 ; ibid. 


74: 

356 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 236. Richard had three sons—John 
the heir, named in the text, Henry the 
theologian and Richard of Crawshaw ; 
W. A. Abram in Preston Guardian, Oct. 
1874. 257 C8, 13, Pe 577+ 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


his daughter and heir was fifteen years of age. 
She married Thomas Brockholes of Claughton, and 
Chaigley was sold to Richard Shireburne in 1655.7" 
From that time it descended 
like Stonyhurst till about 1840, 

when it was sold to William 

Winstanley. It has descended BaP oy 
to his grandson, Mr. William 
Alfred Winstanley, who is 
called lord of the manor of 
Chaigley.?* 

Overholme in Chaigley is 
named in 1583 7! and Kyt- 
ridding in 1600.78 

BAILEY also was properly 
a member of Aighton, as 
appears from charters already 
quoted, but it had greater in- 
dependence than Chaigley and 
was accounted a manor. It gave a name to one or 
more families, probably descendants of the Mittons,?* 
including that which, as has been seen, took Shire- 
burne as a surname. It is not possible to trace the 
minor families.?°4 

Henry de Clayton 28 acquired land in Bailey in 
1284 from Adam de Edieles and Christiana his wife; 
it was to be held by the render of a clove gillyflower 
yearly to Christiana or her heirs.2°° He then ex- 
changed it for a messuage, land and the moiety of a 
water-mill held by William de Winkley and Amery 
his wife.287 Henry was in 1290 summoned to 
warrant the tenant of certain land in which dower 


WiINSTANLEY of 
Chaigley. Or rcv bars 
azure in chief three 
crosses formy gules, 


was claimed by Alice widow of John de Bailey.?** 
Philip de Clayton in 1338 made a settlement of a 
messuage and land in Bailey and Dutton ; the re- 
mainder was to his son Robert, who had married 
Isabel.28° Isabel, as widow of Robert, was plaintiff 
in 1345.770 

The Knights Hospitallers had, as already noted,””! 
an estate in this part of the township. About 1300 
it was acquired by Robert de Clitheroe, one of the 
king’s clerks and rector of Wigan 1303-34.777 Sir 
Adam de Clitheroe, apparently in consequence of 
some dispute, carried off a large quantity of cattle, 
provisions, furnishings and books from the manor- 
house of Bailey in 1332.778 When in 1330 Robert 
desired to give his ‘ manor of Bailey’ to Cockersand 
Abbey it was found that the said manor was held of 
the Prior of St. John in England by the service of 
18d. yearly ; the prior held it in perpetual alms of 
the Lady Isabel, queen of England, as of the honor 
of Clitheroe, she holding of the king by knight’s 
service. The yearly value was £6 135. 44.274 This 
benefaction was not carried through, the chantry 
being founded instead. Robert, who had many 
disputes concerning his lands,?”® in 1334 gave his 
manor of Bailey to Henry de Clitheroe.?”6 

In 1350 the feoffee of Henry de Clitheroe granted 
to Edmund the son of Henry and his wife Eleanor 
daughter of Sir Nicholas Boteler certain lands in 
Bailey, with remainders to Hugh son of Sir Adam de 
Clitheroe, Nicholas son of Sir Roger de Clitheroe and 
Richard son of Thomas de Knowle.?”7_ The next in 
possession, about 1378, was Nicholas de Clitheroe 7” , 


258 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxx, 
no. 73. 

259 Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

360 Family monuments are in Preston 
Unitarian Church; Hewitson, Preston, 
517. There is a pedigree in Burke's 
Landed Gentry. 

%\ Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 260. 

762 Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), iii, 458. 

%8 Whalley Couch. (Chet. Soc.), iii, 680. 

264 The following notes may be of use. 
Otes de Bailey and Walter his son attested 
a charter in the early part of the 13th 
century ; Towneley MS. DD, no. 654. 
Ralph son of Walter de Bailey granted 
2 acres in the vill of Bailey to Alexander 
son of William de Elland, the grant being 
attested by Walter de Bailey and John 
his son ; Add. MS. 32107, no. g21, 875. 
John son of Walter de Bailey granted 
liberty of mill to Adam ‘ Wittandefot,’ 
and John de Bailey, probably the same 
person, gave land to Adam son of Adam 
‘Waltandefot,’ his charter naming the 
“land of Otes my brother.’ 

In 1284 inquiry was made as to whether 
Otes de Bailey had had a rent of 9s. 3d. 
from Aighton claimed by his son John 
(a minor) by Amice de Bradley ; Assize 
R. 1265,m.21d. The occupiers’ names 
are given. In 1291 John son of Otes de 
Bailey had a dispute as to inheritance 
with Henry son of Robert the Miller; 
Assize R. 1294, m. 11d. In the follow- 
ing year Cecily daughter of Otes de Bailey 
claimed chattels to the value of 48s. 
from his executors—John son of Avice 
(? Amice) de Hayhurst and Ralph de 
Bailey ; Assize R. 408, m. 10. 

In 1292 also Richard Pleyndamours 
and Alice his wife demanded the third 
part of messuages, mill, land and rent in 
Aighton against Avice formerly the wife 


of Otes (Eudo) de Bailey and John her 
son (a minor), &c. Alice had been wife 
of John de Bailey, but had left him to 
live with Richard ; having returned and 
teen reconciled to her husband before his 
death her claim was allowed; ibid. m. 56 d. 
The same Richard and Alice were defen- 
dants to a claim by Adam sn of Richard 
son of John de Bailey; ibid. m. ro. 
Robert son of John de Bailey was plain- 
tiff in 1285 and 12913 Assize R. 1271, 
m. 11d.3 1294, m. 9. 

265 See the account of Dutton. 

266 Final Conc, i, 161. 

367 Tbid. i, 162. In 1292 Amery widow 
of William de Winkley claimed a mes- 
suage and land in Aighton as daughter 
and heir of John de Bailey. The defen- 
dants were Thomas de Greengore and 
Maud his wife ; Assize R. 408, m. 6. 

28 De Banco R. 82, m. 52d. Henry 
de Clayton was defendant in 1291 ; ibid. 
89, m. 28. 269 Final Cone. ii, 109. 

20 De Banco R. 343, m. 102. 

U1 See Winkley. 

73Jn 1299 Robert was plaintiff 
respecting lands in Aighton and Bailey, 
the defendants being Jordan Moody and 
Jordan de Bailey; De Banco R. 126, m. 
130d, In 1301 he purchased messuages 
and land in Bailey and Clitheroe from 
John son of Roger de Bolton and Cecily 
his wife, soon afterwards securing an 
oxgang and a half of land, &c., from 
William son of Nicholas de Mitton; 
Final Conc. i, 198. Another acquisition 
was from Edmund Talbot ; Shireburne 
Abstract Bk. 

278 Coram Rege R. 293, m. 52d. A 
detailed list is given of the goods carried 
off, including cattle, horse, barley, oats, 
salt beef and fish, brass pots, a ‘ wyndon 
shete and canevace’ for winnowing corn, 
frying pan and roast iron, carpets, cushions, 


16 


“canevaces’ for the lord’s bed, cross-bow 
with sixteen quarrels, wagon, hammers, 
saw, ‘resting wimbel,’ a ‘grouell,’ pitch- 
fork, &c.; valuable resins called ‘le 
Rose,’ ‘ipomadon,’ ‘athie and prophilias,’ 
‘isope,’ ‘luodarie,’ ‘troye’ and ‘breton’ ; 
a psalter glossed, missal, legendary, grayle, 
vestment, altar towels, censer, phials, 
cross of latten, and other things in the 
chapel. 

24 Ing. p.m. 4 Edw. III (2nd nos.), 
no. 106, 

275 In 1327 Robert complained that 
Margaret widow of Adam Banastre had 
impounded his plough cattle; De Banco 
R. 272, m. 79. For minor disputes see 
ibid. 199, m. 462 d.3 Coram Rege R. 
292,m. 17. In 1334 it was alleged that 
Sir Adam de Clitheroe, then dead, had 
retained John de Bailey and others to 
make claims against him, but John was 
able to show a pardon from the king 
dated at Berwick 26 July 13333; ibid. 
297, Rex m. 20. 

Sir Adam had claimed the ‘manor of 
Bailey’ from Robert in 1332, the defence 
being that Bailey was in Aighton and not 
in Clitheroe. Adam was the son of 
Hugh de Clitheroe, who was stated tohave 
had possession in the time of Edward 1; 
De Banco R. 290, m. 116; 291, m. 149. 
John son of Adam de Clitheroe in the 
same year claimed *a messuage, &c., 
in Aighton against Robert de Clitheroe 
and many others. The defence was 
noteworthy—that there was no vill in 
Lancashire called ‘Aghton’ without an 
adjunct ; Assize R. 1411, m. 12. 

276 Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

%7 Dods. MSS. cliii, fol. 1016. Edmund 
de Clitheroe granted a lease in 13513 
Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

28 Isabel widow of Henry de Clitheroe 
released her dower to him. 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED wrrron carr oF) 


he was son of Edmund.?”8 He occurs down to 
1430,28 and was succeeded by a son Robert,?8! who 
in 1443 was summoned to answer Robert Shireburne 
and Alice his wife, widow of Sir William Hoghton, 
as to a bond dated 1432 for the marriage of Richard 
his son and heir to Margaret Hoghton, daughter of 
Alice. Richard had by inheritance lands in Cumber- 
halgh and Preston, formerly John de Singleton’s.8? 
Richard son of Robert Clitheroe and Alice his wife 
made a feoffment in 1459—60.283 

Thomas Clitheroe was in possession in 1468 when 
he presented to Bailey Chapel ; in 1474 he in con- 
junction with Elizabeth his wife received from feoftees 
the manor of Bailey.*8! He made a settlement of 
his estates in 1504~5,8 and was within two years 
succeeded by his son Robert, who then granted Bailey 
Hall to his mother Ellen.8° Ralph son of Richard 
Clitheroe was in possession by 1544 287 ; he died in 
Angust 1556 holding Crawshaw, Walshman’s Croft in 
Bailey, &c., of Sir Richard Shireburne by a rent of 
5. 1d. ; also lands in Goosnargh and Whittingham. 
His heirs were his father’s three sisters or their repre- 
sentatives, viz. Isabel wife of John Halstead, aged 
seventy, aunt; Joan daughter of John Blakeden, 
thirty, cousin ; and George son of Mary Franks, 
thirty, cousin.” Ralph had, however, just before 
his death sold all his lands to Sir Richard Shire- 
burne,”8° who appears to have made arrangements 
with members of the family and others.290 

This manor descended with Stonyhurst until 1831, 
when it was sold by Cardinal Weld to Joseph 


Fenton.29!_ It has since descended with Dutton. 
No courts are held. 

A family named Ash had for several centuries an 
estate in Bailey and Aighton.”®? Ralph de Bailey 
granted land in Bailey to Robert son of John de Ash, 
to be held by 6¢. rent,?°3 and Ralph de Mitton 
made another grant to Robert de Ash and Henry 
his son at 2s. rent.294 ‘These rents were still payable 
in the 17th century, but there is not material avail- 
able to show the descent completely.29° Hugh Ash 
died in 1554 seised of messuages and lands in Dutton, 
Ribchester, Aighton and Bailey, those in the last- 
named township being held of the king and queen as 
of their manor of Clitheroe. George, the son and 
heir, was only a year old. Edward Ash of Clough 
Bank died in 1609 holding lands in Aighton and 
Bailey of Richard Shireburne by rents of 2s. and 6d. 
respectively ; his heir, his son Robert, was fifty-eight 
years old.97 

A younger branch of the Shireburnes was designated 
‘of Bailey.’ Richard Shireburne of Bailey Hall— 
probably lessee—was a younger son of the Hugh 
Shireburne of Stonyhurst who died in 1528; he 
died about 1580.78 A descendant, also named 
Richard, was outlawed for high treason in 1715, 
having talen part in the Jacobite rising.°° Sir Edward 
Sherburne, the poet (1618-1702), is usually supposed 
to have been of the Bailey line.3° 

An early place-name was Greengore in the northern 
half of Bailey.2°! In 1314 Thomas del Greengore 
confirmed to Adam his son certain land in Bailey, 


279 See note 281 below. 

80 He presented to Bailey chantry in 
1421. He gave leases of Bailey Hall in 
1407 and 14303 Gerard, op. cit. 49, 50 
(from Leagram and Stonyhurst D.). In 
1403 he entailed his lands in the 
counties of Nottingham, York and 
Lancaster ; Shireburne Abstract Bk. 
The chief residence of the family appears 
to have been at Auckley, to the east of 
Doncaster, on the border of Notts. 

Robert de Hoghton in 1407 held 4 
acres in Aighton of Nicholas Clitheroe of 
Bailey by 4d. rent ; Ing. a.q.d. file 438, 
no. 26. Among the Hoghton deeds are 
grants of land in Bailey and Aighton 
from Richard son of John de Bailey to 
Adam de Hoghton, &c.; Dods. MSS. 
exlii, fol. 604, 55. 

331 Robert son and heir of Nicholas 
Clitheroe and grandson of Edmund 
occurs in 1444 3 Towneley MS. C 8, 13, 
p- 282. He married Margaret daughter 
of John de Singleton ; Shireburne Ab- 
stract Bk. 

782 Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 5, m. 15. 
Robert Clitheroe in 1447-8 gave Bailey 
Hall on lease to Richard Crombleholme ; 
Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

%88 Ibid. Richard was living in 1466 
and Alice his widow 1473 ; ibid. 

284 Ibid. 

285 Ibid. The will of Thomas Clitheroe 
(wrongly described as incumbent of 
Mitton) is given in Baines’ Lancs. (ed. 
1870), ii, tor. 

286 Ibid. Robert presented to Bailey 
Chapel in 1517 and was living in 1521. 

Robert Rushton of Walsall claimed 
the manor called Bailey Hall in right of 
his wife Ellen in 1518; Duchy of Lanc. 
Plead. Hen. VIII, iii, R 1. From a 
plea of 1531 it appears that Henry 
Alston had demised the manor of Bailey 
Hall to Edward Halstead for the life of 


7 


Ellen Rishton, widow, who had a rent of 
£6 16s. 8d. from it; Pal. of Lane 
Plea R. 153, m. 15d. 

287 Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

88 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. x, no, 26. 

A moiety of the manor of Bailey was 
in 1549 granted to Robert Low by Ralph 
Clitheroe, together with lands in Bailey 
and Goosnargh ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 13, m. 102. 

289 Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

290 In 1557 Sir Richard purchased a 
moiety of nine messuages, &c., in Aighton 
and Bailey from Robert Clitheroe ; Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 17, m. 21. In 
1574 he purchased nine messuages, &c.y 
from George Green; ibid. bdle. 36, m. 
280. In the following year he obtained 
a considerable estate in Aighton, Bailey 
and Whittingham from John Hopwood ; 
ibid. bdle. 37,m. 57. A further purchase 
was made in 1§90 from John Halstead 
in Aighton, Bailey, Winkley, Haighton 
and Goosnargh ; ibid. bdle. 52, m. 51. 
Also a smaller one in 1593 from John 
Burgoyne esquire in Aighton, Chaigley and 
Bailey ; ibid. bdle. 55, m. 153. The 
‘manor’ of Bailey is not mentioned 
subsequently, except as part of the 
Shireburne estate. 

91 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1836), ili, 371. 

292 Deeds are in Add. MS. 32107, no. 
874-930. 

298 Ibid. no. 930. Ralph de Bailey 
also granted land in the vill of Bailey to 
Robert son of John de Ash, who married 
Cecily daughter of Roger de Heyhurst 
(in Dutton) ; ibid. no. 883, 899. 

994 Thid. no. 925. 

295 Adam son of Adam Walkandfot in 
1292 claimed a tenement in Bailey and 
Dutton against Richard son of Robert de 
Ash; Assize R. 408, m. 42. In 1304 
Robert de Clitheroe claimed account 
against Richard de Ash, his bailiff, and 


17 


in 1327 against two of the name, the 
elder and younger; De Banco R. 152, 
m. 181d.3 268, m. 34. 

Richard de Ashes the elder was 
defendant in a claim for land in Aighton 
put forward by Ralph son of Jordan 
Moody in 1334; Coram Rege R. 297, 
m. 16d. In 1338 Richard de Ash gave 
land in Bailey to his son Robert ; Add. 
MS. 32107, no. 898. Robert is described 
as ‘of Dutton’ in 1341 (ibid. no. 896) 
and in 1346 he obtained land in Aighton 
from William de Wormstall and Margaret 
his wife; ibid. no. 882. It appears 
William and Margaret (in her right) held 
an oxgang of land in Aighton which they 
sold in 1335 to Henry son of Robert del 
Hall ; Final Cone. ii, 98. 

John de Ash seems to have followed 
about the time of Richard II. His son 
Richard married Margery daughter of 
Thomas del Ridding, and she in 1439, 
as widow of John de Whalley, had held 
lands of Richard de Shireburne by a 
rent of 2s. Thomas Ridding was her 
brother and heir; Add. MS. 32107, no. 
874, 895, 886. For the Whalley family 
see Final Conc. ili, 75. 

Thomas Ash in 1456 had a tenement 
called Hurst in Aighton; Add. MS. 
32107, no. 894. 

296 Duchy of Lane. Inq. p.m. x, no. 35. 

297 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 165. 

298 His will of that date is printed by 
C. D. Sherborn, op. cit. 71, and an 
account of the family follows. Some 
other wills are printed in Wills (Chet. 
Soc. new ser.}, ti, 159, 179. 

29) See further in the account of 
Dutton and Stidd. 

800 See Sherborn, op. cit. 84; Gerard, 
Stonyhurst Coll. 82 5 Dict. Nat. Biog. 

801 See the account of the Holden 
family. 


3 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


excepting the Greengore.*”’ John son of Thomas de 
Greengore in 1364 released land in Claughton to 
Ralph de Holden ; while in 1388 Adam de Green- 
gore, brother and heir of John, confirmed to John 
son of John son of Ralph de Holden the land called 
Greengore in Bailey.*° 

The freeholders recorded in 1600, in addition to 
Shireburne, Winkley and Holden, were Richard 
Goodshaw, Thomas Loud, Robert Read and John 
Tomlinson of Aighton ; also Richard Aighton of 
Chaigley.2* Some of these have already been 
named. 

In 1568 there was a dispute as to Hill House in 
Chaigley between John Loud and Joan his wife on 
the one part and William Loud, &c., on the other.% 
Sir Richard Shireburne in 1546 purchased a messuage 
and land in Aighton from James Loud and Isabel his 
wife.39° Thomas Loud in 1632 compounded for his 
recusancy by an annual payment of £2.°°7 William 
son and heir of James Loud held land in 1691.3 

Thomas Johnson a/ias Tomlinson held land in 
Bailey in 1546, with remainder to Richard Tomlin- 
son.°8 John Tomlinson died in 1624 holding land 
in Chaigley, with common of pasture in Bailey, of 
Richard Shireburne as of his manor of Aighton ; 
Thurstan his son and heir was fifty years of age.31° 
John Tomlinson, apparently another son, died in 
1633 holding land in Chaigley and Clitheroe of the 
king ; his brother Thurstan was heir.#!1 

Richard ‘ Haghton’ and Alice his wife procured 
a messuage called Armetridding, &c., in Chaigley 
from Sir Richard Shireburne and Maud his wife in 
1546, apparently in exchange for a tenement in 
Aighton.*!? A settlement of four messuages, dovecote, 
lands, &c., was in 1548 made by Richard and Alice 
Haghton, the remainders being to sons John and 
Roger, and to heirs male of John father of Richard 
Haghton.3!8 

Hugh de Hacking in 1311 acquired a messuage 
and land in Aighton from Thomas de Broadhurst and 
Agnes his wife.*44 This was probably the estate of 
Henry de Shuttleworth and Agnes his wife in 1366.°15 
Broadhurst and other lands in Aighton were in 1644 
held by Nicholas Grimshaw of Clayton.*1¢ 

Thomas Bradley of Thornley in 1564 held mes- 
suages, &c., in Chaigley partly of the queen and 
partly of someone unknown.*!7 Roger brother of 
Richard Bradley of Bailey (deceased) in 1653 peti- 
tioned for the restoration of a moiety of the estate, 
which had been sequestered for the recusancy of 


Elizabeth, Richard’s widow ; she was then dead, 
Roger himself was ‘conformable’ to the Parliament, 
“ever a dutiful and constant good Churchman,’ and 
had two sons in the army.3!® 

Mary Dewhurst a/ias Osbaldeston died in 1638 
holding a messuage, &c., in Bailey of the king as of 
the honor of Clitheroe; Robert her son and heir was 
thirty years of age.*!8 Robert Dewhurst as a ‘de- 
linquent’ had his lands sequestered by the Parlia- 
ment, and in 1654 his son James petitioned for 
restoration.°”? 

A few particulars about non-resident holders are 
found in the inquisitions.*?! 

A considerable number of landowners contributed 
to the subsidy of 1524, the principal being Hugh 
Shireburne. The others were: Robert Ash, the 
wife of Thomas Clitheroe, Thomas Gooday, John 
Halghton, Ralph Holden, Thomas Lenox, Robert 
Waddington and Roger Winckley.3?? The names 
in the 1543 subsidy list are: Richard Shireburne, 
Robert Shireburne, Robert Waddington, Ralph 
Holden, John Gooday, the widow of John Halghton, 
Anthony Winckley, John Hayhurst and Thomas 
Johnson.**3 In 1597 the following contributed for 
their lands: Richard Shireburne (self and wife), 
Richard Holden, John Shireburne (for wife), Richard 
Haughton, John Tomlinson, Bartholomew Gooday, 
Robert Read, Thomas Lowde, Henry Heyhurst.“*! 
In 1626 Richard Shireburne, Roger Winckley, 
Richard Haighton, Thurstan Tomlinson, Richard 
Holden, Richard Crombleholme (for wife), Bartho- 
lomew Gooday, Richard Read, John Whitaker 
and Henry Hayhurst ; the wife of Richard Shire- 
burne and a large number of others paid as non- 
communicants.°?6 

In the Commonwealth time Anne Watson, a re- 
cusant, had had her estates sequestered, but was 
dead in 1654.99 The hearth tax return of 1666 
shows that at Aighton there were eighty-two hearths 
liable, of which Stonyhurst had twenty-three, the 
house of Anne Winckley widow had five, that of 
James Loud five, and four houses had three. At 
Bailey there were thirty-eight hearths, Mrs. Elizabeth 
Rishton’s house having five. At Chaigley there were 
forty-two hearths, but only two dwellings had as many 
as three.*27. In addition to Sir Nicholas Shireburne 
a number of ‘ Papists’ registered estates in 1717.°%8 
The land t.x return of 1787 shows that Thomas 
Weld held nearly all the land; the Earl of Derby 
had a part of Chaigley. 


802 Towneley MS. C 8, 13, p. 475. 

808 Ibid. The Greengore charters are 
in the possession of Mr. Fitzherbert- 
Brockholes of Claughton. 

804 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 234-7. 

805 Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), ii, 348 ; 
iii, 8. 

806 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 12, 
m. 226, 259; the Louds had Ridding, 
Laweroft, &c. Edmund Loud had a 
messuage and land in 1587; ibid. bdle. 
49, m. 102. 

307 Trans. Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xxiv, 
178. 

808 Exch. of Pleas, Mich. 3 Will. and 
Mary, m. 40. 

Soy Pal, of Lane. Feet of F. bale. 12, 
m. 232. 

5310 Towneley MS. C 8, 13, p. 1184. 

81) Ibid. 1181. 


312 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 12, 
m. 296, 223. 

813 Tbid. bdle. 13, m. 1433 see also 

bdle. 52 (1590), m. 755 58 (1597), m. 
17}. 
314 Final Conc. ii, 10. 
315 Ibid. ii, 171. 
Lane. iii, 518. 

816 Add. MS. 32105, no. gor. 

3 Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. xi, 


See also Ducatus 


no. 37. 
318 Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 217~20. 

319 Towneley MS. C 8, 13, p. 340. 

820 Royalist Comp. Papers, ii, 244-51. 

321 Sir William Leyland of Morleys in 
1547 held land in Aighton and Chaig'ey 
of the king by the fortieth part of a 
knizht’s fee; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. 
ix, nO. 43. 

Richard Crombleholme in 1588 held 


18 


land in Huntingdon (Dutton) and Bailey 
of the queen by the hundredth part of a 
knight’s fee ; ibid. xiv, no. 40. See also 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 28, m. 206, 

James Livesey of Livesey in 1620 held 
land in Chaigley, but the tenure was not 
recorded ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 278. 

322 Subs. R. Lancs, bdle. 139, no. 82. 

833 Ibid. no. 125. 

824 Thid. bdle. 131, no. 274. 

825 Thid. no. 317. 

326 Cal. Com. for Comp. v, 3218. 

337 Lay Subs. Lancs. bdle. 2¢0, no. 9. 

328 They were Edward Bradley, James 
Dilworth, John Hill and Samson Raw- 
cliffe of Aighton ; John Merrick of 
Bailey and Christopher Hudson of 
Chaigley ; Estcourt and Payne, Engl. 
Cath, Non-jurors, 102, 106, &c. 

529 Returns at Preston. 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED wrrton carr of) 


A chapel of St. John the Baptist was 
CHURCH built in Bailey by Robert de Clitheroe, 
and he obtained the royal licence to 
grant it with the endowment he provided to Cocker- 
sand Abbey; the canons were to provide two 
chaplains.**9 This intention does not seem to have 
been carried into effect, for in 1338 Henry de 
Clitheroe obtained a fresh licence from the king 
authorizing him to alienate two messuages, 40 acres 
of land, &c., in Ribchester and Dutton for the 
endowment of a chaplain who should celebrate daily 
for the souls of Robert de Clitheroe and others.*#! 
In 1548 it was found that the incumbent ‘ celebrated 
there accordingly and did minister the Blessed 
Sacrament to the inhabitants adjoining at such times 
as the curates of the parish church cannot repair to 
them for the floods.’ 33? Most of the chaplains’ names 
are known, as follows 383 ;— 


1334 William de Preston 

oc. 1338 Thomas 354 

oc. 1403-21 Richard Bradley 

oc. 1421-62 William Bradley 3% 
1468 John Bradley 

oc. 14.98 William Barker 

oc. 1500-17 Lawrence Towneley #67 
1S17 Robert Taylor 388 


In 1535 the income was returned as £3 10s. 14.589 
The endowment was confiscated on the general sup- 
pression of chantries, the lands being sold in 1549 to 
William Eggleston and others,®49 and no attempt was 
made, so far as appears, to maintain service in the 
chapel. The building gradually fell into ruin, and 
the last remains of it were destroyed in 1830.*4! The 
east window had been removed to Stonyhurst and 
placed in its present position there, in a room then 

used as a chapel.4? The Priest’s House, or Merrick’s 
Hall, now standing in Bailey, is thought to have been 
the chantry priest’s residence. It contains some 
wood carving: ‘Robertus Taylor cantorista hanc 
fabricam fieri fecit A. Dai M.D.xxiii.’ #4 

In Chaigley there was a chantry of St. Chad, but 
nothing definite is known of its history. It is stated 
to have been by the roadside opposite a farm now 
called Chapel House.#44 The Chapel-stead in 
Chaigley is named in a deed of 1378-9.3# Richard 
Shireburne of Stonyhurst in 1600 was seised of ‘the 
late dissolved chantry of St. Chad in Chaigley and 
the chantry lands lying in the manors of Aighton, 
Bailey and Chaigley,’ and complained that Roger 


Nowell and Richard Holden had obtained certain 
deeds respecting the same, which he ought to 
have.346 

For the Church of England St. John the Evan- 
gelist’s was built in 1838, near Hurst Green, but 
within Bailey; a burial-ground is attached. A 
district was assigned to it in 1870.547 It is in the 
diocese of Ripon. ‘The vicars are presented by the 
vicars of Mitton. 

The Congregationalists have a small endowed 
school-chapel at Walker Fold in Chaigley, founded in 
1792. Over the doorway is the inscription : ‘Chaidg- 
ley Charity School, Established by Miss Ellin 
Haighton And endowed by Miss Ann Haighton, only 
daughter of Mr. Richd. Haighton, all of London. 
The ground bought of Mr. Richd. Haighton of 
Chaidgley, 1792.’ #48 

From the account of the Shireburne family it may 
be gathered that the practice of the rites of the Roman 
Catholic religion was maintained in the district with 
more or less regularity during the whole period of the 
penal laws.*49 Henry Long, a secular priest educated 
at Rome,**° the chaplain at the hall from 1666 to 
1679, was drawn into a controversy with the vicar of 
Mitton, who had a dispute concerning his revenues 
with Richard Shireburne, ‘the sacrilegious popish 
patron’ of Mitton, as the vicar styled him.) The 
secular clergy were succeeded by Jesuits about 1700,° 
but from 1741 to 1752 the Duchess of Norfolk had 
a Carmelite for chaplain.3°* On the establishment 
of the college in 1794 a larger chapel in the house 
became necessary. In 1797 part of the old stabling was 
fitted up for public use, and this was replaced in 
1835 by the present church of St. Peter adjoining 
the college. It is a pleasing example of the early 
Gothic revival, the architect being J. J. Scoles.*4 
It has in course of time become richly decorated, a 
tasteful high altar having been given in 1893. ‘The 
sacristy contains a number of valuable relics, in- 
cluding the cap and seal of B. Thomas More, mon- 
strances and other church furniture ; also rich vest- 
ments, including a chasuble and cope, part of a gift 
by Henry VII to Westminster Abbey, and a more 
ancient chasuble of English make called the Lucca 
vestment.*°> Mass is also said once a week at St. 


\Joseph’s Schools, Hurst Green. 


The principal endowment *® is 
that of £80 a year for the Shireburne 
almshouses.**” In addition about {10 
a year is distributed to the poor from the gift of 


CHARITIES 


380 Cal, Pat. 1330-4, p. 9. It is 
possible that there had been an earlier 
chapel there. 

331 Ibid. 1338-40, p. 303; the chapel 
is described as ‘lately built by Robert de 
Clitheroe.’ 

333 Raines, 
211-13. 

333 The list is derived from Whitaker’s 
Craven (ed. Morant, 29), his reference 
being to ‘the registers of York’ and from 
the Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

334 Towneley MS. OO, no. 1430. 

335 William Bradley, chaplain of the 
chantry of Bailey, in 1430-1 made an 
exchange of lands with the patron, 
Nicholas Clitheroe ; ibid. no. 1221, 1223. 

He had a son John named in some of 
the deeds in the Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

336-7 He occurs in 1500 ; OO, no. 1457. 
He resigned in 1517 and Taylor succeeded. 


Chantries (Chet. Soc.), 


338 Taylor was still chaplain in 1548, 
being sixty-nine years old ; Raines, loc. cit. 
339 Valor Eccl. (Rec. Com.), v, 144. 

340 Pat. 3 Edw. VI, pt. iii. 

341 Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 474. 

342 Whitaker, loc. cit. 

33 Gerard, op. cit. 99. 

344 A ‘chapel house’ existed in 1725 ; 
Walkden’s Diary, 11 (quoted by Nightin- 
gale). See also Stonyhurst Mag. Nov. 
1887 and the account of Crawshaw. 

343 Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

346 Duchy of Lanc. Plead. Eliz. excv, 
S12. 

347 Lond. Gaz. 25 Feb. 1870. 

348 Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. ii, 217~ 
22. An account of the foundation and 
endowments is given in End. Char, Rep. 
1899. 

349 The hiding-places in the hall itself 
are described in Gerard, op. cit. 78. 


19 


360 Foley, Rec. S. J. vi, 398. 

351 Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. 
iv, 326. 

352 Foley, Rec. S. J. v, 4.00. 
was also a chapel at Bailey Hall. 

353 Zimmerman, Carmel in England, 372. 

354 Gerard, op. cit. 100, 

355 Thid. 245-58 ; views of some are 
given. 

356 An official inquiry was made in 
1898; the report, issued in 1899, in- 
cludes a reprint of that of 1826. The 
details here given are derived from it. 

357 Richard ‘Scireburne’ had in 1686 
intended to found an ‘almshouse or 
maison de Dieu’ for twenty aged persons, 
and his son Sir Nicholas in 1706 carried 
the project into execution. Each of the 
almspeople was to have £4 a year and 
twelve places were appropriated to the 
township of Aighton, Bailey and Chaigley. 


There 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Richard Pickering,#*8 and other sums from those of 
John Richmond *® and James Standford.* The 
schools at Chaigley and Hurst Green have endow- 
ments. 

SHIREBURNE ALMSHOUSES.—Above Stony- 
hurst, at the east end of Longridge Fell, at a height 
of 800 ft. above sea level, stand the Shireburne Alms- 
houses, a picturesque stone building now neglected ** 
and in the first stages of decay, erected in the early 
years of the 18th century by Sir Nicholas Shire- 
burne. The plan is an adaptation of that of the 
usual courtyard type employed in such institutions 
combined with the E-shaped house plan, the wings 
projecting only 28 ft. in front of the main block.3? 
The ‘courtyard’ in reality forms a terrace 69 ft. 6 in. 
by 28 ft., raised about 8 ft. above the ground, and 
approached by a semicircular flight of sixteen steps, 
47 ft. 6 in. in diameter, forming a most effective 
architectural feature. The design of the whole 
building is thoughtful and refined, and has an in- 
stinctive fitness and charm, emphasized perhaps by 
its present forsaken condition. It is a good example 
of simple Renaissance work, in which full advantage 
has been taken of the nature of the site on the slope 


of the hillside. The walls are of wrought stone with 
ashlar dressings and plain architraves to all the 
windows, and the roofs are covered with stone slates 
with overhanging eaves. The end wings are 19 ft. 
in width, the whole of the south front being about 
107 ft. 6 in. in length, which is increased by high 
stone walls and gates connecting a small stone out- 
building on each side with the main structure. The 
building is of one story, except in the projecting centre, 
which rises above the roofs on either side and is sur- 
mounted by a pedimented gable with stone vase orna- 
ments. In the pediment are the arms of Shireburne 
with crest and supporters, and below in large letters the 
words ‘Shireburn Almshouses,’ and over the middle 
entrance is a large blank stucco panel, evidently 
added later, on which probably there was a painted 
inscription which has completely disappeared. The 
tenements of the inmates are arranged in ten small 
double rooms in the middle and side wings, five on 
each side of the ‘chapel,’ with the names of the 
different townships over the doors.°® From the 
terrace, which is inclosed by a stone balustrade with 
turned balusters, there is a fine view to the south 


over the Ribble Valley. 


CHIPPING 


CHIPPING 


This secluded parish,! still uncrossed by a railway 
line, lies in the hilly country between Longridge 
Fell on the south and Parlick and Fairsnape Fell on 
the north ; the principal stream is the Loud, dividing 
the two townships as it flows north-east to join the 
Hodder. The area is 8,8544 acres, and the popula- 
tion in 1901 numbered 1,133. 

The district was called Chippingdale ; but this 
term covered a somewhat wider area than the present 
parish. 

Few antiquities have been found, but a Roman 
road crossed part of Thornley. 

The transference of the parish from its original 
hundred of Amounderness to that of Blackburn was 
probably a consequence of the grant of the manor to 
the lords of Clitheroe. Ecclesiastically it remained in 
the deanery of Amounderness. 

It was one of the parishes laid waste by the Scots 
in 1322, but apart from this its story has been as 
peaceful and uneventful as from its out-of-the-way 
situation might be expected. 


The pensions are still paid, but the bene- 


ficiaries have for a long time preferred to shire. 


Lancashire and for some places in York- 


THORNLEY WITH WHEATLEY 


To the tax called the fifteenth Chipping paid 
28s. and Thornley with Wheatley 175. 6¢., when 
the hundred paid £37 15. 7¢.2 To the county lay 
of 1624 the two portions paid respectively {2 195. 6d. 
and {1 175. 2d. towards £100 levied on the hundred.$ 

In 1666 the East End of Chipping had seventy- 
one hearths liable to be taxed and the West End 
forty-five, but no house had more than four hearths. 
In Thornley Alexander Osbaldeston’s house had seven 
hearths and Henry Shireburne’s the same ; no other 
dwelling had more than three.* 

The agricultural land is thus classified: arable 
land, 46 acres ; permanent grass, 6,721 ; woods and 
plantations, 75.14 

The church of ST. BARTHOLO- 

CHURCH MEW stands on rising ground at the 
north-west side of the village and consists 

of chancel and nave with north and south aisles, south 
porch, west tower and a modern vestry at the north- 
east corner of the north aisle. ‘The chancel and nave 
are without structural division and under one roof, 


the rector of Stonyhurst in money doles 
to poor cottagers. 


live in their own villages, as the alms- 
houses are in an out-of-the-way spot on 
the side of Longridge. It has been pro- 
posed to take the buildings down and re- 
erect them on a more accessible site. The 
Stonyhurst trustees are liable for re- 
pairs. 

Two each of the almspeople were to be 
chosen from Dutton, Ribchester, Wiswell 
and Mitton. 

Sir Nicholas also intended to give qos. 
a year to the boatman at Hacking boat, 
but there is no evidence that this was 
ever paid. He desired that his tenants 
and other inhabitants should have a free 
passaze. Other charities were directed 
for Leagram, Chorley and Hambleton in 


358 He gave his land in Ded Banks in 
Clayton-le-Dale for the benefit of poor 
housekeepers of Aighton, Bailey and 
Chaigley. The rent is £10, which is 
distributed annually in small money 
doles. 

39 By his will of 1769 he left the 
residue of his personal estate (£50) for 
clothing poor children and relieving old 
people of the township. The capital is 
now invested in consols, and the interest, 
29s. a year, is distributed in money doles 
to the sick and other poor persons by the 
vicar of Hurst Green. 

360 See the account of Ribchester chari- 
ties. The share of Bailey amounted in 
1898 to £3 2s. 10d., distributed through 


20 


“1 The last occupant of the houses, 
who had lived there some time alone, 
died in 1910. 

362 The middle part of the main block, 
which projects 2 ft., was probably intended 
for a chapel, but has never been so used, 

363 Chaigley, Bailey and Aighton occur 
each twice. 

1 Sixty years ago the people were de- 
scribed as ‘plain, homespun, dialectal, 
retiring, home-loving dwellers, having 
little and needing less’ ; Parkinson, Old 
Church Clock (ed. Evans), xvi. 

2 Gregson, Fragments (ed. Harland), 19. 

3 Ibid. 23. 

* Lay Subs. Lancs. bile. 250, no. 9g. 

44 Statistics from Bd. of Agric. (1905). 


SASMOHSNTY FNUNGATUIHS + NOLLIJAT 


em Tne 


Bh 


: 
2 ie Y 


a ? L@und 
BOWLAND, 


Fair 
Oak 


r S. “Lickhe SP 
jek ¢ WH LLE 
YWolt Fell * @ Far of) ( & 
Chet yas wis 
>. Co @Wooagates t LEAGRAM, a 
/ Chi, ping ys x w 
=.CHIPPING ~*\ 4 2 
NY} oS x ie ‘\° Chadswi7 > 
? CF Bragley ; s 
C “ GS 
\ any Torney} gé Fell Be. 
oe 


a \ eCrowshaw meant 


ote eee BAILEY 
v a 


$.7 
off 


K\\ AND mh 
bog en? 7 avsHoardsell SY ae 


Stonyhurst 


e a o ° / Wakley 
{ piewe iff oSar on \ Hs Groen 


I a |:£atough 4: y} 
ALSTO ~ TN. RIBCHESTE 
OTHEJRSALL “Zens. og 

Norcross“%Z 


2 


Alston 
= 


fa 


Inpex Map or Curppinc, Leacram, AiGHTon anpD RipcHESTER 


21 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


marked, however, on the outside by a very slight 
difference in height, the total length being 75 ft., and 
are open on each side to the aisles by an arcade of 
five pointed arches. ‘The east end of the chancel, 
which is 16§ ft. wide, is inclosed north and south for 
a length of 7 ft. by a blank wall, and the aisles, which 
are unequal in width, are continued the full length 
of the chancel, the east wall of the building being 
straight and unbroken, but they stop short of the full 
length of the nave at the west end. The wider north 
aisle is under a separate gabled roof of equal height to 
that of the nave, but the nave roof is continued over 
the south aisle at a slightly flatter pitch. Both roofs 
are covered with stone slates and have overhanging 
eaves, and the walls are constructed of local rubble 
without plinth, but with buttresses of two stages and 
diagonal ones at the angles. 

The church is largely an early 16th-century re- 
building of an older edifice, which, judging from the 
north arcade and the piscina in the chancel, seems to 
have been of 13th-century date. Little or nothing, 
however, can be said with certainty about the plan 
or extent of this early building, as the later recon- 
struction has made the architectural evidence rather 
elusive, but the plan suggests that the church had 
north and south aisles in mediaeval times and that 
having become dilapidated the south aisle was rebuilt 
about 1506 with a new spacing of the bays to which 
it was intended to adapt the north arcade. In the 
end the north arcade, however, perhaps because it 
was in a better state of preservation, was left more or 
less as it was, but the piers were largely rebuilt and 
new caps introduced, fragments of the older work 
being used up.® There are no traces of an ancient 
chancel, but if such existed eastward of the present 
plan it was probably destroyed before the end of the 
16th century. There is, however, no evidence of 
this and the character of the original eastern termina- 
tion can only be surmised. The 13th-century piscina 
in the short length of the present chancel wall is 
probably not in its original position, but if it is, then 
it is possible that the 13th-century church consisted of 
a nave extending only as far as the third pier of the 
north arcade from the east, but possibly further west- 
ward. The two west arches are wider than the 
others and the capital of the pier in question is of a 
more or less nondescript character. It is scarcely 
likely that the present arrangement of plan without 
a structural chancel] is that which originally obtained. 
The tower is an addition or rebuilding of the early 
16th century, to which period the rest of the build- 
ing, where not modern, belongs. In 1702 the 
church is said to have been reseated, in 1754 a gallery 
was erected at the west end of the nave, and in 1811 
a considerable amount of repairs seems to have been 
done.6 Previous to 1872 the exterior was white- 
washed,” but in that year a thorough restoration of the 
building was commenced, the roof being found to be 
dilapidated, the tower unsafe and the masonry of the 
windows decayed. The north and south walls and 
south porch were then rebuilt, the ceiling and gallery 
removed and the church seated with open benches. 


5 Fragments of 14th-century tracery work are said to have 
been discovered during the 1872-3 restoration in different parts 
of the building ; T. C. Smith, Hise. of Chipping, 70. 

§ The churchwardens’ accounts show a payment in that year 
of £67 115. ghd. for repairs. 


“Glynne, Churches of Lancs. Glynne visited Chipping in 


There was a partial renovation of the building in 
1909. ; 

The chancel is 25 ft. 9 in. long, occupying the two 
easternmost bays, but the wood screen which formerly 
stood in line with the second pier has disappeared,® 
and the chancel is now only differentiated from the 
nave by the raising of the floor and the arrangement 
of the seating. The east window, the mullions of 
which have been renewed, is of five cinquefoiled 
lights with hollow-chamfered jambs and external 
hood mould and a low elliptical-arched head without 
tracery. ‘The 13th-century piscina in the south wall 
has a trefoiled head, edge-roll moulding and nail-head 
ornament, but its bowl is gone. In the north wall is 
a recess with pointed head, 16 in. wide, originally an 
opening but now built up and used as a credence. 
The roofs and fittings of the chancel together with 
those of the rest of the church are modern, the oak 
quire stalls being erected in 1909. The walls 
throughout are plastered internally. 

The north arcade has five pointed arches of two 
chamfered orders springing from octagonal piers, 
1 ft. g in. in diameter and 6 ft. in height to the top 
of the caps. The arches may be the original 
13th-century ones and some parts of the caps, as 
already stated, are probably of this date. Three of 
these caps follow the section of the piers and are 
simply moulded with a plain square upper and 
rounded lower member. One of them is quite 
plain, but the other two are carved in the neck 
with, for the most part, very elementary patterns 
such as an unskilled carver might naturally use at 
any period, and are probably of the time of the 
16th-century rebuilding. On two sides of the 
westernmost cap, however, there are representations 
of mediaeval tracery of a type common c. 1300, 
consisting of two small circles, one with quatrefoil 
cusping and the other of the ‘rose tournante’ type, 
and a pointed ‘window’ of three lights with the 
mullions intersecting in the head, and on the same 
cap a dragon also occurs. It seems likely, however, 
that all this work is of one date, the new capitals 
being carved by a workman of eclectic tastes having 
a general knowledge of mediaeval forms. The ‘ rose 
tournante’ occurs also on the base of the font, which 
is of 16th-century date. The cap of the third pier 
from the east is a made-up one and on the east side 
is carved with four heads and a beak which seem to 
be original 13th-century work, and the west respond 
has also two heads apparently of equal date. The 
impost of the east respond, however, suggests rough 
work of early 16th-century type, and is evidently 
coeval with the patterns on the two caps to which 
reference has already been made. The late date of 
these seems clear from the introduction of a pointed 
‘window’ as an ornament in a horizontal position, 
suggesting a period when mediaeval forms were 
copied without being understood. The south arcade 
consists of five pointed arches of two chamfered orders 
on octagonal piers 16in.in diameter, with moulded 
caps and chamfered bases, g ft. high to the top of the 
caps, and spaced without reference to the piers on the 


1867. The whole church was then ‘out of condition’ and the 
fittings bad. 

8 Glynne in 1867 noted that ‘the base of the wood scre-o 
remains across the second pier from the east, and has some 
original panelling.’ 


22 


Cuippinc CHURCH FROM THE SOUTH 


Curppinc Cuurcuy: Tue Nave, tooxinc East 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


opposite side. The north aisle is 70 ft. 6in. long by 
15 ft. 4in. wide, and is lit by three square-headed 
windows of four trefoiled lights in the rebuilt north 
wall, with a modern window of three trefoiled lights 
at the east and an old one of four lights at the west 
end. The aisle extends 6 ft. 6 in. west of the arcade 
and formerly possessed, ‘ near the east end of the north 
wall,’ a low side window about 18 in. high, 8 in. wide, 
and 2 ft. from the ground,® which was done away 
with in the restoration of 1872-3, when a small vestry 
was erected at the north end of the aisle on the north 
side. ‘The organ now occupies the east end. The 
south aisle is 68 ft. gin. long and 11 ft. 4 in. wide, 
and is lit by four square-headed windows of three 
trefoiled lights in the new south wall, and by an 
original window of similar type at the east end, the 
mullions of which have been renewed. The east end 
of the aisle was formerly the Shireburne chapel, com- 
monly known as the Wolfhouse quire from the name 
of the residence of its possessor,!? and was separated 
from the rest of the church by a low wooden par- 
tition. In the restoration of 1872 a stoup was 
found in the wall.1!_ There is a priest’s door oppo- 
site the second bay from the east, the principal 
entrance being at the west end opposite the fifth bay. 
West of the door in the south wall is built a plain 
piscina without bowl, and there is another similar one 
in the west wall between the window and the arcade. 
The porch is of stone with gabled roof, the eaves of 
which come close to the ground. In its east wall is 
a small arched recess built into the wall. At the east 
end of the nave roof on the south side is a dormer 
window of five lights, rebuilt in 1873, with stone 
mullions and timber gable. 

The font, which stands at the west end of the south 
aisle near the door, is of gritstone, octagonal in shape 
and of 16th-century date. On each face is a shield, 
three of which are carved with emblems of the 
Passion, and the others with the sacred monogram, 
the initials yj. s. and other devices, one side only 
being blank. The stem has eight hollowed sides, and 
on the foot is a series of devices in Gothic letters 
which have been interpreted as a MG + PDT 
(Ave Maria Gratia Plena Dominus Tecum).!? 

The tower is 13 ft. square internally with diagonal 
buttresses of five stages and a vice in the south-west 
corner. The stages are unmarked externally by any 
string course and the character of the whole is very 
plain, the walls being of rubble and terminating in 
an embattled parapet with continuous moulding to 
merlons and embrasures and with angle pinnacles. 
The belfry windows are of two trefoiled lights with 
stone louvres but without hood moulds, On the 
north and south sides the walls below the belfry 
windows are quite plain except for a small square 
opening on the north and a clock on the south side, 


CHIPPING 


but on the west side are a pointed door with moulded 
jambs and head and a traceried window of three 
trefoiled lights and external hood mould. The 
tower arch is of two chamfered orders springing from 
moulded imposts and was opened out in 1873, the 
bells being rung from the floor of the church. 

A modern stone pulpit replaces one of wood 
which had a massive canopy and was inscribed with 
the initials of the Rev. Thomas Clarkson, vicar, and 
the date 1723. 

In the restoration of 1872-3 during the removal 
of the whitewash several painted texts were brought 
to light!’ but these, with an inscription on the east 
face of the central pier of the north arcade,!4 have 
been lost. 

On the face of the east respond of the south arcade 
is a brass !© to the ‘two wyves of Robert Parkinson of 
Fayresnape,’ Marie daughter of Jerome Asheton, died 
1611, and Anne daughter of George Singleton of 
Stayninge, died 1623. At the bottom of the 
inscription are a skull and cross-bones and these 
lines :— 


‘Theire partes theire persons and theire vertvovs lyfe 
Now rest in peace freed from the bond of wyfe.’ 


There is a tablet on the south wall of the chancel, 
where he is buried, to the Rev. John Milner, vicar 
1739 to 1777, but the other monuments are all 
modern. They include a brass to the fifteenth Earl 
of Derby, who died in 1893. 

There is a ring of six bells cast by Thomas Mears 
in 1793. 

The plate consists of a chalice of 1601-2 inscribed 
round the rim ‘The Comvnion cupp of y* Churche 
of Chyping in y® County of Lancaster 1602,’ with 
the maker’s mark R.B.; and a paten of 1876 by 
Elkington inscribed ‘St. Bartholomew’s Church, 
Chipping, Easter 1876.’ There is also a bread-holder. 

The registers begin in 1559. The first two 
volumes (1559-1694) have been printed.16 ‘The 
churchwardens’ accounts begin in 1809. Plans of 
the seating 1635 to 1818 have been preserved.!” 

The churchyard, which lies principally on the 
south side of the church and is approached from the 
road by a broad flight of stone steps, was enlarged in 
1863. It contains an old yew tree and a stone 
sundial dated 1708, inscribed with the initials of the 
churchwardens. The plate bears the name of Jas. 
Hunter, maker, Wappin, London. The oldest 
decipherable dated stone is 1754. 

Originally the church may have 

ADVOWSON been a chapel of Preston, the rector 
of which place claimed the presen- 

tation in 124018; but the right of the lord of 
Clitheroe, to whom the manor had been given, seems 
in later times to have been admitted without question, 


1635) 1739, 1769 and 1818 are printed 


9T. C. Smith, History of Chipping, 
69. The illustration there given of 
the east end of the church, however, 
shows this window in the east wall of 
the aisle. The illustration is presumably 
correct, 

10 Cf. T. C.Smith, Chipping, 73 (quoting 
Derby MSS.). 

1 Smith, op. cit. 74. 

1 The shields and inscription on the 
font are given, Gent. Mag. 1772, p. 588 5 
but the shields are placed wrong side up, 
and the small letters of the inscription are 
placed close together instead of being 


separate, and are made larger than the 
shields. For corrections see Baines’ Lancs. 
(Croston’s edition), iv, 76, and T. C. 
Smith, op. cit. 73. 

13 T, C. Smith, op. cit. 70. 

M4 It consisted of the name ‘Rich. 
Singl(e)ton.’ 

15 Formerly on a flag in the floor of 
the central aisle ; Hewitson, Our Country 
Churches, 537- ; 

16 Lancs. Parish Reg. Soc. vol. xiv 
(1903). Transcribed by Alice Brier- 
ley. 

"a T. C. Smith, Chipping, 76 ; the lists 


23 


in full. 

18 The church being then vacant the 
king claimed to present as guardian of 
the lands and heir of Johnde Lacy. The 
Prior of Lancaster claimed, but withdrew 
absolutely ; the rector of Preston (Amery 
des Roches), who alleged that Chipping 
was only a chapel belonging to his church, 
withdrew his claim for a time, until the 
heir should be of age, it being acknow- 
ledged that the lord of Clitheroe had 
presented the last incumbent; Abbrev. 
Plac. (Rec. Com.), 110, 111. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


and he and his successors in title presented to Chip- 
ping.’ Soon after the foundation of the see of Chester 
by Henry VIII this rectory was in 1 546-7 given to 
the bishop by the king in exchange for certain lands,” 
and from about that time the bishop enjoyed the 
profits of the rectory,?! appointing a vicar. After the 
establishment of the see of Manchester the patronage 
was transferred from Chester, and the Bishop of Man- 
chester now collates. The income of the rectory goes 
to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. 

At the end of the 13th century the benefice was 
valued at £10 135. 4d. a year,” but forty years later, 
after the invasion of the Scots, at only £5.% In 
1341 this was still the estimate, Chipping being 


The following have been rectors and vicars :— 


responsible for sos. and Thornley for the other 
sos.24; but by 1535 the estimated value had risen to 
£25 15. 84.28 The tithes in 1650 were valued at 
£85 5s. a year, and there were other profits bringing 
the total value to over £126 ‘before the wars,’ of 
which {10 went to the vicar; the officiating 
minister in 1650 had £60 out of the whole.% 
After the restoration of episcopacy the minister’s 
stipend would be reduced to its old amount, but 
in 1720 his income was certified as £36 135. 4d.; 
the vicar had also the use of the mansion or 
parsonage-house.*” Grants from Queen Anne’s 
Bounty were obtained in 1768 and later.28 The 
value of the vicarage is now stated as £285. 


ReEcTors 
Instituted Name Patron Cause of Vacancy 
c. 1230 4 Robert 7° . Poe 
29 Nov. 1240 Peter the Physician * . The King . 2... 
5 Nov. 1241 William Lawrence 3! Pe - «+ «+ « « res. P. the Physician 
oc. 1279 Ralph de Aldburne 3? — 
Rogen®®:. <5. sf 
16 Mar. 1326-7 Robert de Langton. Queen Isabel d. Roger 
oc. 1348-58 Gilbert de Marsden * . —— 
15 Mar. 1368-g Thomas le Wise* . Duke of Lancaster. . . — 
oc. 1391 John Exton *6 ge Wikr Sve — 
11 June 1393 William Whitewell . Duke of Lancaster. . . —— 
1 July 1394 Robert Marshford - res, W. Whitewell 
Robert Gowe . . — 
Dec. 1399 John Maryden*” . The King res. Rt. Gowe 
17 July 1421 John Caton *8 es BR 9 e eck — 
28 Jan. 1441-2 . Lawrence Caton. . . . . ‘s . . . res. John Caton 


19 In 1361 it was found that Henry 
Duke of Lancaster had held the advow- 
son ; Whitaker, Whalley, ii, 480, quoting 
Chan. Ing. p.m. 35 Edw. III, no. 122. 

29 Pat. 38 Hen. VIII, pt. v, quoted in 
Ormerod’s Ches. (ed. Helsby), i, 97. 

21 The bishop appears as rector in the 
visitation list of 1554. He came into 
possession on the death of the last rector 
in that year. 

2 Pope Nich. Tax. (Rec. Com.), 307. 
This ‘old taxation’ was made in 1292. 

28 Ibid. 327 5 the date in the heading 
is 1334. 

24 Ing. Nonarum (Rec. Com.), 38. The 
reason given for the reduction, in addition 
to the havoc caused by the Scots, was 
that in the ‘new taxation’ the value of 
the glebe and certain tithes, oblations and 
altarage dues had not been reckoned. 

2 Valor Eccl. (Rec. Com.), v, 262. 
The mansion-house and glebe were worth 
3s. a year, the tithe of grain £13, other 
tithes £3 10s., Easter offerings, &c., 
£8 35. 8d. 

26 Commonw. Ch, Surv. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), 169, 196, where are 
given particulars of a lease made by the 
Bishop of Chester in 1598 at the rent 
of £25 1s. 8d. There were ‘a fair 
parsonage house and about 5 acres of 
giebe (great measure), with liberty to get 
turbary, all which is valued to be worth 
47 per annum,’ Of the rent named 
£10 was paid to the vicar, to whom 
in 1647 the Committee of Plundered 
Ministers ordered £50 a year more to 
be paid out of the profits of the rectory, 
it being sequestered from Christopher 
Harris, a Papist in arms,’ who enjoyed 
the lease in right of his wife. 

Tt is not clear that the increase in the 


vicar's stipend was maintained ; Plund. 
Mins. Accts, (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), 
ii, 288. 

27 Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 401. The vicar’s stipend was made 
up of £10, the old allowance from the 
bishop, and £21 135. 4d. from the lessee ; 
surplice fees amounted to £5. 

2° For particulars see T. C. Smith, 
Chipping, 63, &c. ; lands were bought in 
Dutton and Whittingham. Terriers of 
both rectory and vicarage are printed ibid. 

79 Parson of Chippingdale ; Lanc. Ch. 
(Chet. Soc.), i, 165. 

30 Cal, Pat. 1232-47, p. 239. The 
king presented in right of the heir of 
John de Lacy, his ward. 

31 Ibid. 265. ‘William the clerk of 
Chipping’ attested a grant to Sawley ; 
Harl. MS. 112, fol. 726, Also another 
in Dilworth ; Add. MS. 32106, fol. 3115. 
These may be earlier than 1241. 

3? In 1279-80 Cecily widow of William 
de la Sale claimed dower in certain 
messuages and lands in Chipping against 
Ralph the parson and other people of the 
place; De Banco R. 28, m. 64 4.3 36, 
m. 45d. In 1281 Pope Martin IV 
notified to the Archbishop of York that 
he had taken under his protection Ralph 
de Aldburne, priest, who had taken the 
cross and intended to go to the assistance 
of the Holy Land. In the margin of the 
register Ralph is described as ‘ former 
tector of Chipping’; Wickwane’s Reg. 
(Surtees Soc.), 121. 

Adam son of Thurstan the chaplain in 
1292 claimed a tenement in Chipping 
held by Simon de Beforton, but was non- 
suited ; Assize R. 408, m. 42. There is 
nothing to show Thurstan’s position. 

88 This and some later names are from 


24 


Torre’s list of rectors; Archdeaconry of 
Richmond, 1825. 

4 Gilbert was the son of Richard de 
Merclesden or Marsden. He occurs as 
plaintiff or defendant from 1348 onwards ; 
De Banco R. 354, m. 3993 360, m. 37; 
&c He was in 1350 charged with the 
abduction of William son and heir of 
John de Marsden ; ibid. 363, m. 78 d. 

35 The date of presentation is from 
Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xxii, 387. 
Thomas le Wise, rector of Chipping, is 
mentioned ina pleading of 1373 ; De Banco 
R. 452,m. 113. Also in a fine of 1375 ; 
Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
ii, 188-9. Again in the following year 
he was charged with detaining a box con- 
taining charters ; De BancoR. 462, m. 136. 

36 He had a dispensation from illegiti- 
macy, enabling him to be ordained and hold 
a benefice, and this was extended by Boni- 
face IX in 1391 to enable him to hold three 
benefices, &c. ; Cal. Papal Letters, iv, 387. 

37 Raines MSS. xxii, 395. The king 
presented as Duke of Lancaster. It may 
be noted that a Robert Gowe, king’s clerk, 
was in 1399 presented to the rectory of 
Wigston and in the following ycar to a 
canonry at Windsor; Cal. Pur. 1399- 
1401, pp. 154, 356. Torre gives his 
successors name as Marmyon. 

38 Raines MSS. xxii, 397. 

89 Ibid. 4o9. The feoffees of King 
Henry (as Duke of Lancaster) presented. 
John Caton resigned Chipping for the 
vicarage of Longford (dio. Lichfield), which 
Lawrence Caton vacated. 

Two ‘chaplains’ occur in the 15th cen- 
tury, viz. Thomas Mawdesley in 1427 
and Richard Smethes in 1447 3 Cal. Pat. 
1422-9, p. 3653 Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 
To, m. 42. 


Tue Fonr 


CurppinG CHURCH : 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


Instituted Name 
oc. 1472-80 Thomas Swift. 
oc. 1481 James Straitbarrell#! . 2 1. 
30 Apr. 1523. . Thomas Mawdesley#?. . . . 
4 Aug. 1530 . Thomas Westby. . . . . . 
12 Feb. 1531 . George Wolset, LL.D.4A4 . 2... 
oc. 1562 John Marsden ae 
8 Feb. 1589-90 Richard Parker*® . 2 2. . 
5 Oct. 1616 William Armitstead #7, 0. 
c. 1622 John King *® 


16 Oct. 1672. 
12 Aug. 1692 
23 Dec. 1701 


1g Aug. 1721 Thomas Clarkson, M.A.* 

29 May 1738 William Rawstorne®® . . . 
19 Feb. 1738- 9: John Milner, M.A, 

11 Mar. 1778 Thomas Pearce, M.A.* 


3 Aug.1779 - 
21 Nov. 1786 . 
10 May 1807 
28 Nov. 1816. 

8 Nov. 1864 . 
21 Dec. 1886. 


40 He was in 1472 summoned to answer 
Hugh Radcliffe regarding a claim for 
£8 13s.4d.; Pal. of Lanc. Writs Proton. 
1 Aug. 12 Edw. IV. In 1480 the Abbot 
of Whalley claimed £40 from him ; Add. 
MS. 32108, no. 1464. 

4l Acting as trustee he was described 
as ‘chaplain’ in 1479 and as ‘rector of 
Chipping’ in 1481; Kuerden MSS. iii, 
H3. He held various other benefices, 
including the rectory of St. Mary-by-the- 
Castle, Chester, 1506-23; Earwaker, 
St. Mary’s, 79. 

There are full accounts of the rectors 
and vicars from this time in T. C. Smith’s 
Chipping, 84-108. Several particulars in 
the following notes have been taken from 
that work. 

The next presentation to the rectory 
was in 1515 granted to James Worsley ; 
L. and P. Hen. VIL, ii (1), 1157. 

42 There was formerly an inscription 
on one of the church windows, asking 
for prayers for the soul of Master Thomas 
Mawdesley, founder of the chantry, and 
his parents, dated 1530; Ducatus Lanc. 
(Rec. Com.), ii, 132. 

48 He held various other benefices and 
was one of the king’s chaplains (Smith), 
and became Archdeacon of York 1540-3 5 
Le Neve, Fasti, iii, 134. 

“This name may be Wolfet or 
Wolflet; he is noticed further under 
Ribchester, of which parish he became 
rector in 1543. 

At the visitation of 1554 the bishop 
was recorded as parson, and a ‘Thomas 
Manstem’ (?), beneficed elsewhere, seems 
to have been in charge. 

45 Alias Marston. Little is known of 
this vicar, recorded at the visitation of 
1562, when he appeared but did not sub- 
scribe. He may be identical with the 
above-named ‘T. Manstem.’ The will 
of ‘Sir John Marsden, clerk, vicar of 
Chipping,’ was proved at Chester in 1588. 
An abstract is given by T. C, Smith 
(op. cit.) ; it names ‘John Parker alias 
Marsden, my bastard son.’ 

46 Act Bk. at Chester, fol. 184. No 
first-fruits were paid by the vicars, but 
the institutions have, when possible, been 
compared with those in the Institution 


7 


Richard White, M. A. 49 a 8 8 
Humphrey Briscoe, B.A’? .. 
Thomas Atherton, M.A.*). 


William Stockdale®® . . . 
John Carlisle 7 . ‘ ind se 
James Penny, M.A. 2 1. 
Edmund Wilkinson ®®, 2... 
Richard Robinson, B.A. 2... 
John Birch Jones, B.D... . 


Vicars 


” 


Books (P.R.O.), as printed in Lanes. and 
Ches. Antig. Notes. See also Baines, 
Lancs. (ed. Croston), iv, 79. 

Richard Parker, son of Reynold Parker 
of Greystonelee in Bowland, copied the 
early volume of the registers, in which 
his own baptism (1563) is recorded. He 
was Dean of Amounderness, but was 
described as ‘no preacher’ in 1590, and 
again about 1610; S. P. Dom. Eliz. 
xxxi, 473 Hist. MSS. Com, Rep. xiv, 
App. iv, 9. 

In 1610 it was returned that Richard 
Parker, vicar, had ‘but one benefice of 
4os. by year, and no vicarage house’; 
Chester Consistory Ct. Papers. 

47 Act Bk. at Chester, fol. 63. The 
name is otherwise given as Armitsdale. 
Nothing seems to be known of him, but 
the baptism of Margaret daughter of 
William Armistead is recorded 8 Apr. 
1628. 

48 His name occurs in the registers 
from 1625. His burial on 23 Sept. 
1672 is thus recorded: ‘John King, 
clerk, minister of God’s word at Chip- 
ping for fifty years last past departed this 
life September the twenty-second Anno 
Dom. 1672 and was buried in the south 
side of the chancel in the parish church 
of Chipping aforesaid.’ 

In 1624 John King paid £4 8s. to the 
clerical subsidy for Chipping, possibly as 
agent of the Bishop of Chester; Misc. 
(Rec. Soc, Lancs. and Ches.), i, 81. 

He accepted the Presbyterian discipline 
without hesitation, for in 1646 he was a 
member of the third classis; Baines, 
Lancs. (ed. 1868), i, 227. In 1650 he 
was commended as ‘an able, orthodox 
divine’; Commonw. Ch. Surv. 170. 
He seems to have conformed as readily 
in 1662, remaining at Chipping till his 
death. 

The inventory of his goods (Smith, 
op. cit. 91-2) shows a considerable farm- 
ing stock, but no books. 

49 Educated at Emmanuel Coll., Camb. 5 
M.A. 1675. Was appointed to Whalley 
in 1694, and died in 1703. 

50 Educated at Jesus Coll., Camb. ; 
B.A. 1689. His will was proved at 
Richmond in 1702. 


25 


Patron 


Bp. of Chester . 


Bp. of Manchester 


CHIPPING 


Cause of Vacancy 


ew dh Jo Kang 

res. R. White 
d. H. Briscoe 
res. T. Atherton 


ak a a Clarion 


res. W. Rawstorne 
d. J. Milner 

res. T. Pearce 

d. W. Stockdale 


. dj. Penny 
d. E. Wilkinson 
res. R. Robinson 


51 Educated at Trin. Coll., Camb. ; 
M.A. 1698. He was promoted to the 
rectory of Aughton near Ormskirk in 
1721 (q.v.) 

52 Educated at Queen’s Coll., Oxf. ; 
M.A. 1714. He became rector of Hey- 
sham in 1735. At Chipping he had 
quarrels with his parishioners. He 
published some books, one being a 
treatise on confirmation. He seems 
to be the ‘Mr. Kelly, High Church 
parson,’ of a local squib of which a full 
account is printed in Smith’s Chipping, 
171-8. 

58 Resigned on being promoted to the 
rectory of Badsworth, Yorks. 

54 Educated at Jesus Coll., Camb. ; 
M.A. 1745. He was a friend and fellow 
worker of John Wesley, and frequently 
mentioned in his diaries. He was also 
one of the king’s preachers in Lanca- 
shire. 


53 Edueated at Oriel Coll, Oxi; 
M.A. 17713; D.D. 17933; Foster, 
Alumni. He became prebendary of 


Chester, rector of Coddington, and then 
of West Kirby, and sub-dean of the 
Chapel Royal. 

56 He was also curate of Samlesbury, 
where he resided. He was a king’s 
preacher. 

57 He was also master of Brabin’s 
School and king’s preacher. In 1790 
there were ‘three Sacrament days’ 
yearly ; T. C. Smith, op. cit. 66. 

58 Educated at Brasenose and Hertford 
Colls., Oxf.; M.A. 17843 Foster, 
Alumni. In 1809 he was appointed 
vicar of Preston (q.v.), and retained both 
benefices till death. 

59 * A man of considerable power and 
influence, an able preacher, and deservedly 
esteemed by his parishioners’; Croston 
in Baines’ Lancs. iv, 81. He was also 
master of the free school from 1817 to 
1837. 

60 Educated at St. Bees; B.A. at 
Trinity Coll., Dublin, 1867. Preferred 
to the vicarage of Carlton on Trent in 
1886, 

61 Educated at Lampeter; B.D. 1889. 
Exchanged Chipping for All Sainte’, 
West Gorton, in 1891. 


4 


A HISTORY OF 


Instituted Name 7 
1891 George Burwell, M.A.” 2. 
11 Oct. 1904 Walter Hudson, M.A." 


A chantry, St. Mary’s, was founded by Thomas 
Mawdesley, rector 1523-30," and its priest was Ralph 
Parker in 1535.°° Its altar was on the north side of 
the church. 

The free school was established under the will of 
John Brabin, dated 1683.°° 

There does not seem to be any record of the normal 
staff of clergy in this parish before the Reformation.*” 
At each of the visitations of 1548 and 1554 two 
names are given, but probably only one was resident, 
and he may have been a domestic chaplain.*® ‘The 
chantry endowment had perhaps been intended partly 
to secure at least one resident priest. After the rectory 
was appropriated to the bishopric it may be presumed 
that the Bishops of Chester usually took care that their 
vicar should reside, but there is little on record about 
the parish. The vicar of the Commonwealth period 
held the benefice during all the changes ; and another 
noteworthy incident is the hostile reception accorded 
by many of the people to Wesley, when John Milner, 
the vicar, desired him to preach at Chipping. In 
June 1752 Wesley and his friend the vicar returned 
to Chipping from an evangelizing tour, and were in- 
formed that the churchwardens and some others were 
consulting as to the means of preventing Wesley from 
preaching. After an interview they were pacified, and 
Wesley preached in the church without disturbance. 
Next year, however, several of those present stopped 
Wesley by force from officiating ; but a large part of 
the congregation followed him into the vicarage after 
prayers, and he preached to them."® 

The churchwardens at the visitation of 1753 pre- 
sented the vicar ‘ for disorderly behaviour in the church 
on Sunday the 4'* of March in the time of divine 
service ; also for absenting himself on several holydays 
and at divers times neglecting to read prayers as usual ; 
likewise for introducing strange and unlicensed preachers 
into his pulpit, contrary to the canon.’ 


LANCASHIRE 


Patron 


. Bp. of Manchester . - 


Cause of Vacancy 
exch. J. B. Jones 
res. G. Burwell 


ad ” 


In 1755 it was stated that there were in the parish 
136 families of Protestants and 38 of Dissenters.” 
An inquiry into the charities was 
CHARITIES made in 1901.7 John Brabin, the 
founder of the schools, also established 
almshouses, for which there is now an income of 
£107 §5., but only part of this is spent upon the six 
almswomen.”? Edward Helme in 1691 gave land 
now producing £35 a year for the general benefit of 
the poor.’ This sum and £16 1os. from another 
foundation 74 are distributed in money doles in the 
township of Chipping. For Thornley with Wheatley 
there is an endowment of £9 18s. a year, distributed 
in sheets and flannel and skirts.” 


CHIPPING 

Chipinden, Dom. Bk. ; Chipping, 1242 ; Chepin, 
1246; Chipindale, 1258 ; Chipin, 1258; the final 
g seldom occurs till xvi cent. Schepin and similar 
forms are found occasionally, 1292 and later. 

The northern boundary at Fairsnape Fell attains 
a height of 1,700 ft. ; thence a spur shoots south, 
terminating in Parlick, 1,416 ft. high. Saddle Fell 
is a minor eminence to the east. From Parlick the 
ground slopes rapidly to the east and south, but land 
over 600 ft. high projects south-east, and on the eastern 
slope of this, close to the boundary, are Chipping 
village and church, beside a brook running south to 
join the sluggish Loud, which rises on Parlick and 
bounds the township on the west (for part of the 
way) and south, curling round a hill soo ft. high, 
Elmridge. Core is in the north-west corner, and 
Wolfhall, formerly Wolfhouse, in the north, The 
area of the township is 5,634 acres,! and it had a 
population of 820 in 1go1. 

The principal road is that from Thornley to Chip- 
ping village, going north. Many smaller roads branch 
off from it, crossing the township in all directions. 


Richard 


69 Educated at St. John’s Coll., Camb. ; 
M.A. 1874. Previously rector of All 
Saints’, Gorton. 

8 Educated at Exeter Coll, Oxf.; 
M.A. 1898. Previously rector of St. 
Cyprian’s, Ordsall, 

®4 Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), ii, 131-2. 

65 Valor Eccl. (Rec. Com.), v, 263. 
The revenue was only 38s. 4d. There 
seem to have been disputes later regard- 
ing the lands, between Hoghton and Shire- 
burne ; Ducarus, loc. cit. 3 i, 152. This 
chantry is not mentioned by Raines, 
who gives Ralph Parker as chantry priest 
at Singleton Chapel in 1547. 

The lands of the chantry were sold to 
Sir John Parrott in 1555-6; Pat. 2 & 3 
Phil. and Mary, pt. viii. 

68 End. Char. Rep. (1902). For the 
founder and his family see Smith, op. cit. 
140. James Remington late school- 
master at Chipping’ was buried there 
15 Sept. 1675. 

® The rector of Chipping was ad- 
monished for not residing in 1444; 
Raines MSS. xxii, 373, 375. 

68 Visit. returns at Chester. 

69 Wesley’s Journal, quoted in Baines’ 
Lancs. (ed. Croston), iv, 80. 

70 Visit. Returns. 

It was printed in 1902, the report 
of 1826 being re-issued with it. The 
following details are derived from it, 


74 John Brabin in 1683 bequeathed to 
trustees messuages called Goose Lane 
House and Waller tenement for his 
charities, and in the following year the 
trustees bought land called Brow Spring 
and there built the school and alms- 
houses. Woodstow House was bought in 
1686 as part of the endowment and 
Woodscales in Thornley in 1690. The 
school was for the poor children of Chip- 
ping, Thornley and Leagram ; the poor 
to be assisted from the other funds were 
those of Chipping, Thornley and Bleas- 
dale. The present gross income of the 
combined charities is £259, but most 
goes to the school. 

The almshouses consist of a two- 
storied stone building divided into three 
tenements, each of which is occupied by 
two women, appointed by the trustecs. 
Each woman receives £2 8s. a quarter 
and as much coal as she requires. No 
doles have recently been given to poor 
housekeepers. ‘The population of Chip- 
ping is decreasing and there are practically 
no poor in the township.’ 

® The estate was the messuage and 


land he had on Helmeridge (Elm- 
tidge), mow known as Richmond’s 
Farm. 


4 Edward Harrison in 1671 left £3% 
the interest to be distributed to poor 
people in the parish of Chipping Church 


26 


on 21 December in each year, 
Lund alias Cragg in 1676 left another 
£30 for like uses, and Henry Barnes in 
1696 bequeathed the residue of his per- 
sonal estate (£37 55.) likewise. Lund’s 
gift was for the parish of Chipping, the 
others for the township only. Thomas 
Walbanck in 1732 left £10 for an annua! 
sermon at Chipping Church, and £15 
each for such poor of Chipping and 
Leagram as should attend the sermon. 
Marsden’s tenement was purchased with 
the combined fund in 1767. The pro- 
perty now owned by the charity consists 
of the Malt-kiln estate, five cottages which 
used to be the workhouse, and a cottage 
and smithy ; the gross rentis £17. A 
sum of ros. is paid to the vicar for the 
annual sermon, and the rest is distributed 
in doles of from 1s. to 255. 

Alice Webster in 1742 left £18 for 
poor householders of Chipping and Lea- 
gram, and her brother James added £2. 
This was lost between 1826 and 1862, 
by the bankruptcy of a trustee, as it was 
supposed, 

‘> A fund of £220 existed in 1812, 
chiefly derived from gifts by William 
Wright (1711), £160, and Richard Lund 
(as above), £7 10s. The capital is in 
Lord Derby’s hands. 

15,631, including 4 of inland water ; 
Census Rep. 1901. 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


‘Within living memory the district was rich in 
fine ancestral timber ; the oak, the ash, the elm, the 
sycamore, the hazel and the holly find congenial soil ; 
and... the alder grows in great abundance in 
“‘carrs and marshes,” although surface draining has in 
recent years much reduced the growth.’ ? 

‘Teanleas fires’ used to be lighted on 1 May, 
24 June, 31 August and 1 November.? 

The township is governed by a parish council. 

Among the trades recorded in the parish registers 
of the 17th century are those of gold-beater, glover, 
hat-maker and linen-weaver. In 1825 there were 
cotton-spinners, roller maker and spindle maker. 

More recently lime-burning, iron-working and chair- 
making were the principal industries. The last-named 
continues, but the iron-turning mill was disused about 
twenty years ago. The land is mostly in grazing.‘ 
The soil is clay and calcareous earth. 

In 1833 there were cattle fairs on Easter Tuesday 
and 24 August. The fairs are now held on 23 April 
and the first Wednesday in October. 

Ground for a camp and rifle range was acquired 
by the government in 1892. 

In 1066 CHIPPING, assessed as three 
MANORS plough-lands, was a member of Earl 
After the 


CHIPPING 


Robert de Lacy,® and from that time it continued to 
form a member of the honor of Clitheroe.’ 

The land appears to have been divided among a 
number of holders, but it is not possible to trace the 
origin or descent of these tenements. The most 
important were those of Hoghton of Hoghton, Knoll 
of Wolfhouse or Wolfhall, and the Hospitallers, 
each of them apparently being regarded at one time 
or another as a ‘ manor.’ 

The Hoghton tenement can be traced back to 
1292, when Adam de Hoghton complained that 
Richard le Surreys (Sothron) and others had made 
forcible entry into his several pasture in Chipping. 
The jury, however, found that the defendants had a 
right to common in 20 acres of moor and other land 
which Adam had inclosed by a dyke, and gave a 
verdict for them. In 1313 only the twelfth part 
of the manor is named in a Hoghton settlement,’ but 
in later times the ‘manor’ is spoken of absolutely.}° 
In 1425 the manor was stated to be held of the king 
by a rent of 2s.1.; in the 16th century the service 
was unknown.!2 In 1552-6 there were disputes 
between Hoghton and Shireburne of Wolfhouse as 
to the lordship, the command of the waste being of 

importance. It appears that the Hoghton manor- 
house was Black Hall, about half a mile west of the 


Tostig’s fee of Preston.® 
Conquest it was granted to Roger of Poitou, and 
became part of the possession of the Bussels of Pen- 
Henry I in 1102 gave it to 


wortham for a time. 


2 T. C. Smith, Hise. of Crigping, 3. 

3 Ibid. 6. For ‘Mischief night,’ the 
eve of May Day, see ibid. 52. 

4In 1843 about a fourth of the land 
was arable, though little wheat was grown; 
T. C. Smith, Longridge, 202. 

5 V.C.H. Lancs, i, 2886, ‘Chipinden’ 
or Chippingdale then probably included 
Leagram and Little Bowland, and perhaps 
part of Thornley. 

6 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 382 3 see also 
the account of Aighton. 

7 In the account of the lands of John 
de Lacy in 1241-2 is found a sum of 115, 
from Chipping, and it occurs again in 

1258; Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 156, 217. 

In 1302 John son of Robert del Hall 
held land of the Earl of Lincoln by the 
fortieth part of a knight’s fee; ibid. i, 
319. From later inquisitions it appears 
that this was in Chipping ; Baines, Lancs. 
(ed. 1870), ii, 693, from the Lansdowne 
Feodary. In 1311 Joppe of the Hall 
held a plat of the earl, rendering 1d. 
yearly, and Thomas son of Kutte did suit 
for his tenement to the court of Clitheroe; 
De Lacy Ing. (Chet. Soc.), 18, 19. 

Later there are but few tokens of the 
dependency on Clitheroe ; see Lancs. Ct. 
R, (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 48, 62. 
In 1356 a number of suitors of the courts 
of Clitheroe are named, among them being 
Adam de Hoghton and Adam son of William 
for tenements in Chipping, Richard son of 
Thomas de Knoll for Thornley and John 
de Bailey for Aighton; Duchy of Lanc. 
Assize R. 5, m. 10d. Ina survey made 
in 1445-6 Chipping was stated to be held 
of the king as of his duchy in socage for 
100 solidates of land; Duchy of Lanc. 
Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, no. 20. 

8 Assize R. 408, m. 53. Earlier than 
this may be a release by the widow of 
William de Moton to Adam de Hoghton 
of her right in the Wetridding, received 
from John de Chipping for a third part 

of the mill; Add. MS. 32106, no, 1500. 


church.124 


In 1304 Siegrith or Siota widow of 
Richard son of Margery de Chipping 
claimed dower in lands held by Richard 
de Hoghton, Agnes widow of Adam de 
Hoghton, William de Southworth, Wil- 
liam son of John son of Bimme de Whit- 
tingham, Adam son of Isabel de Whit- 
tingham and Alice his wife and others ; 
also against Robert de Pleasington in 
respect of a sixth part of the water-mill ; 
De Banco R. 14.9, m. 52-3 3 152, m. 38d. 
For his part Richard de Hoghton sum- 
moned Roger son of Richard son of Mar- 
gery to warrant him ; ibid. 153, m. 124. 

9 Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), ii, 14. 

In 1312 Richard son of Adam de 
Hoghton gave land in Chipping to his 
daughter Margery wife of Thomas de 
Hothersall ; Add. MS. 32107, no. 348. 

Richard de Hoghton was in 1328 de- 
scribed as chief lord when he appeared 
among the defendants to a claim for a 
messuage and lands put forward by Emma 
daughter of William the Ward of Chip- 
ping. Her brother Thomas had succeeded, 
but had been divorced from his wife 
Hawise for consanguinity ; hence his son 
Richard was dispossessed. The other de- 
fendants were William son of Richard de 
Hoghton, William de Greenhulls (Hogh- 
ton bailiff) and Richard son of John de 
Greenhulls ; Assize R. 1400, m. 234d. 

Richard de Hoghton in 1328 granted 
his son William the homage of John son 
of William de Dodhill; Towneley MS. 
OO, no. 1504. 

1 Final Conc. iii, 3, of the year 1377 ; 
it was settled on Henry, younger son of 
Sir Adam. 

M Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ti, 12 5 
the inquisition after the death of Sir 
Henry. In later inquisitions in the same 
volume no rent is mentioned nor is a 
‘manor’ claimed ; ibid. 81, 127-9. 

A messuage, 7 acres of land and § acres 
of meadow in Chipping, given in 1407 by 
Sir Richard Hoghton to his chantry at 


27 


This manor was sold to trustees for 
Charlotte wife of Lord Strange about 1630.8 It 
does not appear much later.4 


Ribchester, were held of Sir Henry de 
Conway by a rent of 6d.; Ing. a.q.d. 
file 438, no. 26. 

In 1478 Agnes widow of Henry Hogh- 
ton claimed dower in twenty-one mes- 
suages, &c., in Chipping; Pal. of Lanc. 
Writs Proton. 18 Edw. IV. 

12So0 in that of Alexander Hoghton, 
1498, and later; Duchy of Lanc, Inq. 
p-m. iii, no. 66; xiv, no. 26, &c. The 
manor of Chipping, with fifty messuages, 
water-mill, dovecote, &c., was in 1602 
settled on Sir Richard Hoghton and 
Katherine his wife; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F. bdle. 64, no. 73. This manor was 
included in a general settlement in 1616; 
ibid. bdle. 89, no. 41. 

122 The bounds of the manor show that 
it covered the whole township; they went 
up Chipping Brook, Peacock Brook, Carr 
Hey Brook, east to Threapleigh, to Burn 
slack, west to the edge of Bleasdale Hill, 
Mereclough, Broadhead, down Bleasdale 
Brook to the Loud, and back to the 
starting-point. The pleadings are printed 
by T. C. Smith, Chipping, 16-21. 

18 Land in Chipping was held of Richard 
Hoghton in 1622 and of Lord Strange in 
1633; Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. 
Lib.), 507. In 1626 a court was held by 
Richard Hoghton as lord of the manor ; 
T. C. Smith, Chipping, 22. It appears 
that the manor was purchased out of the 
portion of Charlotte de la Tremouille in 
1629-30 ; Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 226. It is not 
named among the estates of Sir Richard 
Hoghton, who died in 1631. In 1642 4 
settlement of the manors of Goosnargh 
and Chipping was made by William Earl 
of Derby, James Lord Strange and Char- 
lotte his wife; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 141, no. 31. 

For other references see Lancs. and 
Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
ii, 244, 247. 

14 Tt is stated to have been sold as 
early as 1641 to James Walmesley and 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


The Knolls of Wolfhouse appear to have been a 
branch of those of Thornley, and in the inquisition 
of 1628 respecting the estate the manor of Chipping 
and the capital messuage called ‘ Wolt house in Shire- 
burne,’ with various other messuages, water-mill and 
lands in Chipping, were stated to be held of the lord 
of Thornley by the service of a greyhound, a ‘coter,’ 
One Adam son of Richard de Knoll 
had half an oxgang of land in Chipping in 1280, 
when it was claimed by Ralph de Catterall,!® and 
the surname appears frequently.!7 


and 3s. rent.!5 


others ; and in 1649 Elizateth Walmesley, 
widow, held a court baron; T. C. Smith, 
Chipping, 24, 23. 

18 Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. xxv, 
no, 51, after the death of Robert Shire- 
burne, gent. 

18 De Banco R. 32, m. 243 36,m. 71. 
By an inquiry in 1274 it was found that 
one Roger Haslinghead, hanged for felony, 
had held of Adam de Knoll a messuage 
and half an oxgang of land in Chipping, 
which had been in the king’s hands for a 
year and a day; Lanes. Ing. and Extents, 
i, 241. Seisin was accordingly restored 
to Adam ; Cal. Close, 1272-9, p. 90. 

Adam son of Richard de Knoll held a 
tenement in 1292 which was unsuccess- 
fully claimed by Bernard de Hacking ; 
Assize R. 408, m. 42. Adam seems to 
have been living in 1305 ; Assize R. 419, 
m. 43 420,m. 8. Alice widow of Adam 
de Knoll claimed dower in a messuage, 
&c., against Master Richard de Hoghton 
and Agnes de Scopham in 1308 ; while in 
1312 Richard son of Adam de Knoll 
claimed land against Alice widow of 
Adam ; De Banco R. 173, m. 185 3 195, 
m. 219d. 

It is said that Robert son of Richard de 
Chipping made a grant of land to Richard 
son of Lewis de Knoll, to whom Roger de 
Whitaker made another gift ; also that 
Henry de Thelwall gave land near the 
Kirk brigg to Richard de Knoll ; T. C. 
Smith, C’ipping, 7, 8 (quoting the Derby 
MSS.). 

7 John de Knoll, Richard le Surreys 
and others were in 1292 stated to have 
thrown down a dyke to the injury of the 
free tenement of William de Whitting- 
ham, clerk; Assize R. 408, m. 61d. 
John de Knoll, Adam his brother and 
Richard son of John were in 1308-9 
among the defendants to a claim for a 
messuage, &c., made by John son of 
Thomas son of Christiana de Chipping, in 
virtue of a grant from his father, who was 
still living ; Assize R. 423, m.1. This 
John appears to be the ancestor of the 
Knolls of Thornley, according to the 
pedigree in Smith, Caipping, 33. 

John son of Richard de Pleasington 
appeared in 1355 by his custodee against 
Richard son of Richard de Knoll, Ellis de 
Whitlydale, and John son of Richard de 
Knoll, who held a tenement in Chipping 
c.aimed by him; Duchy of Lanc. Assize 
R. 4, m. 6d. It was alleged that Robert 
de Pleasington, grandfather of plaintiff, 
had given the tenement to his son Richard 
in the time of Edward II; for the de- 
fence it was stated that part had belonged 
to Alice wife of Robert and grandmother 
of plaintiff, and that she had given them 
to Richard son of Adam de Knoll and to 
the said Richard son of Richard ; ibid. 
5, m. 27. A grant by Robert de 
Pleasington to Richard son of Adam de 
Knoll in 1313 is in P.R.O.; Anct. D. 
7462. Richard de Knoll of Helme- 


Wolfhouse de- 


field was plaintiff in 13573; Duchy of 
Lane. Assize R.. 6, m. f. 

18 The above-named Richard son of 
Adam de Knoll or Knolls (Knowles) had 
by his wife Cecily sons named Thomas 
and Richard. From a pleading of 1329 
it appears that one Richard son of 
Christiana (perhaps the Christiana de 
Chipping of the note preceding) granted 
a messuage and land to Roger de Wed- 
acre, free for ten years, but subject to a 
rent afterwards. As Roger refused to 
pay this rent, the property was demised to 
Richard de Knoll and his sons, where- 
upon Roger claimed; Assize R. 427, 
m. I. 

From a confused statement drawn up 
about 1550 (Add. MS. 32106, no. 1086) 
it appears that Richard de Knolls, son of 
William (sic) and father of Lawrence, 
gave Lawrence a moiety of his lordship 
of the town of Chipping in 1329, the 
other moiety descending to Lawrence at 
Richard’s death in or before 1348. In 
the same year John de Knolls, also son of 
Richard, made a feoffment of his lands, 
water-mill, &¢., and Emma his widow in 
1373, holding in dower, also granted 
to feoffees, who afterwards gave to Roger 
de Knolls, A release was made to 
Lawrence Knolls in 1446-7. ‘John 
Knowles was the son of Christopher 
Knowles and father of Isabel Knowles ; 
which Isabel married Roger Shireburne, 
and they had issue Robert Shireburne, 
which Robert had issue Roger, now 
defendant.’ 

Lawrence son of Richard de Knoll 
appears in 1344-7 ; Assize R. 1435, m. 9, 
1§, 37. Lawrence in 1348 proved his 
right to a messuage, &c., in Chipping held 
by Ralph de Knoll and by Thomas son of 
John de Knoll and Richard and John sons 
of Thomas ; Assize R. 1444, m. 8. 

One Adam de Knoll was in 1360 
charged with an assault on Thomas son 
of Roger de Knoll at Thornley; Assize 
RK, AG Ty Ge, 24s 

A John son of Richard de Knoll ap- 
pears to have forfeited his lands for felony, 
as they remained in the king’s hands from 
1382 to 1409 (Lancs. Ing. p.m. Chet. 
Soc. i, 72); but Thomas son of Roger 
de Knoll alleged that he had purchased 
some or all of the lands in Chippingdale 
after the king’s pardon had been obtained ; 
Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 355 3. xl, 
525. 

From inquiry made in 1425 it appears 
that certain lands of Thomas son of 
Roger son of Lawrence de Knoll had 
been given to his wife Katherine, who 
afterwards married Geoffrey de Warburton 
of Newcroft in Flixton, the reversion 
being to Lawrence son of Thomas ; Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 9-11 3 i, 73. 

Richard and Edmund sons of Lawrence 
Knoll are mentioned in 1448; Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R. 11, m. 31. Margaret 
widow of Richard Knoll claimed dower 


28 


scended to John Knoll,!® whose daughter Isabel 
married Roger Shireburne, a younger son of Robert 
Shireburne of Stonyhurst ; and in 1493 the estate 
seems to have been secured by Roger.!® 
Shireburne, who built the Wolfhouse chapel in 
Chipping Church,” died in 1543, his son and heir 
Robert being then fifty-three years old.?! 
remained Roman Catholics at the Reformation,”” and 
during the Civil War the estate was sequestered by 
the Parliament.?8 
Shireburne, who in 1678 mortgaged or sold it to 


Roger 


The family 


Wolfhouse descended to Alexander 


in 1473; Pal. of Lanc. Writs Proton. 
13 Edw. IV. 

19 Final Conc. iii, 14.3. 

20 T, C. Smith, Caipping, 73 (from 
Derby MSS.). 

21 Ibid. 227, from the Ing. p.m. among 
the Derby MSS. His estate included 
closes called the Kno:t, Whitacre and 
Birchenlee. The mill and lands in Chip- 
ping were held of the Earl of Derby (as 
of his manor of Thornley) in  socaze. 
Roger the son and heir of Robert seems 
to have been married as early as 1523 to 
Margaret daughter of John Bradley. 

Sir Richard Shireburne of Stonyhurst 
and Roger Shireburne of ‘ Millhouse’ in 
1554 agreed that the latter should not 
alienate his estate, and that in default of 
male issue by Grace, then Roger’s wife, it 
should go successively to Hugh and 
Henry, Roger’s brothers; Add. MS, 
32106, no, 1085. In 1569 there appears 
to have been an exchange of lands, &c., 
in Chipping between Roger Shireburne 
and Thomas Hoghton; Pal. of Lane, 
Feet of F, bdle. 31, m. 171, 184. 

From the pedigree printed in Dugdale’s 
Visit, (Chet. Soc.), 265, it appears that 
the succession was as follows: Roger 
-s. Robert —s. Roger ~s. Robert. The 
last-named died in 1627 holding the 
‘manor’ as stated in the text, and leaving 
as heir his brother Henry, aged twenty- 
two ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m, xxv, no, 
51. An agreement between Henry and 
Isabel, Robert's widow, was made about 
the same time; Add. MS. 32106, no. 
1095. From the same pedigree it appears 
that another brother John succeeded and 
sold Wolfhouse to his uncle, John Shire- 
burne, who had a son Robert and grand- 
son Edward, who seems to have died 
young. 

From a fine of 1638, however, it seems 
that the younger John Shireburne trans- 
ferred his manor of Chipping, with water- 
mill, dovecote, various messuages and 
lands, to Richard Shireburne of Stony- 
hurst, perhaps as trustee ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F, bdle. 133, no. 27. 

Robert Shireburne (father of Edward) 
was succeeded by his brother Alexander, 
the vendor. Various details of the 
descent will be found in Smith, op. cit. 
and Sherborn, Fam. of Sherborn, 59-66. 

For the Shireburnes of Knott, a branch 
of the Wolf house family, see ibid. 114 -16. 

22 In 1607 the two-thirds part of Roger 
Shireburne’s estate sequestered for recu- 
sancy was granted out by the Crown ; Pat. 
5 Jas. I, pt. i. 

28 In the composition papers it is stated 
that the above-named Isabel widow of 
Robert afterwards married Thomas Helme 
of Goosnargh, and that Robert's lands 
were sold to a William Parker. Parker's 
estate was sequestered for ‘delinquency,’ 
and the widow was allowed the £15 4 
year she claimed in 1651; Cal. Com. for 
Comp. iv, 2782. 


BLACKBURN 


six years later it was sold 
to William Patten and Thomas Naylor?>: these 
were probably trustees of Thomas Patten of Preston, 
from whom this manor of Chipping has descended 
through the Stanleys of Bickerstaffe to the Earl of 


Christopher Wilkinson 4 ; 


Derby. No courts are held. 


The estate of the Hospitallers in Chippingdale goes 
back to early times, and is named in 1292.7” After the 
Suppression the manors of Haworth and Chipping were 
sold by the Crown to George Whitmore of London,” 


About the same time John Shireburne 
claimed allowance of his title to the 
manor of Chipping, of which Parker was 
in possession by conveyance from the said 
John in 1641. Parker had granted him 
a rent-charge of {10 a year for life and 
covenanted to provide him in meat, drink, 
apparel and lodging and keeping for a 
horse. Robert Shireburne, the son of 
John, in 1653 begged allowance of his 
title to Chipping Manor, Wolfhall, the 
Knotts, &c., conveyed to him by his 
father, William Parker having unjustly 
intruded thereon. This claim was ad- 
mitted and the sequestration discharged 
as from 24 Dec. 1649; ibid. iii, 2300. 

John Shireburne of Staffordshire, pro- 
bably the John who sold to his uncle of 
the same name, complained that his 
estate had been sequestered as to two- 
thirds on the supposition that he was a 
recusant ; but he ‘has been and is con- 
formable and was never convicted’ ; ibid. 
2301. 

The will of Robert (son of John) 
Shireburne, dated 1668, bequeathing the 
manor of Chipping, Wolfhall, &c., to his 
brother Alexander is printed in Smith, 
Chipping, 229. 

24 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 201, 
m. 111, The estate is described as the 
manor of Chipping, with twenty messu- 
ages, &c., and a water-mill in Chipping 
and Thornley. Alexander Shireburne was 
joined with his wife Frances in the fine. 

% Tbid. bdle. 212, m. 109. The de- 
forciants were Christopher Wilkinson, 
Ellen his wife, John Shireburne, William 
Banks and Anne his wife. William 
Patten and Thomas Naylor appear as 
trustees for Thomas Patten in a later fine; 
ibid. bdle. 213, m. 8. 

The date of purchase by Thomas Patten 
is given as 6 Feb. 1679-80 in Smith, 
Chipping, 226. 

Some particulars of the later years of 
Alexander Shireburne will be found in the 
work above cited—Fam. of Sherborn, 65-7. 
He was a recusant in 1680; Smith, op. 
cit. 30. 

26 See the account of Thornley. 

® Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 375. 
About 1535 the knights’ bailiff of Chip- 
ping had a fee of 335. 7d.; Valor Eccl. 
(Rec. Com.), v, 69. In a rental of 1609 
it is recorded that the Hospitallers had 
held Highfield, &c., of the king as of his 
manor of Chipping by a rent of 15. 
Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 1324. 

William Hall, hanged in 1506, had 
held lands in Chipping and Dutton of the 
Prior of St. John by a rent of 7s. 6d. ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. iii, no. 19. 

% Pat. g Jas. I, pt. xxvii, The manor 
was parcel of the preceptory of Newland 
in Yorkshire. 

*9 Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 132. There 
were free rents in many townships, lands 
in Claughton and perquisites of courts. 

Sir Richard Shireburne of Stonyhurst, 
who died in 1594, had held lands in 


HUNDRED 


who transferred them to Richard Shireburne of Stony- 
hurst 2°; this is perhaps the origin of the manor 
_ claimed by the family. A court was held by Richard 
Shireburne in 1690,°° and as late as 1825 the manor 
of Chipping was said to be held by Thomas Weld.*! 


CHIPPING 


Sawley Abbey had land in Chipping.*” 


Chipping, but the tenure was not known 5 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvi, no. 3. 
After the above-named purchase Richard 
Shireburne (1628) was seised of the 
manors of Haworth and Chipping, but the 
tenure is not stated ; ibid. xxvi, no. 4. 

30 T. C. Smith, Chipping, 23. 

31 Baines, Lancs. Dir. ii, 633. A 
similar statement is made in his later 
Hist. of Lancs. (ed. 1836, iii, 362), with 
the addition that the Earl of Derby had 
recently purchased the manor. 

33 Roger de Lacy gave to John de 
Dinckley (Dunkekanlega) an oxgang of 
land in the vill of Chipping formerly held 
by Alexander de Chipping, a rent of 12d. 
being payable ; Harl. MS. 2077, fol. 324. 

John son of Uctred de Dinckley gave 
St. Mary of Sawley Haselhurstridding, and, 
desiring that it should be held free from 
all secular service, charged his oxgang in 
Chipping with any such service due from 
his gift. Confirmations were granted by 
Robert, Gilbert and Alice, the children 
of John de Dinckley. Geoffrey son of 
Richard le Waleys by the above-named 
Alice, who had been tenant of Hasel- 
hurstridding, gave part of Coueracres to 
the monks, the bounds naming Evisbrook, 
Mersyke, Brundeparloc (? Parlick Brow) 
and Covihill. These charters, from Harl. 
MS. 112, fol. 724, are printed in Whit- 
aker, Whalley, ii, 483-4. 

The Sawley land, called Helhurst in 
Chipping, was granted by the Crown to 
Sir Arthur Darcy in May 1538 ; L. and P. 
Hen, VIL, xiii (1), g. 1115 (13). 

33 Several references to them will be 
found in preceding notes. 

John de Chipping gave land to William 
son of Adam de Aula; T. C. Smith, 
Chipping, 7. In 1280 Cecily widow of 
William de la Sale claimed dower against 
John de Chipping and others ; De Banco 
R. 36, m. 45d. Siegrith daughter of 
Adam de Chippindale was in 1292 non- 
suited in her claim for a tenement in the 
place held by Thomas de Chippindale and 
John Bimmeson of Whittingham ; Assize 
R. 408, m. 76. At the same time Alice 
widow of Roger son of William de Chip- 
ping claimed as dower the third part of 
three messuages, 24 acres of land and 
8 acres of meadow held by Robert the son 
of Roger ; ibid. m. 64d. 

Emma daughter of Richard son of 
Margery de Chipping in 1304 recovered 
an oxgang of land, &c., against Roger the 
son and heir of Richard and William his 
brother, she alleging a grant from their 
father ; ibid. 419, m. 2. 

John son of John del Hall of Chipping 
in 1322 held 10 acres in Chipping by 
the fortieth part of a knight’s fee ; Lancs. 
Ing. and Extents, ii, 134. 

In 1336 William son of John de 
Chippindale claimed various plats of 
land against John de Dudhill, Adam son 
of Thomas de Hothersall and Roger le 
Sotheryn (Surreys); De Banco R. 306, 
m. 177. 


29 


Of the minor families but little can be stated. 
The earlier surnames include Chipping and Chip- 
pindale,’3 Greenhills *!—some of whose estate seems 
to have passed to Wawne*® and other parts to 


John son of Adam son of Robert de 
Chipping and Cecily widow of Henry the 
Wright in 1358 obtained a writ concern- 
ing messuages and land in Chipping 5 
Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 337: 

Margaret widow of Lawrence del Hall 
of Chippingdale in 14.02 released her right 
in land in Anstehalgh in Ribchester ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 353. 

In 1506 William Hall held a messuage 
and land in Chipping of the king as of 
his castle of Clitheroe by a rent of 184. ; 
being convicted of felony in Middlesex 
he was imprisoned at Newgate and after- 
wards hanged ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
iii, no, 19. William son and heir of 
Robert Hall enfeoffed his uncle Roger 
Hall of Gainsborough of all his lands in 
Dutton, Chipping and Chippingdale ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no, 181. Roger Hall 
was the king’s bailiff of Gringley, Notts. 

34 Adam son of Richard de Greenhills 
granted to Sir Adam de Hoghton all his 
land in Robert’s-croft on the eastern side 
of Cresswell Syke, just as he had received 
it by gift of Adam son of Thurstan ; 
Dods. MSS. cxlii, fol. 54. 

35 John son of John de Greenhill in 
1310 gave to Henry de Dinckley and 
Maud his wife land in Chipping, the 
bounds of which began on the eastern 
side of Mabholm, went down to the 
Loud, ascended this stream to Barton 
Hey, thence north to the Foul outlane as 
far as Diksnape Syke, and southward to 
the starting-point; Ct. of Wards, box 
13 A,no.FD27. The same Henry and 
Maud in 1358 obtained land between 
Whitacres and Countes Hey and between 
the Black Moss and Loud; ibid. no. 
FD 45; box 13B. ‘These and other 
lands in Chipping, Wheatley, Wilpshire 
and Dinckley seem to have come to 
Richard Hirde and Margaret his wife by 
1418-21; ibid. box 13 A, no. FD 24, 16, 
37, 15, 13 box 13 B. 

In 1455 they were transferred to 
William son and heir-apparent of John 
Wawne (‘ Wawan’) of Chippingdale, John 
having been son and heir of Margaret 
Hirde ; ibid. box 13 B; 13 A, no. FD 18, 
28. William Wawne, Elizabeth his wife 
and Thomas his son and heir occur in 
1469; ibid. FD 11. 

WilliamWawne son and heir of Thomas 
in 1520 gave to feoffees his close or pas- 
ture land called Marebonne, occupied by 
Edward Helme, for the use of Grace, 
grantor’s wife, in accordance with an 
agreement between his mother Anne and 
one Nicholas Walmesley; ibid. FD 30. 
William Wawne, described as ‘of Wheat- 
ley,’ in 1566 made a feoffment of lands 
in Wheatley, Chipping and Ashley (in 
Whittingham) for the use of his son and 
heir Nicholas; ibid. FD 13. In the 
following year Nicholas married Ellen 
daughter of Edward Sharples of Osbaldes- 
ton ; ibid. box 13 B. 

Edmund Wawne son of Nicholas died 
in or before 1592 holding a messuage in 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Brown 3@ —Ravenshaw,°” Surreys?® and Startevant 
or Sturtevant,3? with others denoting landowners in 
adjacent townships.%° Some deeds of the Halton 
family have been preserved by Kuerden.*} 
HESKETH END was long the estate of the Alston 
family, traceable to the time of Edward I. The 
house known by this name is a two-story stone 
building, about 14 miles south-west of Chipping, 
the front facing south, with a projecting gabled 
wing at the west end. The principal part now 
remaining appears to have been built at the end 
of the 16th century by the Alstons, but the building 
was probably originally of greater extent. Some of 
the inscribed stones in the east part have apparently 
been inserted in a rather haphazard fashion and 
suggest the later rebuilding. At the west side is a 
large projecting stone chimney, but the exterior of 
the house, which has a stone slated roof repaired with 
modern blue slates at the back, is chiefly remarkable 
for the lengthy and unique inscriptions which run 
across the front and on the inner return of the west 
wing. These, together with the whole of the front 
of the house, were for a long time very much ob- 
scured by repeated coatings of whitewash, but ir. 
1907 the building was thoroughly restored, the 
whitewash carefully removed and much of the stone 


work re-chiselled. The main front wall was largely 
rebuilt, but the smaller inscribed stones after being 
carefully cleaned were put back in the positions they 
formerly occupied. The interior is almost wholly 
modernized, but there is an inscribed stone in the 
chief bedroom and another in the dairy. It is now 
a farm-house. 

The west wing, which is 17 ft. across, has a 
mullioned window of seven lights with hood mould 
over on each floor and a two-light window in the 
gable, over which is a stone carved with the sacred 
monogram. ‘The inscription runs across the front 
wall above the ground-floor window in double lines, 
and is carved on six separate stones, the wording on 
each stone being complete in itself, as follows, except 
perhaps in the last two stones : 


BRVTVS ERECTVS LON 
DINV ANTE CHRIST 1108 


CESAR CONQVERT AN 
GLIA ANTE CHRIST 58 


SAXONII CONQVERT ANGLIA 
ANNO DON 447 EPISCOPAT IB 


DANII CONQVERT A 
NGLIA ANNO DOI I018 


AGER FLODDAN AN 1513 
ANGL RECEP. FIDM AD 179 


ANGLIA 
M - SIVE - 


IN CO 
SHIRI 


This is continued on four stones along the return 
of the west wing facing east as follows, the end of 


Chipping of Robert Shireburne by a rent 
of 6d., and 4 acres improved from the 
waste, held of the queen by the hundredth 
part of a knight’s fee; also lands in 
Wheatley and Ashley ; Duchy of Lance. 
Ing. p.m. xv, no. 13. His mother Ellen 
is named, and his heir was his younger 
brother Thomas, thirteen years of 
age. 

86 In 1426 a messuage and lands with 
common of turbary were settled on John 
Brown and Alice his wife, with remainders 
to their children Thomas, Richard, Joan 
and Agnes, and in default to the right 
heirs of Christiana de Greenhills, mother 
of Alice; Final Conc. iii, 91. This Alice 
was perhaps the mother of John Formby 
named in the account of Studley in 
Thornley. 

Evan Brown died in 1545 holding a 
messuage in Chipping, and his brother 
George in 1567 holding of Thomas 
Hoghton by 1d. rent; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. vii, no. 243; xi, no. 4. James 
Brown in 1586 held similarly ; ibid. xiv, 
no. 42. 

37 Stephen de Ravenshaw contributed 
to a subsidy in 13323; Exch. Lay Subs. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 80. William 
son of Stephen de Ravenshaw in 1342 
acquired land and wood in Chipping from 
William de Ravenshaw the younger and 
Alice his wife; Final Conc. ii, 115. 
William was afterwards outlawed for 
felony, but in 1360 his lands were released 
to the superior lord, Sir Adam de Hoghton; 
Dep. Keeper’s Rep. xxxii, App. 341. 

88 The name either as Surreys or 
Sothron occurs frequently in the neigh- 
bourhood. 

Alice widow of Hugh le Surreys re- 
leased to Roger son of Bimme her dower 
right in Boothhurst in Chipping, which 
Hugh had granted to Roger ; Dods. MSS. 
cxlii, fol. 564, The same Roger, it may 
be added, had a grant of Coppedhurst 
from Emmota de Meluir; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 1495. 

Thomas (son of Hugh) le Surreys in 
1288 claimed land in Chipping against 
Roger son of William de Chipping and 


John son of Roger; De Banco R. 72, 
m. 40; 89,m.19. Richard le Surreys 
was defendant in 1292 and plaintiff in 
1301; Assize R. 408, m. 644.3 419, 
m. 13. 

89 Robert Startevant of Chipping in 
1304-5 claimed various lands in the 
township as son of Robert son of Bimme 
the White, averring that his father had 
died during a pilgrimage to the Holy 
Land ; Assize R. 419, m. 43; 420, m. 9, 
10. Among the defendants were Master 
Richard de Hoghton, Agnes widow of 
Adam de Hoghton, William and Thomas 
de Helme, Roger son of Richard son of 
Margery de Chipping, William son of 
John son of Bimme de Whittingham, 
John de Greenhill and Richard son of 
‘John Othegrenehulles.’ 

With regard to the surname White it 
may be added that Robert son of Robert 
le Blund in 1246 claimed 6 acres in 
Chipping against John son of William ; 
ibid. 404, m. 3. 

40 Richard de Catterall in 1244 held 
lands of the heir of the Earl of Lincoln ; 
Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 160. 

The Bartons of Barton long held a close 
called Barton Hey of the Hoghtons, with- 
out any known service ; see, for example, 
Lancs.Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 8. They occur as early as 1298, in which 
year John de Barton called upon Master 
Richard de Hoghton (as mesne lord) to 
acquit him of service demanded by Henry 
de Lacy Earl of Lincoln ; De Banco R. 122, 
m. 62d. 

Lawrence Starkie died in 1532 holding 
land of the king by knight’s service ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. ix, no. 21. 
Disputes between the heirs occurred in 
1540; Ducatus Lanc. i, 165. The Chip- 
pingdale estate seems to have been sold by 
one of the co-heirs—Etheldreda wife of 
Humphrey Newton —to Sir Richard 
Shireburne in 1565; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F. bdle. 27, m. 112. 

The tenure of the Chippingdale lands of 
George Kirkby of Up Rawcliffe is not re- 
corded ; they appear to have been sold by 
his brother William to Gabriel Hesketh 


30 


in 1563; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xi, 
no. 8; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle, 25, 
m. 197. This was perhaps the estate 
afterwards held by the Heskeths of Poul- 
ton of Shireburne of Wolfhouse by a 
rent of 25,3 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 364-6. 

Jane Beesley, widow, in 1585 held the 
moiety of a messuage called Peacock Hey, 
&c., but the tenure is not stated ; Duchy 
of Lanc, Ing. p.m. xvi, no. 24. Francis 
Beesley in 1609 held his lands, &c., in 
Chipping of Richard Hoghton ; Lanes. Ing. 
p.m. (Rec. Soc.), i, 138-9. 

The tenure of Richard Walton’s mes- 
suage (1594) is not recorded ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvi, no, 42 3 xvii, no. 48. 
That of Joshua Galland (1638) was of the 
king by knight’s service ; ibid. xxx, no. 17. 

John Bairstowe of Brownhurst had 
lands in Chipping, 1623-43; Chan. Inq. 
p-m. ti, Misc. 515-78. 

41 Kuerden MSS. iii, H 3. The earliest 
deed is a grant by Richard son of John de 
Knoll to Adam son of William de Halton 
of a messuage in Chipping in 1332. John 
Halton appears from 1451-2 to 1479 and 
Miles his son and heir (who calls James 
Helme ‘my uncle’) in 1466 and 1477, 
in which latter year John, his son and 
heir, was espoused to Margaret daughter 
of Robert Mason. Miles again occurs in 
1481 and 1497-8 ; and James the brother 
and heir of John Halton, deceased in 
1505-6, was bound to Margaret, the 
widow of John, who had married Nicholas 
Cotton. 

4? The place may have taken a name 
from the Heskeths recorded in the last 
note but one. 

In 1291 Geoffrey son and heir of 
Benedict de Chipping claimed land against 
Christiana daughter of William the Wain- 
wright and John son of William de Alston 
of Helme ; it was alleged that Robert son 
of Benedict de Chipping had demised the 
land to William de Alston; De Banco R. 87, 
m. 37. There is little record of the family. 
William and Robert Alston, yeomen, occur 
in 14473 Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 10, 
m. 42. 


INOW YT HLAOS : any HLaXsapy = ONIddIHZ) 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


the last stone facing the front being carved with the 
sacred monogram : 


ANNO DOMI ISQI ELIS REGI 
REGNO ANNI ETATIS NOSTRE 


ROBART ALSTVN 25 
RIC ALSTVN IVNIOR § 


A CREACIONE MVNDI 5553 A CONQVES 
TO ANGLIE §24 DEVM TIME REGEM HONOR 


Over the door on the return of the west wing 
facing east is a stone inscribed 


RESPICE FINEM ET NVNQV 
AM PECCABIS PROXIMVM AMA 


and to the left of this over a small built-up 
window another stone with the name of ‘ Richarde 
Alstun 53.’ On the main south front are other 
inscribed stones, one with the sacred monogram 
between two crosses, another with the fragment 
Ric avistv, and a third aLsTVN HATH INHERITED 
HERE IB I8 YER. 


In the bedroom in the east wing an inscribed 
stone reads : 
DEVM TIME 
REGEM HONOR 
PROXIMVM AMA 
HOC FAC ET VIVE 
IN ETERNVM 


and a stone in the dairy has ‘ Fear God and love the 
right.’ 

The west wall retains its old rough stone walling 
unrestored and has a small square built-up window 
with the sacred monogram between two crosses on the 
head. Another window has also some ornament in 


CHIPPING 


the head, and the chimney, which is a good one of 
two shafts, has two gargoyles in the angles. 

Richard Alston of Chipping died in 1607 holding 
a messuage and lands there of the king in socage, 
Richard his son and heir was forty years of age.13 

HELME, now Elmridge, gave a surname to a family 
which spread into neighbouring townships.“4_ William 
Helme died in 1597 holding a messuage, &c., of 
Richard Hoghton by a rent of 4d. and leaving a 
son Richard, aged twenty-two.!® Richard died in 
1638 holding of Lord Strange; his son and heir 
William was thirty years of age.4® Leonard Helme 
died in 1601, but the tenure of his Chipping 
property is not recorded.” Another William Helme 
died in 1612, leaving a son James, thirty-nine years 
old ; he also held of Richard Hoghton as of his 
manor of Chipping.4® James died in 1622, leaving 
a son William, aged twenty in 1633, by which time 
Lord Strange had succeeded Hoghton.*?® 

CORE was divided. At one time it seems to 
have been held by an illegitimate branch of the 
Knolls. In later times the most important family 
was that of Parkinson.*! From them sprang Richard 
Parkinson, Canon of Manchester and Principal of 
St. Bees College, who was born at Woodgates in 
1797. 

One of the most notable estates, on account of the 
tenure, was that of the Leylands of Morleys in 
Astley,*® who held ‘of the heirs of William son of 
William son of Maurice’ by a rent of 184.588 

The following were freeholders in 1600: Richard 
Austen (Alston), Richard Bolton, Henry Mawdesley 
and Thomas Thornley.>t The Subsidy Rolls afford 
further information ; thus in 1524 Roger Shireburne 


‘8 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), i, 108-9. 

Captain Robert Alston, apparently a 
Parliamentarian, occursin 1650; Royalist 
Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
ii, 264. 

‘The Alstons remained owners until 
1702, when it passed to the Eccles family; 
in 1819 Richard Eccles of Wigan sold it 
to Thomas Cardwell, whose descendants 
now (1893) possess it’; T. C. Smith, 
Chipping, 234, where many particulars as 
to the Alston family are given. 

44 Ralph de Helme occurs in 1332; 
Exch. Lay Subs, (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), 80. 

Lawrence de Helme and Isabel his wife 
in 1377 obtained from William del Wood 
and Margery his wife a messuage and lands 
in Chipping ; Final Conc. iii, 2. 

A settlement of two messuages, cottages, 
land and wood in Chipping and Helme 
was made in 15533; the remainders were 
to Joan then wife of William Lorimer and 
then after her death to Lawrence Helme 
and his issue by Joan then his wife ; Pal. 

_ of Lane, Feet of F. bdle. 14, m. 36. 

For a dispute between Alice Helme, 
widow (and others), and Thomas Helme 
see Ducatus Lanc. ii, 227. 

45 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and 
Ches.), i, 150, 

With regard to the rent of 4d. it may 
be noted that one Geoffrey de Whitting- 
ham in 1297 held a plat of the waste in 
Chippingdale for which he received that 
sum ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 283. 

‘6 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxx, no. 76. 

4’ Ibid. xviii, no. 20. 

‘8 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), i, 213. 
He had other lands in Thornley, Wheatley 
and Lea, 


49 Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 

507. 
50 John Mauldeson of ¢ Coure,’ a minor, 
in 1358 claimed a messuage and land 
against Richard and Adam, sons of Thomas 
de Knoll, as being son and heir of John 
son of Richard de Knoll. It was alleged 
that his father (John son of Richard) was 
born before espousals; Duchy of Lanc. 
Assize R. 6, m. 1. 

In 1360 John son of Maud de Coure 
had livery of a messuage and lands seised 
into the duke’s hands by reason of the 
felony of John (son of Richard) de Knoll ; 
Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 347. 

Richard Cover alias Coer, yeoman, is 
named in 1448 ; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 11, 
m. 42. 1 T. C. Smith, Chipping, 247. 

A dispute as to lands in Chipping be- 
tween Whitaker and Parkinson is referred 
to in Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 24.6. 

In 1653 Ralph and Richard Parkinson 
of Chipping petitioned to compound for 
land sequestered by the Parliament for 
the delinquency of their eldest brother 
Thomas Parkinson of Infield in Claughton; 
Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 3106. 

52 See the account of Manchester Church 
and the 1880 edition of his Old Church 
Clock. He died in 1858. 

53 An estate in Chipping, Thornley, 
&c., was given to feoffees by William 
Leyland and Anne his wife in 1509 ; Pal. 
of Lanc., Feet of F. bdle. 11, m. 24.9, 248. 
Part of the estate was held for life by 
Eleanor Holland, widow, and part by 
Robert Thimelby and Margery his wife. 

Sir William Leyland died in 1547, but 
the tenure of his Chipping lands is not 
recorded ; in the case of Thomas Leyland, 


aI 


his son, it is given as in the text and like- 
wise after the death of Edward Tyldesley ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xi, no. 20; 
xiv, no. 10. In 1621, however, the tenure 
was described as of Sir Richard Hoghton 
as of his manor of Chipping in socage ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 269. In 
1606-7 a grant of lands in Chipping, 
Wheatley and Thornley was made to 
Edward Tyldesley of Astley; Pat. 4 
Jas. I, pt. xxx. 

It should be added that according to an 
old pedigree (Harl. MS. 1408, fol. 159) 
William Leyland married Anne daughter 
and heir of Alan Singleton, who was the 
descendant of the heiress of Adam de 
Bury, whose estate in the parish is noticed 
under Thornley. The wardship and mar- 
riage of Anne daughter and heir of Alan 
Singleton were in 1503 granted to James 
Medcalfe ; Dep. Keeper's Rep. xl, App. 


3 

53a Nothing is known of the origin of the 
tenure. William son of Maurice occurs 
in the Pipe Roll of 1213-15, when he owed 
40s. out of 60s. due apparently for some 
encroachment on the forest or other offence 
against the forest laws; Farrer, Lancs. 
Pipe R. 251. He also attested a charter 
by Roger de Whitacre, who gave lands in 
Chipping to Reginald ; Dods, MSS. xci, 
fol. 161. The bounds in this case are of 
interest : Along the lache which falls into 
Summerford as far as the moor and then 
on the west side to the road to the mill 
between Chipping and Wheatley, down 
the road to the Loud, and along this river 
to Summerford. 

54 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 
235-6. Some references to the Mawdesley 
family will be found in Ducatus Lane, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


was the principal landowner contributing to the 
subsidy, Robert Alston and Richard Thornley being 
the others.°5 Thomas Sturtivant, Thomas Bolton, 
Robert Alston, Thomas Thornley, Thomas Rodes 
and Christopher Mawdesley contributed for their 
ands in 1543.°° Robert Shireburne, Thomas 
Thornley, Henry Mawdesley, Richard Alston, Roger 
Sturtivant and Richard Bolton were the landowners 
in 1597. Thosein 1626 were: Henry Shireburne, 
Richard Thornley, Richard Parkinson, the heirs of 
Robert Alston, Thomas Boulton and John Sturtivant ; 
James Beesley and a large number of others paid 
specially as non-communicants.°® Several ‘ Papists’ 
registered estates in 1717.59 The land tax return of 
1789 shows that the Earl of Derby, Sir H. Main- 
waring, and — Blundell were the chief landowners. 

An inclosure award was made in 1812. 

The parish church has been described above. 

The Wesleyans made attempts to found a congre- 
gation, but abandoned them about 1850.° 

The Nonconformists after the Restoration had a 
meeting-place ®* and in 1705 the chapel in Hesketh 
Lane was built. It is associated with the name of 
Peter Walkden, minister from 1711 to 1738, whose 
Diary was published in 1866."! It was closed in 
1880 and then sold. The Congregationalists had 
another chapel from 1838 to 1882.%° 

In 1604 it was reported to the Bishop of Chester 
that an ‘old priest ’ was harboured in Chipping ; and 
‘James Bradley, recusant, [was] reported to bea leader 
of priests to men’s houses.’°* John Bradley, Grace 
Fairclough and Richard Singleton, as recusants, com- 
pounded for their sequestrations in 1630 onwards by 
payment of £2 each.®” Little, however, is known 
of the story of the proscribed religion there, and 
the Roman Catholic church of St. Mary, opened in 
1828, seems to be the offspring of the mission long 
before worked from the adjacent Leagram Hall. It 
was served by the Jesuits until 1857 and since then 
by secular priests.%8 


55 Subs. R. Lancs. bdle. 130, no, 82. 


where he died in 1769. 


THORNLEY WITH WHEATLEY 


Thorenteleg, 1202 ; Thorndeley, 1258 ; Thorne- 
delegh, 1262. The din the middle occurs to 1350 
and later. 

Watelei, Dom. Bk. ; Whetelegh, 1227 ; Queteley, 
1258; Wetteleye, 1302. 

This township stretches from south-west to north- 
east for over 4 miles along the northern slope of 
Longridge Fell, the highest point within the town- 
ship being about 1,100 ft. The Loud forms the 
north-west boundary ; it falls into the Hodder just 
outside the limits. Wheatley, which anciently was 
the principal member of the township, is now con- 
sidered to be no more than a small area of 554 acres, 
somewhat south of the centre. The whole town- 
ship measures 3,220% acres,! and in rgor had a 
population of 313. 

The principal road is that from Longridge eastward 
through the length of the township, which it enters 
about half a mile north of Longridge railway station. 
Passing Cockleach it descends till it comes to the 
Loud, and then for a mile and a half runs near this 
stream, passing between Wheatley on the south and 
Lee House on the north. At Higher Arbour it 
divides, part going north-west, crossing the Loud ? into 
Chipping, and part ascending eastward past Thornley 
Hall and Bradley Hall, the latter being near the 
boundary of Chaigley. From Thornley Hall a branch 
goes north to cross the Hodder. 

A Roman road is said to have crossed the township 
into Yorkshire, passing near Bradley Hall. 

The township is governed by a parish council. 

Included in the grant of Chipping- 

MANORS dale in 1102 THORNLEY descended 
like Clitheroe. From later records it 

seems that the Osbaldeston family were lords of the 
place. The immediate lordship was held by a 
family using the local name,® who were about the 
beginning of the 14th century succeeded by the 


An account of land in Wheatley and Thornley, where 


56 Ibid. no. 125. 

5” Thid. bdle. 131, no. 274. 

58 Ibid. no. 317. 

59 James Richmond, Thomas Wilcock, 
ee Bolton, James Lowde, John Dew- 

urst, Bartholomew Dilworth, Thomas 
Dobson and James Parker ; Estcourt and 
Payne, Engl. Cath, Non-jurors, 103, 127. 

°0 Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 56. 

LT. C. Smith, Chipping, 180. 

® During the indulgence granted by 
James II a meeting was set up at Chip- 
ping ; O. Heywood, Diaries, iii, 228. 
Among the ‘ Presbyterian parsons and 
their meeting-places’ registered in 1689 
was Thomas Whalley for Christopher Par- 
kinson’s house in Chipping ; Hist. MSS. 
Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 231. This minister 
went to Hindley ; O. Heywood, op. cit. iv, 
309. Christopher Parkinson was probably 
the benefactor of the school. 

6 T. C. Smith, Chipping, 165-80; 
Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. ii, 210-17 (a 
view is given). James Bolton left £40 
for a meeting-house, ‘but when the door 
of liberty is shut’ to poor widows and 
orphans ; Gastrell, Notitia (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 403. 

64 Peter Walkden was born near Man- 
chester in 1684 and educated at the school 
there. After leaving Hesketh Lane he 
went to Holcombe and then to Stockport, 


him, with extracts from his diaries and 
papers, may be seen in Trans. Hist. Soc. 
xxxil, 118 5 xxxvi, 15. 

5 Nightingale, op. cit. ii, 220-3, 

°6 Visit. P. at Chester Dioc. Reg. 

87 Trans, Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xxiv, 
174, 178. The list of recusants in 
1667-8 is printed by T. C. Smith, op. cit. 
29. See also Misc. (Cath. Rec. Soc.), 
v, 147-9. 

® Foley, Rec. S. J. v, 339 3 Smith, op. 
cit. 158-60. 

13,219 acres, including 3 of inland 
water; Census Rep. 1901. 

? In 1635 there is mention of a new 
stone bridge built at a place called Loud 
Bridge, where was formerly a bridge of 
wood, the highway being a frequented 
one; Cal. S. P. Dom. 1625-49, p. 510; 
1636-7, p. 333. 

® See the account of Chipping. In 
1258 rents of 6s. 8d. from Wheatley and 
2s. 6d. from Thornley were due to Ed- 
mund de Lacy; Lancs, Ing. and Extents 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), i, 217. 
The rent of 7s. due from ‘Utteley’ in 
1241-2 probably relates to Wheatley ; 
ibid. i, 156, 

+ There does not seem to be any evi- 
dence of the manner in which this family 
acquired the mesne lordship. In 1349 it 
was found that the heir of Thomas de 
Osbaldeston held in service one plough- 


32 


eight plough-lands made one knight's fee ; 
Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1870), ii, 693, quoting 
the Lansdowne Feodary. 

In 1445-6 Richard Balderston held 
Thornley with Wheatley as well as Os- 
baldeston ; Duchy of Lanc. Kts,’ Fees, 
bdle. 2, no. 20. 

5 The assignment of dower to Iseult 
widow of Robert by Richard son of Robert 
in 1202 gives the names of several under- 
tenants, including Jordan (probably of 
Wheatley) and Roger de Bradley. The 
mill is named; also clearings called 
Braderode and Flaxerode; Final Conc. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 10. 

Ralph son of Adam de Thornley occurs 
in 1262; ibid. 137. He was living in 
1292, being then engaged in several suits. 
As chief lord of Thornley common of 
pasture was claimed against him by John 
son and heir of John de Knoll in respect 
of 40 acres of wood, it being alleged that 
Ralph had disseised plaintiff's father ; 
Assize R. 408, m. 33d. Ralph on his 
part alleged that he had a right to grind 
his demesne corn at John de Knoll’s mill 
in Thornley quit of multure ; ibid. m. 53. 
At the same time Richard son of William 
de Thornley was non-suited in a claim 
against Robert son of Thomas de Sales- 
bury for a tenement in Thornley ; ibid. 
m. 76. Richard de Thornley appears in 
13023 ibid. 418, m. 13. 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


family of Knoll or Knolls®; as early as 1302 John 
de Knoll held of the Earl of Lincoln the eighth part 
of a knight’s fee in Thornley and Wheatley.’ John 
shortly afterwards acquired two messuages, 2 oxgangs 
of land, &c., in Thornley, which had been granted by 
Thomas son of Hugh le Surreys to John son of 
Jordan de Mitton.’ In 1319 Thomas son (and heir) 
of John de Knoll called upon Thomas de Osbaldeston 
as mesne lord to acquit him of the service in respect 
of a tenement in Wheatley claimed by the Earl of 
Lancaster ;° and Osbaldeston claimed the custody of 
the manors of Wheatley and Thornley, Thomas de 
Knoll being a minor, because John his father had 
held by knight’s service.” 

Thomas de Knoll died between 1350" and 1354, 


CHIPPING 


his widow Margaret and son Richard having the lord- 
ship in the latter year. Richard and his brother 
Adam were defendants in 1358 against a claim by 
John Maudson of Core.’ From later deeds it appears 
that Adam ultimately inherited ; he had three sons — 
Richard, John and Adam." Richard repudiated his 
wife and married another, but on trial this was 
decreed unlawful and he had to return to his first 
spouse. She bore him two sons, Miles and Gerard."® 
The former had a daughter Margaret, who married 
John Singleton,'® and the latter had a son Richard, 
whose son John Knoll was the heir male, when, 
about 1500, Thomas first Earl of Derby purchased 
the manor of Thornley.” From the rental of 
1523-4 it appears that a rent of 4s. 4¢. was due 


Alice wife of John de Sedbergh and 
her sisters Christiana and Agnes were 
non-suited in 1292 in a claim against 
Ralph son of Adam de Thornley ; Ralph’s 
daughter Avice is named; ibid. m. 33. 
One of the sisters may have been the 
Christiana widow of Robert del Town 
who in 1304 claimed dower against 
Ralph de Thornley; De Banco R. 151, 
m. 203d. Ralph seems to have called 
upon Joha de Knoll for warranty ; ibid. 
154, m. 31. Alice widow of William 
del Town was defendant in 1351 ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Assize R. 1, m. vd. 

In 1316 Margery daughter of Richard 
Franceys of Ribchester demised land in 
Thornley in Chippingdale to Adam son 
of Hugh de Clitheroe ; it had been given 
to her for life on her marriage with Adam 
son of Ralph de Thornley ; Towneley 
MS. DD, no. 1182. 

§ Ralph de Mitton made complaint 
against Richard de Knoll and others of 
the neighbourhood in 1253 ; Curia Regis 
Ry Se, Hh SOs hg 1 eh. 22, 25d, 

There were disputes between John de 
Knoll and Hugh le Surreys in 1277-8, it 
being adjudged in the latter year that John 
had thrown down part of Hugh’s ditch in 
Wheatley (3 rods justly and 6 rods un- 
justly), 6d. damage being awarded ; Assize 
Ru i295, 1.494. 1238, m. gid, 

A claim by John son of John de Knoll 
in 1292 has been mentioned. He also 
claimed common of pasture against John 
son of Jordan de Mitton, giving his pedi- 
gree as son and heir of John, brother and 
heir of Richard (s.p.), son and heir of 
Richard de Knoll ; Assize R. 408, m. 55 d. 
The family therefore held some land in 
the township as early as the middle of the 
13th century. 

7 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 319. 
mesne lord at the time is ignored. 

8 The charter from Mitton to Surreys 
is in De Banco R. 89 (1291), m. 19, and 
has been referred to in the account of 
Chipping. 

John son of Jordan de Mitton appears 
in Thornley as plaintiff in 1305, the de- 
fendants being John and Adam sons of 
John de Knoll and others; Assize R. 
420, m. gd. 

The two messuages and 2 oxgangs of 
land seem to have been acquired by John 
de Knoll from John de Mitton and Alice 
his wife about 1308 ; De Banco R. 171, 
m. 23d. In reply to the claim of John 
de Mitton in 1308-9 John de Knoll, here 
styled ‘lord of Wheatley,’ averred that 
the 2 oxgangs were in Wheatley, and not 
in Thornley ; Assize R. 423, m. 1d. 
Hugh de Salesbury and William son of 
Hawise de Livesey were also defendants. 

In 1310 Thomas son of Hugh le 


fi 


The 


Surreys, called to warrant John de Mitton 
and Alice in respect of the estate, sum- 
moned Henry de Lacy Earl of Lincoln 
to warrant him; De Banco R. 183, 
mM. 374+ 

The connexion of the Surreys family 
is shown in later pleas. Agnes widow of 
Thomas le Surreys in 1335 claimed dower 
in certain lands in Wheatley in Thornley 
against Amabel widow of Thomas de 
Osbaldeston, but the defendant produced 
a charter of Roger son of John de Mitton 
(1332) granting the lands to Thomas and 
Amabel for life or eleven years ; ibid. 
303, m. 9. Agnes also made claims 
against Roger, Hugh and John, sons of 
John de Mitton ; in reply Hugh and John 
said they held jointly with their wives, 
Agnes and Cecily; ibid. 303, m. 9 d.; 
311, m, 206, 

9 Ibid. 229, m.151. Thomas de Knoll 
was doomsman of Wheatley and Thornley 
at the court of Clitheroe in 13233 Lancs. 
Cr, R. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 48. 

10 De Banco R. 230, m. 34.4. 

John de Knoll appears to have had 
other issue, for in 1347 there was a suit 
respecting a messuage and lands in Thorn- 
ley which were successfully claimed by 
William son of Richard son of Robert le 
Walsh and Cecily daughter of Robert de 
Hyde of Alston against Richard le Walsh 
(the father of William), John (son of 
John) de Knoll and William his son. 
The plaintiffs alleged a grant by Richard ; 
Assize R. 1435, m. 16d. 

1 In 1338 Roger son of John de Mitton 
granted to Thomas de Knoll part of his 
land and waste in Wheatley Wood in the 
vill of Thornley ; Towneley MS. OO, 
no, 1010. Among the witnesses were 
Richard son of Adam de Knoll and 
Richard son of John de Knoll. The 
land seems to have been exchanged for 
Ramscloughgreen; Kuerden fol. MS. 
p- 212, no. 366, 

Thomas de Knoll was on the com- 
mission of the peace in Blackburn Hun- 
dred in 13453 Cal. Pat. 1343-5, p. 510. 
He was lord of the town of Thornley 
in 1350 when Thomas son of Richard de 
Bradley claimed common of pasture as to 
100 acres of moor against him, Margaret 
his wife, Richard his son and John son of 
John de Knoll; Assize R. 1444, m. qd. 

12 At Easter 1354 William son of 
Richard son of Robert le Walsh claimed 
common of pasture in respect of 161 acres 
against Richard son of Thomas de Knoll 
and Margaret widow of Thomas, who had 

the lordship, also against Adam de Knoll 
and Reginald his brother. The claim 
succeeded, it being shown that a sufh- 
ciency of pasture had not been left ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 3, m.j. It 


33 


appears from later records that Adam 
and Reginald were younger sons of Thomas 
de Knoll. 

18 Ibid. 6, m. 13 see the account of 
Chipping. 

M4 This account of the descent is taken 
from depositions recorded about 1500; 
Towneley MS. OO, no. 1011. 

15 Final Conc. iii, go, being a fine in 
1425 settling the manor of Thornley with 
lands and wood in Chipping, Wheatley and 
Aighton on Richard Knoll and his sons 
Miles and Gerard and male issue. Miles 
Knoll was living in 1446; Pal. of Lanc. 
Plea R. 9, m. 33. 

16 There was a settlement of the manor 
by John son of Christopher Singleton and 
Margaret his wife in 14793 Final Cone. 
inl, 039. 

The claims of Margaret appear to have 
met with much opposition, Thus in 
1483 Stephen Knoll claimed the manor 
against John and Margaret Singleton by 
virtue of a settlement on Richard son of 
Thomas de Knoll and Joan his wife, with 
remainders to Adam and Reginald, 
brothers of Richard, in default of male 
issue. Reginald had sons John and 
William, the latter being succeeded by a 
son John and a grandson George, through 
whom apparently Stephen claimed ; Pal. 
of Lanc. Writs Proton, file 1 Ric. III; 
Plea R. 58, m. 6. 

John Singleton in 1487-8 demised 
Thornley to Sir Alexander Hoghton tor a 
year; Dods. MSS. exlii, fol. 494, no. 3. 

WIn 1479 Robert Wilkinson and 
Thomas Newton gave a bond to Thomas 
Lord Stanley as to the manor of Thorn- 
ley ; Towneley MS. OO, no. 1007. It 
does not appear how their title came, but 
Robert Wilkinson in 1482 released his 
title in the manors of Thornley, Wheatley 
and Aighton, with various lands, &c., 
late of John Knolles; ibid. no. roo8. 
They were, therefore, probably the heirs 
or trustees of one of the John Knolls of 
the text. Later still, in 1503 John the 
son and heir of John Newton, then of 
Towas [? Towcester], Northants, released 
his right (by inheritance) in the manor to 
Thomas Earl of Derby ; ibid. no. 1006. 

The earl’s purchase of the manor from 
Christopher Singleton, son and heir of 
Margaret (widow of John Singleton) 
daughter of Miles Knoll, took place in 
1499; ibid. no. 1003-4. Margaret 
Singleton was living in 1503 and 1504; 
Dep. Keeper’s Rep. xl, App. 5443 Final 
Cone. iii, 154. About the same time 
Roger Shireburne and Isabel his wife, 
heiress of the Wolfhouse branch of the 
Knoll family, appear to have released 
their right in the manor and lands ; ibid. 


ili, 155. 


5 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


to the king and 12d. to the Prior of St. John of 
Jerusalem.” ; 

The manor descended like Knowsley until 1600, 
when William the sixth earl soid it to Baptist Hicks 
of London," who in turn sold it to Michael Doughty 
of Lathom,” one of the clerks of the kitchen there.” 
Henry Doughty and his son William took part against 
the Parliament in the Civil War, and the estate was 
sequestered and afterwards sold.” As in other cases, 
part or the whole was recovered for the family. 
John Doughty, the eldest son, who died in or before 
1647, left two daughters, Mary and Susan.** The 
former married Thomas Patten of Preston, who died 
in 1697, leaving as heir his daughter Elizabeth wife 
of Sir Thomas Stanley of Bickerstaffe.* By this 
marriage the manor has descended to the present Earl 
of Derby in the same way as Bickerstaffe.”* Manor 
courts are still held once a year.” 

THORNLE}? HALL, sometimes known as Patten 
Hall, stands at the foot of Jeffrey Hill on the north side 


of Longridge Fell, and isa plain two-story house very 
much modernized, but retaining some ancient features, 
Over the doorway is the inscription ‘B. O. Michael 
Dovghtie 1605,’ and in the dining-room ayer the 
mantelpiece is a small cupboard on which are the 
initials of Elizabeth and Mary Patten and the date 
1709. All the windows are modern sashes and the 
house has little architectural interest, but the front 
lay-out is effective with balled gate picrs, low fence 
wall and a tall clipped yew tree close up to the 
building rising to the level of the eaves. 
WHEATLEY was in 1066 the important part of 
the township, being named in Domcsday Book as 
assessed at one plough-land.” In later times it is 
sometimes named before Thornley and sometimes 
after it, as at present. Occasionally Wheatley appears 
to have been regarded as a separate manor.” 
BRADLE?V was held by the Hospitallers, the 
tenants being a family assuming that name,*' who had 
lands also in Chaigley and neighbouring townships. 


1’ Rental in the possession of Lord 
Lathom. The following tenants paid the 
‘gressum’ due every eighth year: Mar- 
garet Alston 19s. Alexander Bradley 
24s. 4d. Thomas Burne 7:., wife of 
Thomas Dilworth 1os., Richard Kilworth 
8s., Henry Dicconson 1-s., Richard Eccles 
135. gd., Ughtred Huddersall 7s., Richard 
Marsden 15s. 114., Edward Rodes 1¢s., 
Thomas Rodes 8s., Christopher Sower- 
butts 1o:., John Thornley 14s. gd., Robert 
Wilkinson 20s., &c. The rents of free 
tenants amounted to 22s. gd., of tenants 
at will £22 45. 10d, the demesne yielded 
£10 (to which was added the rent of a 
close in Chaigley lately purchased, viz. 
1os. and 6./. instead of a stone of cheese), 
the commuted ‘works’ of the tenants 
18s. 6d., the turbary of Withinreap 
18s. 10d. The gross return from the 
manor was given as {44 12s. gd., but 
many alluwances had to be made. No 
courts had been held. A payment of 4d. 
called ‘Juger sylvere’ was made yearly 
to the bailiff of Blackburnshire at the 
court held at Clitheroe. 

19 Towneley MS. OO, no. 1013-16, 
In 1602 the earl sold lands, &c., in 
Chipping and Bosden in Bowland to 
Baptist Hicks, who in 1606 sold the same 
to Michael Doughty ; ibid. no. 1001-2. 

® In Feb. 1602-3 Baptist Hicks of 
London transferred to Michael Doughty 
of Lathom, Cecily his wife and Henry 
his eldest son the manor of Thornley, late 
the inheritance of Ferdinando Earl of 
Derby ; OO, no. 1005. From a later 
fine, however, it seems that in 1609 Sir 
Baptist Hicks acquired the manor of 
Thormley and messuages and lands in 
Thornicy, Chipping and Bosden from 
Thomas Lord Ellesmere and Alice his 
wite, Countess of Derby (i.e. widow of 
Ferdinando); Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F, 
bdle. 75, no. 18. For the countess’s 
right see Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), iii, 
323 352, 458. 

31 Stanley Papers (Chet. Soc.), ii, 23, 
106, &c. Michael Doughty represented 
Preston in the Parliament of 1589 and 
Liverpool in that of 1593; Pink and 
Beaven, Parl. Repre. of Lancs. 146, 184. 

A pedigree of Doughty of Thornley 
will be found in the Visit. of 1613 (Chet. 
Soc.), 64. Henry Doughty paid £10 on 
refusing knighthood in 1631 ; Mis. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 217. 

2 Reysdise Comp. Paters (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), ii, 256-68. It appears 


that Henry Doughty the father about Aug. 
1648 ‘took up arms against the Parlia- 
ment and fled away with the Scots forces 
under Duke Hamilton’ ; ibid. 266. Other 
sons, Henry and Michael, are named. 

Henry Doughty's estate was sold in 
1652; Index of Royalists (Index Soc.), 41. 

*8 Royalist Comp. Papers, ii, 257. His 
widow Elizabeth daughter of Serjeant 
Robert Callis was claiming under her 
marriage settlement of 1641. A mort- 
gage by Henry Doughty (the father of 
John) of the manor-house of Thornley, 
called Thornley Hall, is named. No 
‘delinquency ’ seems to have been alleged 
against John Doughty. 

24 In a fine respecting the manor of 
Thornley, with lands, water-mill, &c., in 
Thornley, Chipping, Goosnargh and 
Witton in 1684 the plaintiffs were 
William Patten and Thomas Naylor and 
the defendants Thomas Patten, esq., Mary 
his wife and Susan Doughty, spinster ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 213, m. 8. 

2% See the account of Bickerstaffe. 
Thomas Patten, a barrister, was the 
eldest son of William Patten of Preston ; 
see pedigree in Gregson’s Fragments (ed. 
Harland), 185 3 Preston Guild R. 

Thomas Patten represented Preston in 
the Parliament of 1688 as a Whig; Pink 
and Beaven, op. cit. 156. 

* The manors of Thornley and Chip- 
ping were held by successive Earls of 
Derby in 1738 and 1776; Pal. of Lane. 
Plea R. 549, m. § 5 623, m. 14, 

7 T.C. Smith, Chipping, 46-52, ex- 
tracts from the old Court Rolls being given. 
From a record of the boundaries of the 
manor in 1808 they seem to have been 
those of the township. On the border of 
Dutton were a stone called the White 
Stoup and a group of stones called the 
Cripple Oak. 

% V.C.H. Lancs. i, 2886. Cf. the tene- 
ment of Osbaldeston in 1349 as already 
recorded, 

A family named Wheatley occurs. Thus 
in 1227 Jordan de Wheatley obtained 
from Eve widow of William de Edisford an 
oxgang of land in Wheatley, which was to 
descend to Jordan’s heirs by his late wife, 
sister of Eve ; Final Conc. i, 50, 60. 

99 In 1612 William Helme (see Chip- 
ping) was said to have held lands in 
Thornley and Wheatley of Edward Tyldes- 
ley, as of his manor of Wheatley, by 25. 5d. 
rent ; Lanc;. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 213. See also note 8 above. 


34 


89 “Wheatley” is named in the list of 
the Hospitallers’ estates in 1292 ; Plac. de 
Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 375. In 1294 the 
Prior of St. John complained that John de 
Knoll had rescued certain cattle impounded 
at Thornley ; De Banco R. 103, m. 26. 

In a Stidd rental of 1609 a rent of 
2s, 10d, is entered as due from John 
Rodes for a tenement in Thornley, and 
one of 6d. from John Hurst (lately Edmund 
Wall or Wawne) in Wheatley ; Kuerden 
MSS. ii, fol. 1324. 

81 Adam son of Adam de Bury appears 
to have held the ‘manor of Bradley’ in 
1246, when he sold it to Thomas rector 
of Slaidburn ; Final Conc. i, 102, The 
bounds extended from the Loud to Long- 
ridge and from Bradley Syke to Bradley 
Brook. This may have been only a feoff- 
ment in trust, for in 1262, when Ralph 
son of Adam de Thornley acquired from 
Robert de Bradley 100 acres of wood in 
the township, Adam de Bury ‘put in his 
claim,’ as did also the Prior of St. John 
of Jerusalem and John de Knoll; ibid. 
137-8. The bounds began at the place 
where Bradley Brook fell into the Loud, 
went up the brook to the Veu Viver, 
thence west to Bradley Syke, down this to 
Ramsclough and so down to the Loud, 
Hugh le Surreys charged Robert de 
Bradley in 1278 with breaking his pound 
at Thornley ; De Banco R. 23, m. 374. 
Thomas le Surreys in 1289 complained 
that Robert had cut down trees in Thorn- 
ley in contravention of the above agree- 
ment ; Abbrev. Plac. (Rec. Com.), 219. 

A Roger de Bradley of 1202 has been 
already mentioned, In 1278 Robert de 
Bradley had some dispute with Ralph son 
of Adam de Thornley ; Assize R. 1238, 
m. 33d. The same parties appear to 
have been again at variance in 1292; 
Assize R. 408, m. 54. 

From Richard son of Robert de Bradley 
dower in Thornley, Aighton and Chaigley 
was in 1313 claimed by William de 
Huyton and Emma his wife, in right of 
her former marriage with Thomas de 
Bradley ; De Banco R. 201, m. 69d. In 
1332 Richard and Robert de Bradley con- 
tributed to the subsidy ; Exch. Lay Subs. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 82. Richard 
de Bradley, perhaps another of the name, 
was one of the chief inhabitants in 1341 5 
Ing. Nonarum (Rec. Com.), 38. 

Thomas de Bradley in 1389 acquired a 
messuage and land in Thornley from 
John son of Thomas son of Roger de 


THorntey wiTtH Wueat_ey : THorNLEY Hai 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


STUDLEY is also named in the records, though it 
has now disappeared from the map. ‘The Greenhills 
and Sowerbutts families were connected with 1 
Studley also occurs as a surnam 

Apart from these estates there is but little record 
of the landowners of former times. 
the Leylands of Morleys and their successors had 
lands in Thornley, Wheatley and Studley, held of 
the Earl of Derby in socage.*® The Wawne family 
held their land in Wheatley of the Crown as of the 
dissolved priory of St. John of Jerusalem by a rent of 
12¢89; and Richard Shireburne of Stonyhurst in 
acquiring the Hospitallers’ manors and lands in Stidd 
and Chipping acquired therewith rents and lands in 
Thornley, Wheatley, Studley and Cockleach.4? Joha 
Rodes, another landowner, also held of the Hos- 


A pedigree was recorded in 1567.32 Thomas Bradley 
died in 1564 holding the capital messuage called 


Bradley Hall with 60 acres of 
land, &c., in Thornley of the 
queen as of the late priory of 
St. John of Jerusalem in Eng- 
land by a rent of 45.33 John, 
his son and heir, then thirty- 
six years of age, died in 1597, 
leaving three daughters as co- 
heirs, viz. Ellen wife of John 
Osbaldeston, Elizabeth widow 
of Thomas Talbot and Jane 
wife of Francis Ducket, aged 
respectively forty, thirty and 
twenty-eight years.34 It de- 
scended to the heirs of 
Alexander Osbaldeston 
(1660),35 and from them 


was purchased in 1764 by the Earl of Derby.% 


Chipping and Cecily his wife ; Final Conc. 
iil, 35. In the following year he was a 
juror ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 41. 
Robert Bradley attested a Thornley deed 
in 14413 Dods. MSS. cxlii, fol. 534. 
John Bradley of Chipping, Robert son of 
John Bradley of Chaigley and Miles the 
brother of Robert occur in 1445; Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R. 8,m. 33. Robert Bradley 
was concerned in the manor of Thornley 
in 1479; Final Conc. iii, 137. 

John Bradley of Thomley was con- 
cerned in a rescue of impounded cattle 
in 1521, which seems to have led to 
great disturbance; Duchy Plead. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 88-93. Joan 
the widow and John the son of John 
Bradley of Bradley Hall in Thornley were 
defendants in a plea of debt in 1538; 
Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 167, m. 16. 

Joan wife of Thomas Crombleholme 
and sister of Henry Bradley of Chipping 
in 1420 received from the feoffees lands 
in Ribchester, Thornley and Wheatley, the 
remainders being to Christopher son of 
Thomas and Joan-and to Joan’s right heirs ; 
Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 224. 

82 Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 38; the descent 
is thus given : John -s. Thomas -s. John, 
who had three daughters. The younger 
John had a brother Thomas Bradley, who 
acquired part of the manor of Silverdale. 

8 Duchy of Lanc, Ing. p.m. xi, no. 37. 

34 Ibid. xvii, no. 28. There is in it 
recited an indenture dated 1590 by 
which John Bradley granted the rectory 
of Warton to feoffees, for the use of 
Thomas Talbot and Elizabeth his wife aa 
to one moiety, and of John Osbaldeston 
and Ellen his wife as to the other moiety. 
See Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 53, 
m. 170. 

85 The heir of John and Ellen Osbal- 
deston was Edward their son, living in 
1613; Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 84. In 1611 
it was found that Thomas Osbaldeston, 
outlawed for murder, had a life annuity 
of £20 from Bradley Hall and other 
lands of John Bradley, late of Beetham 
in Westmorland, recently in the posses- 
sion of John Osbaldeston, next of Ellen 
his widow, and in 1611 of Edward 
Eccleston of Prescot parish ; Lancs. Ing. 

p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 179. 

The following fines relate to it : 1658, 
Anthony Munson and Frances his wife, 
deforciants of the manors of Bradley and 
Balderston ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 
162, m. 16. 1726, Nicholas Starkie v. 


Braovtey of Bradley. 
Sable a fesse engrailed 
argent, in chief a mullet or 
between two crosses formy 
fitchy of the second all 
within a bordure en- 


grailed of the same, 


pitallers.4! 


One or two other names occu 


CHIPPING 


£37 
e374 


As in Chipping, 


r.42 


John Bradley 


and John Rodes contributed to the subsidy of 1524 


Alexander Osbaldeston, manors including 
Bradley; ibid. bdle. 298, m. 4. 1763, 
the manor of Bradley and messuages in 
Bradley, Thornley and Chaigley, the plain- 
tiff being William Turner and the deforci- 
ants David Sturgeon, Jane his wife, Richard 
Shuttleworth, William Bartlett and Eliza- 
beth his wife ; ibid. bdle. 370, m. 66. 

36 Information of Mr. J. J. Hornby. 

37 The feoffees in 1441 regranted to 
John Formby his lands, &c., in the vill 
of Studley, a hamlet of Thornley, with 
remainders to his daughters Alice and 
Joan in equal shares for life, and then to 
Thomas Greenhills the cousin and heir- 
apparent of the said John, with remainders 
to Margaret and Isabel, sisters of the 
said Thomas, and then to Alice, mother 
of John Formby ; Dods. MSS. cxlii, fol. 
53. John in 1444 made a formal affirma- 
tion that Thomas Greenhills was the heir of 
the land he had from his mother Alice; ibid. 
fol. 545 ; Towneley MS. OO, no. 1213. 

William Sowerbutts of Studley re- 
leased to Thomas Lord Stanley in 14.58 
certain lands in Studley and Wheatley ; 
ibid. no. 1009. Robert Sowerbutts in 
1482 released to William son of Henry 
Hoghton all his right in certain lands in 
Studley and was re-enfeoffed ; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 350; Towneley MS. DD, 
no. 1869. Richard Sowerbutts was a free- 
holder in 1600 ; Misc. (Rec. Soc.), i, 235. 

37a In 1357 John de Studley claimed a 
messuage and lands in Wheatley against 
Henry de Dinckley and William son of 
Richard the Smith; Duchy of Lane. 
Assize R. 5, m. 8d., 1d. 

35 See the account of the Leyland 
tenement in Chipping and the references 
there given. In 1621 Edward Tyldesley’s 
estate was held of Michael Doughty as of 
his manor of Thornley ; Lancs, Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 261-9. 

89 An account of the Wawne or Walne 
family has been given under Chipping ; 
the tenure recorded is in Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. xv, no. 13. See also the 
Hospitallers’ rental of 1609 quoted above. 

In 1409 Agnes widow of Robert Moton 
gave her daughter Alice wife of John 
Wawne the elder a tenement in Wheatley, 
the bounds of which extended from the 
Loud on the north to Studley Brook on 
the south, and part of another tenement 
between Studley Brook and Longridge, 
which had descended to the grantor on 
the death of her sister Alice, a daughter 
of William the Smith ; Anct. D. (P.R.O.), 


35 


in respect of their lands.* 


The widows of John 


A12063. The latter tenement was known 
as the Birks in 1525, when it was held 
by Robert Wawne, William Sowerbutts 
being occupier; ibid. A 13467, 13473. 
Lower and Higher Birks are now shown 
on the map to the south of Wheatley. 

For a dispute between Wawne and 
Sowerbutts see Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), 
iii, 163, 179. 

40 Thornley Hall, &c., as part of Stidd 
was included in the grant to George 
Whitmore and others; Pat. 9 Jas. I, 
pt. xxvii. It was sold to Shireburne in 
16133; Kuerden MSS, ii, fol. 132. See 
Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. xxvi, no. 4. 

Sir Richard Shireburne had in 1573 
purchased a messuage, &c., in Wheatley 
and Thornley from Richard Alston ; Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 35, m. ror. 
Richard Shireburne in 1586 purchased 
messuages and lands in Thornley, Wheat- 
ley and Studley from Robert Newsham and 
Elizabeth his wife ; ibid. bdle. 48, m. 27. 

41 See the rental of 1609 above cited. 
John Rodes was a freeholder in 1600; 
Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), i, 235. 
In 1631 the same or a succeeding John 
paid £10 on declining knighthood ; ibid. 
217. 

For the Rodes family see T. C. Smith, 
Chipping, 251-3. 

42 John del Woodscholes received lands 
in Thornley in 1316-17; Dods. MSS. 
cxlix, fol. 58. John son of Robert del 
Woodscholes was plaintiff in 1351 ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Assize R. 1, m.vd. In 1546 
Elizabeth Rodes, widow, was plaintiff in 
a fine respecting Woodschole howe and 
lands, &c., in Thornley, the deforciants 
being Thomas Johnson alias Tomlinson 
and others; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 12, m. 293. 

In 1574 a settlement was made of a 
messuage, &c., in Wheatley and Thornley, 
by Robert Aytough, Joan his wife, William 
Ambrose, Ellen his wife (to whose heirs it 
was to remain), Agnes and Frances Eccles ; 
ibid. bdle. 36, m. 121. 

Sir Richard Hoghton in 1630 held land 
in Thornley, but the tenure is not stated ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvii, no. 13. 
Some appears to have been sold by Sir 
Henry Hoghton in 1772; Pal. of Lanc. 
Plea R. 615, m.7d. 

Thomas Shireburne of Heysham in 
1635 held land of Henry Doughty as of 
his manor of Thornley ; Towneley MS. 
C8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 1083. 

8 Subs, R. Lancs. bdle, 130, no. 82. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Bradley and William Rodes so contributed in 1543 4 
and John Rodes in 1597, in which year Thomas 
Wawne was in ward to the queen.*® John Rodes 
and William Wawne paid for their lands in 1626, and 
many others paid as non-communicants.4® "Thomas 
Bourne paid £10 on refusing knighthood in 1631.47 

James Bradley #8 and Ellen Wilkinson,** recusants, 
had two-thirds of their estates sequestered during the 
Commonwealth. ‘Thomas Eccles of Thornley, as a 
‘Papist,’ registered his estate in 1717, as also did 
Stephen Dilworth.5° The land tax return of 
1787 shows that the following were chief land- 
owners: Lord Derby, Robert Rhodes and Roger 
Kenyon.*! 

Archbishop Sancroft about 1685 purchased farms 
in Thornley called New House and West House, and 


gave them to augment the stipends of the vicar of 
Blackburn and the curates of the chapels of ease,52 

A decree concerning the wastes of Thornley, 
Wheatley and Studley was made in the time of 
James 1.58 

The only place of worship is St. William’s Roman 
Catholic church, Lee House, founded by the above- 
named Thomas Eccles in 1738.54 He gave it to the 
English Franciscans, and on their approaching ex- 
tinction in 1826 the secular clergy took charge fora 
time; but owing to a dispute between the Rev. 
Francis Trappes and the vicar apostolic the chapel 
was closed from 1841 to 1859.°° Since then it has 
been served by the English Benedictines.5* In the 
churchyard is the base of an old cross removed from 
the road between Chipping and Longridge.5” 


RIBCHESTER 


RIBCHESTER 
DILWORTH 


Ribchester proper, together with Dutton and Dil- 
worth, is in the hundred of Blackburn, but the re- 
maining township is in Amounderness. ‘The area of 
the whole, including Stidd, is 8,437 acres, and the 
population in 1901 was 5,912. 

‘The history of the town goes back to Roman times, 
numerous vestiges of its former occupation still re- 
maining.! Camden says that the inhabitants used the 
following proverb in his time 2 :— 


It is written upon a wall in Rome, 
‘Ribchester was as rich as any town in Christendom.’ 


Before the Conquest the whole formed part of Earl 
Toxtig’s Preston fee, and was within the hundred of 
Amounderness. During the 12th century one part 
seems to have been included in the honor of Clitheroe, 
and thus Ribchester, Dilworth and Dutton became 
transferred to Blackburn Hundred, the other town- 
ships, Alston and Hothersall, remaining in Amounder- 
ness.? Ecclesiastically there was no change; the parish 
was in the diocese of York, archdeaconry of Richmond 
and deanery of Amounderness. 

The mediaeval history is obscure*; the resident 
lords and landowners are scarcely known. Leland 
about 1540 made the following notes: ‘ Ribchester 
is a seven miles above Preston on the further ripe 
of Ribble as Preston is. Ribchester is now a poor 
thing ; it hath been an ancient town. Great squared 


DUTTON 
ALSTON WITH HOTHERSALL 


stones, vaults, and antique coins be found there: and 
there is a place where that the people fable that the 
Jews had a temple.’> ‘The Reformation left traces in 
the prosecution of recusants, some of the gentry and a 
large portion of the yeomanry remaining faithful to 
the Roman Catholic religion.6 Thomas Cottam, a 
native of the parish, was executed for his priesthood 
in 1582. hough the Civil War passed over with 
few sequestrations, the Jacobite rising of 1715 re- 
ceived much support. Thomas Hothersall of Hother- 
sall was outlawed for his part in it, as were Robert 
Daniell and another ; while Jonathan Winckley and 
Thomas Shuttleworth, both of Alston, were executed. 

In more recent times the parish has remained 
comparatively isolated. The manufactures are small ; 
wood-turning, cotton-weaving and quarrying employ 
the people. The agricultural land is employed 
almost entirely for pasture, as the following return ™ 
shows :— 


Arable Permanent Woods and 
land grass plantations 
ac. ac, ac. 

Ribchester, Dutton, 
Hothersall . . 3 453094 3404 

Longridge, Alston, 
Dilworth. . . 36 2,750 82 
39 7.0598 424 


44 Subs. R. Lancs. bdle. 130, no. 125. 

“6 Ibid. bdle. 131, no. 274. 

46 Ibid. no. 317. 

47 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 217. 48 Royalist Comp. Papers, i, 217. 

49 Cal. Com. for Comp. v, 3200. The 
guardians of John Wilkinson, the heir, 
procured a discharge, the sequestration 
having been made in error. John was 
grandson of Ellen Bradley. 

50 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. Non- 
jurors, 136,150. Edward Eccles was a 
recusant in 1668 ; Smith, Chipping, 3035 
also 254-8, and Misc. (Cath. Rec. Soc.), 
v, 152. 

51 Land tax returns at Preston. 

52 Abram, Blackburn, 282 ; End. Char. 
Rep. for Blackburn, 1904. 

53 Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), ii, 276. 


‘4T. C. Smith, Chipping, 160-5 ; 
Thaddeus, Franciscans in Engl.159. The 
first priest-in-charge—Germain Helme 
(usually called Holmes) of the Garstang 
family—was arrested on suspicion in 1745, 
during the Young Pretender’s rising, and 
died a prisoner in Lancaster Castle the 
following year ; Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. 
Cath, iii, 259-64. 

55 Misc. (Cath. Rec. Soc.), iii, 139. 
The disputes were carried to the Roman 
courts and decided in favour of Fr. Trappes. 

56 Trans. Hist. Soc. (new cet.), xiii, 169. 

57 T. C. Smith, Longridge, 200. 

1 The Chester brook or Castel brook 
named in some of the local charters pro- 
bably commemorates the Roman citadel ; 
see /’.C.H. Lancs. ii, 519 5 also Watkin, 
Roman Lances.; Shortt in T. C. Smith, 
Ribchester ; Garstang, Roman Ribchester 5 


36 


Trans. Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xvii, 1895 
xviii, 1973; Lancs. and Ches. Antig. Soc. 
vii, 229 3 xvii, 235. 

2 Britannia (ed. 1695), 750. 

3 About 1350 ‘the Sigrop clough be- 
tween Ribchester and Hothersall’ was 
“the division between Amounderness and 
Blackburnshire’ ; Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 
425. 

4In the time of pestilence 1349-50 
the Archdeacon of Richmond alleged that 
100 men and women had died in the 
parish of Ribchester, and he was allowed 
probate dues amounting to 338. 44.3 
Engl. Hist, Rev. v, §29. 

5 Ttin, iv (1), 22. 

6 T. C. Smith, Ribchester, 60-5, gives 
details and lists of names for the 17th 
century. 


°a Statistics from Bd. of Agric. (1905). 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


The last perambulation of the parish took place in 
1829.7 

To the county lay of 1624, founded on the old 
fifteenth, when Blackburn Hundred paid £100, Rib- 
chester and Dilworth paid £3 145. 4d. and Dutton 
£1 115. 10}d., while Alston and Hothersall in Amoun- 
derness paid £1 35. 11}¢.—a total of £6 105. 13d. 
from the whole parish.® 

The government was formerly in the hands of ‘the 
gentlemen and Twenty-four,’ the records going back 
to 1638.9 At present Ribchester and Dutton have 
each a parish council; Alston and Dilworth form the 
urban district of Longridge. 

The hearth tax returns of 1666 show that Rib- 
chester and Dilworth together had 124 hearths liable; 
the largest house was Ellis Cottam’s with five hearths, 
one house had four and three had three. Mr. Richard 
Townley’s house at Dutton had five hearths, another 
had four, and there was a total of sixty-one in that 
township.10 

Thomas Pennant in his journey to Alston Moor 
in 1773 visited this place to see the antiquities. He 

says: ‘We crossed the New Bridge, an elegant struc- 
ture of three elliptical arches. A quarter of a mile 
beyond stands Ribchester, a poor village, formerly a 
famous Roman station: on its north-east side it is 
bounded by a little brook, on the south-east by the 
River Ribble, both which annually make great encroach- 
ments on the place; the last especially, which has 
crossed from the other side of the vale and threatens 
ruin by undermining the banks on which the village 
stands: a row of houses and some gardens have already 
been swept away.’ After describing the Roman re- 
mains, and speculating on the possibility of the tide 
having once ascended as high as Ribchester, Brock- 
holes being at that time its limit, he names some of 
the old halls of the neighbourhood, remarking that 
‘they all stand on the edge of the bank, embosomed 
once by thick woods of oak, which flourished greatly 
on the steep slope.’ 4 

The church of ST. WILFRID stands 

CHURCH on the south side of the town, about 

100 yds. from the right bank of the 

Ribble, which here, taking a big bend, flows south 

for about half a mile below Ribchester Bridge. The 

building consists of chancel with small north vestry, 

nave with south aisle and north chapel, south porch 

and west tower, and occupies part of the site of the 

Roman station, the line of the north wall of which 
passes through the churchyard on the north side. 

The building belongs substantially to the 13th cen- 
tury, and has many points of resemblance to the church 
of Whalley, which was erected about the same time, 
though the dimensions are smaller and there is no north 
aisle to the nave. The work would probably be in 
progress during the middle of the first half of the 
century, when the building would assume its present 
shape, with the exception of the north chapel, porch 
and tower. It probably then terminated with a gable 
at the west end surmounted by a bell-turret, and so 
remained till some time in the 14th century, when the 
chapel and porch were added. Nothing then seems 


7T. C. Smith, Ribchester, 73. 

8 Gregson, Fragments (ed. Harland), Note Ba. iii, 43. 
23. 
* Smith, op. cit. 160-73. A petition 
for exemption from serving on the 
Twenty-four, sent in by John Ward of 


10 Lay Subs. Lancs. bdle. 250, no. 9. 

U Downing to Alston Moor, 92-100. 

12 Churchwardens’ accounts quoted by 
T. C. Smith, Hist. of Ribchester, 92-9. 


37 


RIBCHESTER 


to have been done till the end of the rsth century, 
when the west tower was built and the plan assumed 
its present shape. Considerable changes, however, 
took place in the appearance of the building during 
the next century, when the old steep roofs of both 
chancel and nave were taken down, the chancel walls 
raised and the present roofs erected. The appear- 
ance of the aisle was entirely altered by the insertion 
of new square-headed windows and the walls probably 
raised, and it is even possible that the aisle walls were 
entirely rebuilt at this time, though the rough character 
of the masonry makes it difficult to be sure of this. 
The line of the former steep roof to the nave is still 
clearly distinguishable on the east face of the tower, 
and its pitch suggests that the original aisle wall must 
have been considerably lower than at present or that 
the nave and aisle were under one roof. There seems 
never to have been a clearstory, the nave originally 
having enough light in all probability from the west 
end as well as from the north. ‘There are records of 
repairs done to the fabric in the 17th and 18th cen- 
turies, the two ugly dormer windows on the south 
side of the nave roof probably belonging to the former 
period. The chief work of repair was done in 
1685-6 and in 1711, when the fabric was twice 
beautified,!? and in 1736 the west gallery was erected. 
After this little seems to have been done to the build- 
ing till 1830, when it was repaired and new seats put 
in. Two windows in the south aisle were renewed some 
thirty years later, but no real restoration took place 
till 1881, when the chancel was taken in hand. The 
rest of the building remains in a more or less neg- 
lected condition, the walls being covered with yellow 
wash, obscuring much of the mediaeval detail, which 
in other parts is spoilt by paint and varnish. 

The chancel, in common with the rest of the church, 
is faced with rubble masonry, and the north wall was 
partly rebuilt in the restoration of 1881. Its internal 
dimensions are 40 ft. in length by 21 ft. in width, 
and the floor is 64 in. below that of the nave, the 
east end of the church thus losing something in 
dignity when viewed from the west, the sanctuary 
being raised by only one step, thus bringing it to the 
general level of the floor of the church. The roof is 
new with three wood principals, the tie-beam at the 
east end cutting awkwardly across the top of the 
window. The east wall is faced on the interior with 
rough stone, but the other walls are plastered above 
the string which goes round the chancel at the height 
of the window sills. The east window is the original 
13th-century one of three lancet lights 1 ft. 10 in. in 
width, splaying out on the inside to 5 ft. There are 
two original lancet lights also in the south wall 15 in. 
wide, splaying to 4 ft. on the inside and with a depth 
of 2 ft. 3 in., and remains of a third may still be seen 
from the inside. ‘There have been two similar windows 
at the east end of the north wall, one of which still 
remains, opening into the vestry, the door to which 
is cut in the wall through the lower part of the 
second, the head of which may be seen above. West 
of these windows the north chancel wall appears to 
have been always blank as at present, except for a 


Hothersall in 1639, is printed in Pal, ‘1685. For beautifying the church, 


£3 10s. 1686. Pd to ye masons for 
hewne work and for waiting and getting 
stones, £3 35. 10d. 1711. For beauti- 
fying the church, £3.’ 


A HISTORY OF 


smal] opening about midway in its length 10 in, wide 
by 1§ in. high with a pointed head, and 3 ft. 6 in, 
from the floor. The outside of the wall having been 
rebuilt no trace of an opening now appears on 
the exterior, but the wide splay on the interior 
seems to show that it answered the purpose of a 
low side window directed on to the altar. In the 
14th century a good deal of alteration appears to have 
taken place on the south side of the chancel, the 
sedilia and piscina being of that date, together with 
two windows ; onea wide three-light opening near the 
east end replaces the second lancet and the other of 
two-lights at the west end with low transom forming 
a lychnoscope or low side window. The first of these 
14th-century windows, the lights of which were low 
with cinquefoiled heads under a wide pointed arch 
with foliated circular tracery, has been entirely re- 
newed, but the original jambs and traceried head of 
the western two-light window remain, though the 
mullion and transom are modern. The south door- 


LANCASHIRE 


stone corhel 5 ft. above the floor, probably for an 
image, but now unoccupied and broken at the top, 
and in the south-west corner is preserved a sepulchral 
slab 4 ft. 3 in. long, though imperfect at the top, with 
incised ornament and sword. The chancel arch is 
pointed and of two chamfered orders, springing from 
circular moulded imposts and semicircular shafts below, 
with fillet on the face and bases with the water 
moulding. The bases, however, have been a good 
deal restored, and rest on a plain chamfered plinth 
running along the west side of the chancel back to 
the north and south walls. The small vestry on the 
north side of the chancel and all the fittings are 
modern. 

Externally the chancel has a plain chamfered 
plinth now below the level of the surrounding 
ground, and flat buttresses of two stages. The heads 
of the east window are quite plain without hood 
moulds, and the gable has been repaired at the top 
and a modern apex cross erected. The roof is 


re CENTURY 


ea==e M157 Century 
E316! Century 
MoDERN 
jo 10 20 30 4040 
ScaLce or Fret ; 


Pian or St. Writrrip’s Cuurcu, RiscHEsTer 


way is the original 13th-century one with a simple 
pointed arch with external hood mould springing 
from moulded imposts slightly above the level of an 
external string course which goes round the chancel. 
The sedilia and piscina appear to have been inserted 
subsequent to the three-light window, if the present 
stonework of the latter exactly represents that which 
it displaced, as they break awkwardly in front of the 
opening. ‘They are, however, of 14th-century date, 
the sedilia being triple with semicircular heads and a 
half-semicircular arch at each end dying into a scroll 
moulding string course which forms a square head to 
the sedilia and piscina. The piscina has a segmental 
head and two bowls with floreated sinkings. The 
13th-century string which runs the length of the 
north and east sides is cut away under the first lancet 
on the south side against the returned 14th-century 
scroll moulding. In the east wall the string and the 
sills of the windows have been renewed. To the 
north of the east window is a semicircular moulded 


covered with stone slates and has overhanging eaves. 
The raising of the walls has greatly injured the 
appearance of the chancel on the south side, spoiling 
the proportions of the windows by reason of the long 
stretch of blank walling above. The line of the 
former high-pitched chancel roof, the eaves of which 
were level with the top of the windows, can still be 
seen on the east wall of the nave. 

The nave is 61 ft. by 24 ft. and consists of four 
bays, with south arcade of four pointed arches of two 
chamfered orders, carried on octagonal piers with 
moulded caps and bases, and similar responds at 
each end. The floor is flagged and the roof is 
divided into eight bays by nine oak principals, the 
two end ones against the walls and the middle one 
having a tie-beam and short pieces down the walls 
carried on corbels. The others are merely collars 
with shaped pieces under, and the roof does not seem 
to have been at all altered since its erection in the 
16th century except by the insertion of the two great 


38 


RipcHesTER CHURCH FROM THE SOUTH-EAST 


Riecuesrer CuurcH: Tue Nave Looxinc East 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


dormer windows on the south side which break into 
it awkwardly, the principals being still in front of 
each window with a space above the rafters where 
the line of the roof is raised. A moulded wall plate 
now whitewashed runs round the building, on a por- 
tion of which at the north-west corner is the date 
1527 in Gothic characters. 

The south aisle is 10 ft. 6 in. wide and has three 
square-headed windows on the south side, the eastern- 
most of which is modern, a three-light modern 
pointed window at the east end,}8 and a small two- 
light window at the west. The south doorway is in 
the west bay and is a good piece of 13th-century 
work, now unfortunately painted and varnished, with 
pointed arch of two moulded orders, square chamfered 
inner jamb and outer shafts with moulded capitals 
and bases. ‘The door is modern, probably of 18th- 
century date. The aisle retains its original 16th- 
century oak lean-to roof with shaped wind braces, 
and its east end is occupied by what is known as the 
‘Hoghton choir’ or chapel, inclosed by an oak screen 
probably of early 16th-century date but much 
restored. It has eleven openings with traceried 
heads on the north side and eight on the west, with 
an embattled cornice. ‘The chapel is now filled with 
square pews. 

The porch has a pointed 14th-century arch of two 
orders with wave moulding springing from moulded 
imposts, and with external hood mould and moulded 
jambs. The gable, however, is quite plain above, 
and the roof in common with all the roofs of the 
church has overhanging eaves and is covered with 
stone slates. The walling is of rough stone with 
large angle quoins. There is a small window on 
each side and a wood bench on the west side. In 
the south-east corner is an altar tomb cut from a solid 
block of stone with three shields, one of which bears 
the arms of Hoghton.# 

On the north side the nave is open, for something 
like half its length at the east end, to the north 
chapel, but west of this is a built-up doorway 
3 ft. 6 in. wide. The rest of the wall is blank, 
except for a square-headed three-light window under 
the roof inserted in the 16th century when the wall 
was raised. Externally the north nave wall retains 
its two original angle buttresses with gabled heads 
and a portion of the former west wall of the building 
above the straight joint in the masonry showing 
where the north wall was raised when the old steep- 
pitched roof was removed. : 

The north chapel, or ‘Dutton choir,’ is 34 ft. by 
14 ft. and is open to the nave on the south side by 
an arcade of two pointed arches of two plain 
chamfered orders with hood moulds on each side, 
springing from a central pier of three clustered shafts 
with large circular moulded cap, and from half-round 
responds at each end with moulded caps and bases. 
The terminations of the outer chamfer over the pier 
on both sides are ornamented with roughly carved 
heads, but the arches and shafts, as well as all the 
other stonework in the chapel, are much spoiled by 
repeated coats of whitewash and paint. The chapel 


18 These two modern windows had been 
‘recently erected’ in 1869; W. A. 
Waddington, Sketches on the Calder and 
Ribble. 

14 This stone is mentioned as being in 


the chancel in 1877 (Dobson’s Rambles 472. 


by the Ribble, ii, 108), but Mr. Smith says 
that in 1890 it was ‘nowhere visible’ 
(Hist. of Ribchester, 205). 
in 1850 speaks of it as in the north 
chapel ; Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc. xxii), 


RIBCHESTER 


has a separate gabled roof, and on the western gable 
are the remains of a bell-turret. ‘The wall plate on 
the south side is carried over the tops of the arches 
by four stone brickets, and there is one rough 
principal to the roof which is plastered under the 
spars. At the east and west ends the chapel is lit 
by two good 14th-century windows with moulded 
jambs and mullions, traceried heads and external 
hood moulds. The north wall has a square-headed 
window of three trefoiled lights and a 13th-century 
lancet with inner arch on corbels, probably re-erected 
here from the north wall of the nave when the chapel 
was built. The piscina which remains at the end of 
the south wall has a moulded segmental head and jambs. 

The west tower is 13 ft. 6 in. square inside and 
has a projecting vice in the south-east corner. The 
western buttresses are of seven stages, set square and 
finishing just above the sill of the belfry windows. 
The tower is faced with rubble masonry with quoins 
at the angles and is very plain in character, its stages 
being externally unmarked. On the north and south 
sides the walls are blank below the belfry except for a 
small square-headed window to the bell-ringing stage. 
The belfry windows are pointed and of three lights 
with tracery in the head, external hood mould and 
stone louvres. ‘The walls finish with an embattled 
parapet and string course, and there is a clock on the 
east side facing the village. The west door has a 
pointed arch with continuous moulded jambs and 
head, and above is a three-light window similar to 
those in the belfry. The tower arch is of two 
chamfered orders, the outer one dying into the wall 
at the springing, but the lower part is now filled by 
a wooden screen with turned balusters at the top 
and a modern door. The upper part of the opening 
is hidden by the organ, which occupies the west 
gallery. This gallery, which is described in the 
faculty of 1736 as ‘for the use of the Singers of 
Psalms,’ has a plain 18th-century wood front grained 
and varnished, and is approached by a staircase on 
the north side within the tower. 

The font is of 14th-century date, and stands in its 
original position near the south door. It is octagonal 
in plan with straight sides and chamfered angle shafts 
dying into a splayed plinth, and has a flat wood top. 
Like the south door it has unfortunately suffered from 
successive coats of paint. 

The pulpit is of oak and octagonal in plan, with 
pilasters at the angles, richly carved panels and pro- 
jecting cornice carried by shaped brackets. On the 
door are the date 1636 and the initials of Christopher 
Hindle, vicar, and attached to it is an oak reading- 
desk, probably of equal date, forming a two-decker. 

The seating is composed principally of modern 
straight-backed benches, but some of the 18th-century 
square pews still remain, two in the nave having the 
name or initials of Jas. Dewhurst and the date 1761. 
Another in the north chapel has the initials ,©, and 
the date 1729. 

There is a little old stained glass in the head of the 
east window of the north chapel, but it has been 
spoiled with paint on the inside.!5 


In the windows were formerly 
memorials of John Talbot and Isabel his 
wife, and of Thomas Lenox (Lynalx) 
and Elizabeth his wife, together with the 
Lynalx arms; Whitaker, Whalley (ed. 
Nicholls), ii, 459 n. 


Canon Raines 


39 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


There are mural monuments to the Rev. B. T. 
Haslesvood, rector (d. 1876), Jonathan Openshaw of 
Hothersall (d. 1882) and the Rev. F. E. Perrin, 
rector (d. 1885). 

In the south-east corner of the north chapel is the 
base of an old cross. In the north chapel also is an 
ancient tombstone now bearing an inscription dated 
1689. 

There is a ring of six bells by Mears of White- 
chapel, all dated 1821, but hung in the following 
year. In 1650 the ‘curiew’ was rung at 4 a.M. and 
8 p.m. It is still rung in the evening.!® 

The plate consists of a chalice of 1777, another of 
1815, and a plated flagon and paten made by Richards 
of Birmingham, 1826. 

The registers begin in 1598. The first volume 
(1598-1694) has been printed by the Lancashire 
Parish Register Society.17 The churchwardens’ 
accounts begin in 1650.18 There was formerly a 
parish library, dating from 1684, but it was dispersed 
more than fifty years ago.}9 

The churchyard lies principally on the north, south 
and west sides of the church, and is entered through 
gates, near the south-east corner, from the village. 
It was enlarged in 1870 when the old burial-ground 
was closed. To the south of the chancel is a stone 
sundial raised on six square steps, the plate of which 
is missing, but the shaft, which is probably of 17th- 
century date, forms a very picturesque feature in the 
exterior view of the building. The oldest dated 


A church has existed here at least 
from the end of the 12th century.” 
Like the manor, the advowson be- 
longed to the Lacys, lords of Clitheroe,”! and descended 
to the Earls and Dukes of Lancaster, and so to the 
Crown. In 1546 the rectory was granted to the 
newly-created bishopric of Chester, in part exchange 
for other lands,22 and a vicarage was ordained to 
which the bishop collated.?? The rectory is now in 
the hands of the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, and the 
Bishop of Manchester collates to the vicarage.?4 

In 1292 the value of the rectory was taxed as 
£22 a year, but owing mainly to an incursion of 
the Scots it decreased within the next thirty years to 
£12, at which it remained in 1341.7 In 1535 
the income was estimated at £39 155. 6¢., including 
the value of the rectory-house and glebe.28 ‘The Par- 
liamentary Commissioners in 1650 found that the 
Bishop of Chester had leased the tithes to the inhabit- 
ants for the nominal value of the rectory, out of 
which he had paid 20 marks to the vicar.2? This 
stipend was greatly increased soon afterwards, out of 
the sequestered revenues of the bishopric of Chester," 
but after the Restoration the vicar’s income would 
return to its former level. However, about 1718 
Bishop Gastrell found that the vicar had nearly £39 
a year 5! and that there was also {5 6s. 8d. reserved 
‘for a priest serving within the church of Rib- 
chester.’ 32. The vicars have for forty years been 
styled rectors. ‘The income is now returned as 


ADVOWSON 


gravestone is 1696. £242.54 
The following have been rectors and vicars :— 
Rectors 
Instituted Name Patron Cause of Vacancy 
c.1200 . . . . Richard % Hoa a Ow 
GoUZ4O <b, ars Drogo ** . ee ee ee ee -— 
25 Feb. 1243-4 Guy de Russelon 7. . . . . . The King Sites. 4 — 


16T, C. Smith, Ribchester, 104, The 
clock was placed in the tower in 1813, 
but one had been there from 1650 or 
earlier. 

7 Vol. xxvi, 1906. Transcribed and 
edited by J. Arrowsmith. 

18 Many items are extracted by T. C. 
Smith, Ribchester. 

19 Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 4713; Smith, op. cit. 214-19, who 
states that the founder, Bradley Hayhurst 
of Dutton, was curate of Macclesfield 
1671-82 (Earwaker, East Ches. ii, 505), 
and died about 1685. 

20In a grant of the moiety of Rib- 
chester made by Robert de Lacy before 
1193 the ‘gift of the church of the same 
town’ was expressly reserved to the 
grantor ; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), ii, 185. 

41 See the account of the rectors. 

2 Pat, 38 Hen. VIII, pt.v ; Ormerod, 
Ches. (ed. Helsby), i, 97- 

28 The vicar’s stipend was 20 marks. 

24 The patronage was transferred to the 
Bishop of Manchester in 1859; Lond. 
Gaz. 5 Aug. 

% Pope Nich. Tax. (Rec. Com.), 307. 

26 Ibid. 327. 

27 Ing. Nonarum (Rec. Com.), 38. 
The township of Ribchester contributed 
£4 16s. 8d., Alston the same, and Dutton 
£2 6s. 8d. The apparent decrease of 
value was attributed in part to the 
omission of the tithe of hay, &c., and 
other dues belonging to the altarage of 
the church, £4 in all, but chiefly to the 


destruction caused by the Scots, owing to 
which ten fewer ploughs were used in the 
parish. 

8 Valor Eccl. (Rec. Com.), v, 262. 
The house and glebe accounted for 
£8 5s. tod. the tithes of corn £20, 
other tithes £2 16s., Easter dues, &c., 
£8 135. 8d. The outgoings came to 6s. 
only, for procurations and synodals. 

2 Commonw. Ch. Surv. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), 168. A detailed 
survey of the house and glebe lands is 
printed ibid. 197-202. Some more 
profitable arrangement seems to have 
been made, for in 1656 an allowance of 
£70 a year out of the tithes was ordered 
to be made to the incumbent; Plund. 
Mins. Accts. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
ii, 130, 152, 207. 

30 In 1659 it was ordered that £60 
should be paid to the vicar out of the 
tithes ; ibid. ii, 288. 

81 Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 471. 
The sum was made up of the 20 marks 
paid by the bishop, the Dutton tithes 
£143, small tithes £9 125., and surplice 
fees £3. 

There were five churchwardens, one 
chosen by the vicar out of three nominated 
to him, and the other four by the 
‘Twenty-four men’ of their respective 
quarters. The clerk was chosen by the 
heir of Hoghton Tower. 

A list of Easter dues and surplice fees 
in 1682 is printed in Smith, op. cit. go-1. 

In a lease of the rectory granted by 
Bishop Gastrell in 1724 it is stated that 


40 


the tithes of Dutton were reserved towards 
the maintenance of the vicar of Rib- 
chester ; Chester Consistory Ct. Rec. 

32 Notitia, loc. cit. 

38 The benefice was declared a rectory 
in 1867 5 Lond. Gaz.1 Mar. The usual 
style of the incumbent is ‘rector of Rib- 
chester and vicar of Stidd,’ 

84 Manch. Dioc. Dir. 

35 He attested an early grant of part of 
Hothersall; Add. MS. 32106, no. 19 
Hud. 

Ellis the clerk of Ribchester occurs 
early in the 13th century ; Whalley Couch. 
(Chet. Soc.), iii, 870; Final Conc. i, 51. 

86 In 1246 it was recorded that Drogo 
rector of Ribchester had been drowned 
from a horse in the Ribble, accidentally, 
as was supposed. The horse was drowned 
also, and 18d., the value of its hide, must 
be paid to the sheriff; Assize R. 404, 
m. 20. 

In 1243, perhaps after the death of 
Drogo, the king (in right of his ward, 
Edmund de Lacy) claimed the right to 
present to the church of Ribchester, then 
vacant, the other claimants being the 
€Prior of Dutton’ and Walter Moton. 
The prior, no doubt the master of Stidd, 
said he claimed nothing in the advowson ; 
Cur. Reg. R. 131, m. 18, 17. 

37 Cal. Pat. 1232-47, p. 420. He was 
a relative of the king's, who presented in 
right of his ward, and had many pre- 
ferments; see the account of Preston 
Church and Cal. Papal Liters, i, 224- 
He was in minor orders only ; ibid, 242. 


BLACKBURN 


Name 
Humbert de Ascitiis?®. . 2... 
Robert de Pocklington 9 . 2 . 
Robert de Brustwick*®. 2. 2. % 


Instituted 
1 Aug. 1246 . . 
C0290 « 4s « 
23 Nov. 1325 . . 


oc. 1333 
10 Nov. 1337 . 


7 Oct. 1343 
5 Feb. 1349-50 


1 Mar. 1364-5 
18 Dec. 1374 


Thomas Trayley#. 2... 
Matthew Palmer #2... 

Mr. Walter de Woodhouse ** . . 
William de Wakefield“! . . 2 


William de Hornby. 2. 2. 


John de Lincoln * . 
John de Yerdeburgh 


The King 


8 


21 Jan. 1374-5 Lambert de Thirkingham Be go 55 

? William de Bolton 48 . . 2... oy 

8 Nov. 1395 . . John Farmer* . 2. 2. . 1. +5 
oc. 14.08 John Moor® . . 2. 

5 Apr. 1419 Richard Coventry®) . 2. . . The King 

3 Dec. 1419 . . John Elswick ?®. 2. 2. 2. . 

14 Dec. 1468 . . William Talbot, D.Decr.*® 2 . 

88 Cal. Pat. 1232-47, p. 484. In _ rector had had Kippax, in the diocese of 


1246 the advowson was in the king’s 
hands by reason of the wardship of Ed- 
mund de Lacy, and was worth 40 marks 
yearly ; Assize R. 4o4, m. 20d. The 
rector is named as ‘ Imbert.’ 

Josce the clerk of Ribchester occurs in 
1258-9 ; Originalia, 43 Hen. III, m. 6. 
He is several times mentioned in local 
charters. Hawise, his widow, claimed 
an oxgang of land in the vill in 1282; 
De Banco R. 45, m. 7od. 

89 Robert de Pocklington, parson of the 
church of Ribchester, claimed land in 
Dilworth in 1292 ; Assize R. 408, m. 63, 
18d. Letters of protection were given 
him in 1294; Cal. Pat. 1292-1301, 
p- 123. In 1305 he claimed land against 
Robert Moton; De Banco R. 153, 
m. 317d. Robert, rector of the church 
of Ribchester, attested a local deed 3 Add. 
MS. 32106, no. 275. 

40 Cal. Pat. 1324-7, p. 204. The 
name is also spelt Burstwick. The king 
presented by reason of the forfeiture of 
Thomas Earl of Lancaster. The new 
rector was one of the king’s clerks. 
Henry de Haydock, another king’s clerk, 
was picsented in 1331, but Robert de 
Brustwick showed that he had been duly 
presented by Edward II, and was allowed 
to retain the benefice; ibid. 1330-4, 
pp: 82, 102. 

41 At Michaelmas 1333 Robert de 
Brustwick, rector of Lamley, claimed a 
sum of money from Thomas Trayley, 
rector of Ribchester. The latter was also 
sued by Simon de Westhalum, chaplain ; 
De Banco R. 296, m. 402d. There had 
perhaps been an exchange of benefices. 
In 1336 Thomas Trayley received pardon 
for an outlawry; Cal. Pat. 1334-8, 


Pp. 197. 

42 Ibid. p. 550. The new rector had 
been rector of Little Canfield (Essex), 
in the diocese of London, Trayley 
taking his place there. The lordship of 
Clitheroe was held by Queen Isabella, and 
Palmer was one of her clerks. He re- 
ceived in 1333 a papal provision of a 
canonry and prebend at Bosham; Cal. 
Papal Letters, ti, 387-8. 

48 He was a prebendary of York in 
1347-y; Le Neve, Fasti, iii, 217, 
192. 

44 Cal. Pat. 1343-5, p. 128; the new 


7 


York, which Woodhouse took. The 
date given is that of presentation; Wake- 
field is said to have been instituted on 
10 Nov.; Smith, Ribchester, 139. In 
1331, at the request of Joan queen of 
Scotland, whose clerk he was, the pope 
provided him to a canonry at Lichfield, 
but he was to resign Kippax. The pro- 
vision was renewed in 1332 3 Cal. Papal 
Letters, ii, 350, 356. 

As William de Wakefield, rector of the 
church of Ribchester, he granted to John 
de Osbaldeston, chaplain, a part of his 
land in the vill, lying in the lower part 
of the croft he had received from John 
Banastre ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 261. 

49 Cal. Pat. 1348-50, p. 469. The 
new rector, one of the king’s clerks, 
exchanged the rectory of Wootton, Lincoln 
diocese, for Ribchester. He was after- 
wards rector of St. Michael’s-on-Wyre, 
and receiver for the Duke of Lancaster. 
He occurs as rector of Ribchester down 
to Jan. 1364-5, so that there is no break 
in the succession at this point ; De Banco 
R. 419, m. 180. 

46 Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xxii, 387. 
One of this name was prebendary of 
York and Lincoln later in the century ; 
Le Neve. 

47 John de Lincoln in 1374 exchanged 
Ribchester for Long Leadenham, in Lin- 
coln diocese, with John de Yerdeburgh, 
who was presented to Ribchester on 
18 Dec. 1374; Duchy of Lanc. Mise. 
Bks. xiii, fol. 47. It is unlikely that he 
was instituted, for he almost immediately 
accepted Stoke, in Staffordshire, and 
Lambert de Thirkingham was presented 
on 21 Jan. 1374-5 ; ibid. 

48In Whitaker's Whalley (ii, 462) 
William de Bolton is said to have been 
instituted on 27 Feb. 1367, but there 
must be some mistake in the date. 

49 Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.) xxii, 393 ; 
the Archdeacon of Richmond was to have 
£12 as first-fruits. Henry IV in Dec. 
1399 ‘ratified the estate of John Farmer, 
king’s clerk, in the rectory of Ribchester ; 
Cal. Pat. 1399-1401, p. 101. The name 
is also spelt Fermer. 

Boniface IX in 1397 appointed John 
Farmer, rector of Ribchester, to the 
prebend of Prees, in Lichfield Cathedral, 
if he should be found fit; Cal. Papal 


41 


HUNDRED 


Patron 


Queen Isabella . . 


Queen Isabella. . 


Duke of Lancaster. . 


ee ye 


RIBCHESTER 


Cause of Vacancy 
res. G. de Russelon 


res. R. de Pockling- 
ton 


exch. T. Trayley 

exch. W. de Wood- 
house 

exch. W. de Wake- 
field 


exch. Jo.de Lincoln 
res. Jo. de Yerde- 
burgh 


. . res. W. de Bolton 


d. John Moor 
. res. R. Coventry 
res. J. Elswick 


Letters, v, 84. In 1405 Innocent VII 
extended an indult granted to Rector 
Farmer the year before; while he should 
be serving the Bishop of Norwich (whose 
registrar he was), studying at the 
university, or residing at the Roman 
court, he might farm out his benefices, 
&c.; ibid. vi, 8, 285. John ‘Fermer’ 
was prebendary of Wolvey, in Lichfield 
Cathedral, in 1398, probably in exchange 
for Prees; Le Neve, Fasti, i, 640. 

50 John Moor, rector, was the feoffee 
of Sibyl widow of Sir Roger de Fulthorp 
in Aug. 1408 5 Towneley MS. DD, no. 
2025. He seems to have been resident, 
as he is similarly mentioned several 
times ; e.g. Final Conc. iii, 84 ; Towneley 
MS. C 8, 13, p. 602 (1415). 

51 Raines MSS. xxii, 395. 

In 1420 Richard Coventry was rector 
of Benefield (Northants), in the diocese 
of Lincoln, and obtained a plenary in- 
dulgence ; Cal, Papal Letters, vii, 336, 
340. 

5? Raines MSS. loc. cit. This rector 
seems to have been resident, as his name 
frequently occurs in local deeds, &c. ; e.g. 
Final Cone. iii, 112. 

He and William Clifton in 1429 
claimed a debt against Richard Walmsley 
of Ribchester 3 Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 2, 
m. 94. John Elswick, rector of Rib- 
chester, was a feoffee of lands in Chaigley 
in Apr. 1468; Add. MS. 32108, T 
336. 
58 In 1468 there was an inquiry as to 
the patronage, which was claimed by 
Edmund and Richard Talbot under a 
grant from the Crown in reward of services 
rendered to Richard Earl of Salisbury. 
The king had presented the last rector, 
to whom a pension of £20 was allowed 
on account of his decrepitude; Raines 
MSS. xxii, 385 (from registers of Archd. 
of Richmond). In an act of resumption 
in 1467 the grant to the Talbots was 
specially reserved ; Parl. R. v, §99. 

William Talbot graduated in the canon 
law at Cambridge, bachelor in 1470 and 
doctor in 1475-6 ; Grace Book A (Luard 
Mem.), 83, 111. He obtained a prebend 
at York in 1480 and another at South- 
well in 1485 ; he was buried at the latter 
church in 1498, his monument. still 
remaining; Le Neve, Fasti, iii, 189, 


448. 
6 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Cause of Vacancy 


Instituted Name : Patron 

16 Mar. 1496-7 . Robert Crombleholme * . _ The King ee ge Ua 
31 July 1527 . . William Clayton, D.Can.Li* =. — ce Cromble- 
21 Dec. 1532. + Thomas Thirlby, LL.D. . "The King > Goa aca ae, Clayton 

g June 1542 George Wolset, LL.D.*7. . . oe ee «res. T, Thirlby 

Vicars 
oc. 1562 . James Lingard ** a aad 
22 Mar. 1571-2 Christopher Alsop *° 
Henry Norcross * John Whitaker . . «res. last incumbent 


g Mar. 1573-4 
17 Dec. 1616 


5 Feb. 1617-18 . 


1656 William Ingham. 
6 Oct. 1681 George Ogden, B.D. * Bp. of Chester . 
3 Aug. 1706 Thomas Johnson, BA.® 2. . Fe i 
26 Feb. 1738-9 John Heber® . 2. 2. 2. ww. + 
54 Smith, op. cit. 141. Crombleholme Gilbert Wicks obtained a presentation 


resigned the rectory on a pension, but 
died soon afterwards, intestate, when his 
administrators began a suit against the 
Abbot of Whalley ; Duchy Plead. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 201. The abbot 
was liable as surety for William Clayton, 
the succeeding rector, and alleged that 
the covenants had been fulfilled. 

55 The king in 1520 granted the next 
presentation to John Veysey (Bishop of 
Exeter) and Sir Edward Belknap ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Misc. Bks, xxii, 229d. On 
Crombleholme’s resignation the bishop, 
as surviving trustee, presented one 
Thomas Brerewood, and complained that 
William Clayton unjustly hindered his 
obtaining possession; Pal. of Lane. 
Plea Ri. 142, tie 2 d. 

The new rector (D. Can. Law, 1528 ; 
Foster, Alumni Oxon.) held various 
benefices and dignities, including Winder- 
mere, Doncaster and Bromfield Churches, 
and canonries at Lichfield and York; Le 
Neve, Fasti, i, 6273 iii, 193 3 L. and P. 
Hen. VIII, v, 608, 7oo. He died 14 
Oct. 1532, and it appears that Edmund 
Bonner was recommended as his successor 
at Ribchester ; ibid. v, 604, 687. A 
letter from Clayton to Cromwell is at 
the P.R.O. ; ibid. iv, 2248. 

*6 Thomas Thirlby (Trinity Hall, 
Cambridge, LL.D. 1528) had many 
preferments, becoming successively Bishop 
of Westminster (1540), Norwich (1550) 
and Ely (1554); Le Neve, Fast, He 
had complied with the religious changes 
of the time, but in 1559 refused to 
abandon Roman communion and was 
deprived by Elizabeth, Thenceforward 
he lived a prisoner with Archbishop 
Parker, dying at Lambeth in 1570. See 
Dict. Nat. Biog. ; Cooper, Athen. Cantab. 
i, 287-90. 

He had a dispute with his lessees of 
the rectory of Ribchester in 1542 ; Duchy 
Plead, ii, 160. 

57 Act Bk. at Chester 1502-76, fol. 
125. He was also rector of Chipping. 
His name is uncertain, being given also 
as Wolfet or Wolflet. He was educated 
at Oxford (M.A. 1512, as Welsett or 
Wylsett ; Foster, Alumni), was rector of 
St. Olave, Hart Street, London, in 1518 
to 1528, and became clerk of the king’s 
closet in 15373 he had other benefices 
and was a canon of Salisbury; see the 
account by T. C. Smith, Chipping, 85-6. 
His will, dated 1553, was proved at 
York in 15543; an abstract is given by 
Raines, Chantries (Chet. Soc.), 195-6. 


Richard Learoyd ®. 


Christopher Hindley’. . . . . FS 


to the rectory in 1540, but it does not 
appear to have been acted upon ; L. and P. 
Hen. VIII, xv, g. 1027 (20). 

55 No first-fruits were paid by the 
vicars. James Lingard’s name appears 
in the visitation list of 1562 and again 
in 1570. He was one of the old clergy, 
having been ordained in 1546-7 3 Chester 
Ordin, Bk. (Rec. Soc, Lancs. and Ches.), 


3, 77+ 

59 Smith, Ribchester, 143. Some later 
dates are taken from the same work, 
which contains a full account of the 
vicars. Alsop’s name occurs in Jan. 
1573-43 Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.), 
xxii, 56. 

60 Act Bk. at Chester. The Bishop of 
Chester had in 1572 granted the next 
presentation to Bernard Anderton, his 
servant, and another, who transferred it 
to John Whitaker. In Raines MSS. 
xxii, p. 350, will be found a record of the 
proceedings against Norcross in 1614~15. 
He was charged with having obtruded 
himself into the ‘parish’ of Stidd, and 
with being a drunkard, ale-house keeper, 
gambler, &c. He was deprived or 
degraded, but continved to live at Rib- 
chester, being buried there 14 Aug. 1623. 
In 1590 he was described as ‘no 
preacher’; S. P. Dom. Eliz. xxxi, 47. 

61 Act Bk. at Chester 1579-1676, fol. 
645. He became one of the chaplains 
or curates at the Collegiate Church, Man- 
chester, and was buried there 22 Aug. 
1623. From the presentments at one 
of the visitations it appears that he was 
unable to obtain possession of the vicarage- 
house at Ribchester. 

62 From this time the institutions have 
been compared with the Institution Books 
P.R.O. as printed in Lancs. and Ches. 
Antiq. Notes. 

Christopher Hindley (or Hindle— 
Hynde in Act Bk.) was of Cowell or 
Cowhill in Rishton. At first he ‘could 
not peaceably enjoy the vicarage,’ appa- 
rently owing to the opposition of Nor- 
cross, who also detained a communion 
cup; Visit. P. of 1619 at Chester Dioc. 
Reg. Though not a member of the 
classis, he continued to minister at Rib- 
chester after the establishment of Presby- 
terianism, until violently ejected from 
his pulpit in 1649 while denouncing the 
execution of Charles I. He then retired 
to Cowhill, where he died in 1657 ; Lee 
Glean. Lancs. and Ches. i, 34 &. 

It was probably the execution of 
Charles I which roused the vicar to 


42 


Bp. of Chester. . . . 


depr. of H. Nor- 
cross 


res. R. Learoyd 


d. W. Ingham 
d. G. Ogden 
d. T. Johnson 


resistance, for in 1646 the Parliamentary 
Committee ordered an increase of £40 in 
his stipend, and as late as May 1649 
directed payment of arrears; but in the 
following month the increase was sus- 
pended on account of accusations of 
‘notorious misdemeanours’ ; Plund. Mins. 
Alccts. i, 70, 72. In 16§0 it was found that 
‘the present incumbent, Mr. Christopher 
Hindley,’ had been ‘lately suspended by 
order from the provincial assembly of 
divines for this county, but for what 
cause the presentors know not’; Commonw. 
Ch, Surv. 169. Thus he had not then 
been deprived, 

63 William Ingham, who was considered 
a ‘diligent, painful minister,’ occurs at 
Church (1646), Goosnargh (1650) and 
Shireshead (1652); Commonw. Ch. 
Surv. 155 ; Plund. Mins. Accts. i, 119. 
He was not recommended as ‘settled 
minister’ of Ribchester until 1656, so 
that the account of his conduct given by 
his Royalist successor has no doubt been 
exaggerated ; ibid. ii, 151. The first 
baptism by him was on 23 Nov. 1656; 
Reg. He seems to have been a Presby- 
terian and signed the ‘Harmonious Con- 
sent’ in 1648, but conformed at the 
Restoration, retaining the benefice till his 
death in 1681, For his will see Smith, 
op. cit. 150. 

64 Educated at Jesus Coll., Camb.; M.A. 
1668. His epitaph describes him as 
‘fellow’ of his college and B.D.; the 
former statement is erroneous. He built 
a vicarage-house in 1682. He was elected 
fellow of Manchester in 1681 and retained 
this with his vicarage till his death in 
1706 at Manchester. In 1692 the 
Bishop of Chester (Stratford) wrote to 
him asking whether he intended to reside 
at Ribchester or to resign it; see Loc. 
Glean. Lancs. and Ches. ii, 4 and the 
account of him in Raines, Fellows of 
Manch. (Chet. Soc.), 183-8. At Rib- 
chester he collected the antiquities found 
there. 

65 Educated at Brasenose Coll. Oxf. ; 
B.A. 16923 Foster, Alumni. He was 
non-resident in 1734, but was buried at 
Ribchester in 1738. 

65 Educated at University Coll., Oxf, 
but did not graduate ; Foster, Alumni. 
He was rector of Marton, a family living, 
1728 to 1775, and did not reside at Rib- 
chester ; Whitaker, Craven (ed. Morant), 
95- In 1739 the vicar was also ‘chap- 

lain to his Majesty's invalids at Ports- 
mouth’ ; Visit. Returns. Reginald Heber, 
the poet, was his nephew. 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


Instituted 
29 Aug. 1775. . 
27 July 1776. 
11 July 1798 . 
23 Apr. 1800 . . 
14 Apr. 1829 . 


Name 


John Griffiths BA. 2. . . 
John Atkinson 78 . . . 
Isaac Relph , ae 
James Quartley, M. A. 70 Beak 


Boulby Thomas Haslewood, BAM i , ; ao 


RIBCHESTER 
Patron Cause of Vacancy 
Bp. of Chester. . . . d. J. Heber 


d. J. Atkinson 
d. I. Relph 
d. J. Quartley 


Recrors 


1876. . 
18 Aug. 1885 . . 
11 May 1892 . . 
7 Jan. 1g08 . . 


Francis John Dickson, M.A.78 
Evan Harries. . eri 
John William Brooker. . 


The early rectors were often officials of the Earls of 
Lancaster or the kings, holding Ribchester as one of 
numerous preferments and resigning it after a brief 
tenure for some more lucrative benefice. It is 
unlikely that many of them were resident, and pro- 
bably for this reason they seldom occur in local deeds. 
After the rectory came into the possession of the 
Bishops of Chester the vicars appointed were usually 
resident, but the stipend was small, and the position 
of the incumbents was probably no better than that 
of the former curates of the absentee rectors. Some 
of the vicars held other preferments. Before the 
Reformation there were probably three or four 
resident priests,’> the parish church with its chantry 
and the chapels at Longridge and Stidd having to 
be served. The visitation list of 1548 gives four 
names, including the rector’s, but Stidd had no 
doubt ceased to be used.76 The church goods taken 
away by the commissioners of Edward VI in 1552-3 
were a pix of silver gilt, a cross, a cope and five 


Frederick Eugene Perrin, M.A.’ 


Bp. of Manchester. . 


” . ° 


d. B. T. Haslewood 
d. F. E. Perrin 


res. E. Harries 


. ” . . 


is the case in 1562,” A single minister appears thence- 
forward to have sufficed for the parish until about 
1700, though during the Commonwealth period 
there was a second one at Longridge.6! Mr. Ogden, 
vicar at the end of the 17th century, had a resident 
curate.82 In 1731 the churchwardens notified to the 
Bishop of Chester the existence of Quakers, Popish 
and Presbyterian Dissenters and Anabaptists.®% 

The priest of St. Mary in Ribchester Church 
appears to have been an established institution before 
1349, when a rent-charge of 25. on lands in Dutton 
was made in his favour by Henry de Clayton.*4 Ten 
years later a small sum was left to the priest singing 
at St. Mary’s altar. This was no doubt the altar 
on the south side ofthe church. In 1407 Sir Richard 
Hoghton obtained the royal licence to refound or at 
least to endow a chantry at her altar on the north 
side of the church.86 The endowment, derived from 
lands in Ribchester, Dutton, Chipping and Goosnargh, 
was unusuaHy liberal, the net income of the chantry 


vestments.”7 


67-8 He was appointed one of the king’s 
preachers in Lancashire in 1786. He was 
also curate of Walton-le-Dale, where 
there is a tablet to his memory. 

69 He had been curate of Ribchester for 
twenty-two years before being appointed 
vicar. He is said to have been drowned 
in the Ribble ; Smith, op. cit. 156. 

70 Baines, Lancs. (ed. Croston), iv, 103. 

71 Educated at Peterhouse, Camb. ; 
B.A. 1818. On his appointment, he 
being ‘an Evangelical and active clergy- 
man,’ the Congregationalists gave up their 
services; Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. 
ii, 113. He ‘was in many respects 
a model parson, and was highly esteemed 
by his parishioners, although it is to be 
regretted that the old parish library was 
allowed to become gradually dispersed, 
and the numerous Roman antiquities dis- 
covered during his incumbency to be irre- 
coverably scattered’ ; Smith, op. cit. 157. 

7 Educated at Trinity Coll., Dublin ; 
M.A. 1848. ‘He succeeded in accomplish- 
ing many urgently needed reforms’ ; ibid. 

73 Educated at Trinity Coll., Camb. ; 
M.A. 1873. Rector of Bispham 1876-85. 

74 Educated at St. Bees. Vicar of Christ 
Church, Pendlebury, 1881-92. 

7% In a purely local deed of 1423 
William Wile and Robert Whittingham, 
chaplains, were trustees, while John Els- 
wick, the rector, and Thomas Sedill, 
chaplain, were witnesses ; Towneley MS. 
DD, no. 1234. 

76 The details given are from the visi- 
t:tion lists at Chester. 

77 Augm. Off. Misc. Bks. clxxx, m. 22. 

78 James Moor ; he had been there in 
1548 also. 79 Viz. the vicar’s name. 

80 There is, for instance, no sign of an 


In 1554, when the Bishop of Chester 
was rector, only one name appears,’® and the same 


priest in 


assistant—either lecturer or schoolmaster 
—in the clerical subsidy lists, 1620-39, 
in Misc, (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 
55, &c. %Seethe account of Longridge. 

82 Ogden himself and several other 
vicars were non-resident, but from 1682 
there seems usually to have been a resi- 
dent curate at Ribchester and another at 
Longridge from about 1700. There is a 
list in Smith, op. cit. 158-9. William 
Felgate, the curate in 1689, was ‘con- 
formable’ to the government ; Hist. MSS, 
Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 230. 

88 Visit. Returns. 

84 Add. MS. 32106, no. 175. 

85 John del Lee, smith, gave a rent of 
6d., charged on his lands, to God, St. 
Mary of Ribchester and all Saints and to 
the chaplain perpetually singing at the 
altar of our said Lady St. Mary in the 
church of Ribchester. Should the rent 
fall into arrears the ‘ governor or parochial 
chaplain or procurator’ of the church 
might distrain ; ibid. no. 317. 

Among the Shireburne deeds was a 
bond sealed in 1545 in the parish church 
of Ribchester before our Lady’s altar ; 
Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

86 The writ of Ing. a.q.d. was issued 
in July 1406, but the inquiry did not take 
place till a year later. It was then 
reported that it was not to the king’s loss 
that Sir Richard Hoghton should assign 
to the chaplain of the perpetual chantry 
in honour of the B. V. Mary in a certain 
chapel on the north side of the parish 
church of Ribchester various messuages, 
lands and rents in Ribchester, Chipping, 
Goosnargh, Hothersall and Aighton, in 
part satisfaction of £10 granted by Sir 
Richard to the chaplain in virtue of the 


43 


1547 being £10 175. 444.97 
Whittingham was the first priest, 


Robert 


1409 8; Ellis 


king’s licence, In Ribchester nine mes- 
suages, 41 acres, &c., were held of 
Katherine Lynalx by a rent of 17}¢., and 
7 acres of pasture were held of Robert 
Townley by 2s. rent ; Ing. a.q.d, file 438, 
no. 26. 

The royal licence referred to was given 
in May 1406; the chaplain was to cele- 
brate for the good estate of the king and 
Sir Richard Hoghton, for the souls of 
their ancestors and others (including John 
de Osbaldeston and William Moton, 
chaplains) ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 364. 
The grant of the lands by Katherine 
widow of William Lynalx, lady of Rib- 
chester, is in Kuerden’s fol. MS. p. 247. 

The lands of the chantry seem at a 
little earlier date (1397) to have been held 
by the above-named William Moton ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 455 (fol. 323). 

87 Raines, Chantries (Chet. Soc.), 196-9. 
There was no plate. The field-names 
recorded include Hichough, Bankheys, 
Stonyfurlong, Withinlache, Priestmeadow, 
Orley, Atough, the pasture called Eyerley 
and Avergate. The quit-rents payable 
for Ribchester lands were 16d. to Sir 
Richard Hoghton for Atough and 2s. 6d. 
to Robert Lynalx for the third part of 
another tenement. 

It should be noticed that in 1535 the 
gross income was returned as (4 135. 4d. 
only ; 3s. 9d. was due to the king for 
puture ; Valor Eccl. (Rec. Com.), v, 263. 

85 Add. MS. 32106, no. 365. Sir 
Richard Hoghton appointed, and the right 
of presentation remained with his descen- 
dants. The advowson of the chantry of 
Dutton at Ribchester was one of the 
tights of Alexander Hoghton in 149%; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii,’no. 66. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Crombleholme was appointed in 1467 © and was 
still there in 1496% ; James Schlacter, chaplain, 
held it in 1504 °%; James Tarleton appears in 
1525% and was still ce'ebrating according to his 
foundation in 1547, when the chantry was sup- 
pressed. The confiscated estates were In 1550 
granted by the Crown to Thomas Reeve and others. 

Land had also been given for the maintenance of a 
light in the church. 

Cecily the Recluse is mentioned in 1292. 

A school was founded in 1793-7.*° 

Apart from the school and religious 
endowments there are several bene- 
factions for the benefit of the poor. 


CHARITIES 


An official inquiry was held in 1898, and the report, 
printed the following year, contains a reprint of that 
of 1826.97 For the township of Ribchester about 
£54 is distributed annually in money doles, of which 
over £42 is derived from a bequest by Mrs. Elizabeth 
Dewhurst in 1842.°°  Inaddition for Ribchester and 
Stidd is a sum of over £10 yearly, with ‘ preference 
for poor Catholics ’ * and almshouses with an income 
of £53 115. 24.1% In Dilworth £12 is given in 
money doles 101 and another endowment has been 
lost°2 In Dutton calico is distributed to the value 
of £7.1°% For Alston over £16 is available, distri- 
buted in gifts of money! ; and some bencfactions 
for this township !° and Hothersall have been lost.!"" 


Robert Whittingham was still chaplain in 
1443; Add. MS. 32106, no. 341. 
>4 Raines MSS. xxii, 399; 

Hoghton presented. 

” In 1487 John son and heir of Thomas 
Blackburn released to Ellis Crombleholme, 
chaplain of the perpetual chantry of 
B. Mary on the north side of Ribchester 
Church, all right in certain lands, part 
lying between the house of St. Saviour at 
Stidd and Chester Brook and part in Rib- 
chester Eyes, called the Crookedroyds ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 310. This grant 
was followed by an arbitration ; ibid. no. 
419, fol. 316, John Boyes of Ribchester 
in 1496 granted to the same chantry a 
part of his land in the corner of the south 
side of Bernard Park, inclosed by a new 
ditch ; ibid. no. 471, fol. 326. 

*'a He was described in 1504 as £ pos- 
sessor of the chantry of Dutton founded 
in the church of Ribchester’ ; Kuerden 
MSS. iv, P21, no. 74. 

1 In 1527 it was recorded that he had 
been chantry priest for two years, having 
been presented by Sir Richard Hoghton. 
He is again named as priest in 1535 3 
Walsr Eccl, (Rec. Com.), v, 263. 

% Raines, Chantries, 194. Fromanote 
on p. 1y§ it seems that the rector (George 
Wolset) had in 1543 procured the next 
presentation for himself. 

“8 Pat. 4 Edw. VI, pt. vii. Part was 
soon afterwards sold to James son of 
William Jenkinson, innkeeper of Rib- 
chester, the occupier; Towneley MS. 
OO, no. 1229-30. The chapel seems to 
have been acquired by the Townleys of 
Dutton, but it had previously been known 
as Dutton chapel. The Hoghton chapel, 
on the south side of the church, does not 
scem to have had an endowed chantry. 

94 Raines, op. cit. 2533; the yearly 
yalue was 75. 

% Assize R. 408, m. 18; there is a 
further notice of her land in Assize R. 
1299,m.16d. Diana, the Anker maiden, 
possibly servant of another recluse, is 
named in a deed of 1349; Add. MS. 
32106, fol. 322. 

°6 The master began teaching in 1793 
and a schoolhouse was erected on the 
waste in 1797 ; End. Char. Rep. for Rib- 
chester (1899), 2, 11. 

% The details in the following notes are 
taken from these reports. 

In 1624 an inquiry was made asto £50 
bequeathed to the parish by Robert Jen- 
kinson, citizen and merchant tailor of 
London in 1616, the sum being supposed 
to be in danger ; and John Dewhurst and 
Thomas Waring, executors of Robert 
Dewhurst, were ordered to pay the £50 
to James Norcross, churchwarden, who 
was to give security for its safe trans- 
mission to succeeding wardens ; Harl. MS. 


Henry 


2176, fol. 324, 334. From what follows 
it appears that the capital sum was 
divided among the townships, and that all 
has been lost except the £10 appropriated 
to Ribchester. 

% This is called the Waterworth Dole. 
The capital sum is £1,300, invested in 
Preston Corporation stock. The distri- 
bution takes place at Christmas time, 
there being about 180 recipients. 

William Norcross left £20 towards 
binding poor apprentices and Robert 
Jenkinson £10 for the poor. These sums 
were in 1732 invested in a house and land, 
known as Dods Hall. The property was 
in 1871 sold for £379 and the money 
invested in consols in the name of the 
official trustees; the annual income is 
£11 $s. The portion which should be 
applied to apprenticing children is £7 105. 
but no such use has been made of it for 
sixty years, the whole income being dis- 
tributed in small doles (15. to 2s.) on 
St. Thomas's Day. Another sum of £40 
was lent to the township, as was supposed, 
but the poor law auditor having disallowed 
the 36s. formerly paid out of the rates as 
interest, this charity has been lost. 

Miss Harriett Jane Quartley in 1878 
bequeathed £19 19s. to the vicar of 
Ribchester for the poor. This is invested 
in consols and produces an income of 115., 
distributed among six poor and aged 
persons at Christmas. 

% This was founded by James Stand- 
ford in 1695, he bequeathing £150 for the 
poor of Stidd, Bailey and Ribchester, and 
£300 for ‘other purposes.’ The money was 
invested in land near Skipton and the gross 
income is now £41 25. The net income 
is paid to the Roman Catholic priest at 
Stidd, who reserves two-thirds to his own 
use (for the ‘other purposes’) and distri- 
butes the rest in small money doles, Pro- 
testants being among the recipients. 

1” These almshouses were founded 
under the will of John Shireburne of 
Bailey and Sheffield, who died in 1726, 
as will be seen in the account of Stidd 
below. The connexion of the Walmsley 
family with them seems to have been that 
of trustees. In 1728 the churchwardens 
of Ribchester made the following present- 
ment to the Bishop of Chester: ‘We 
have an almshouse erecting, but whether 
the revenues be according to law we know 
not’; Visit. Retums. ‘ Alice Worthing- 
ton, widow, pauper from the hospital at 
Stidd,’ was buried 24 May 1732; Church 
Reg. There are six sets of rooms, one of 
which is occupied by the schoolmistress 
and the others by the five almswomen 
who are appointed by the priest. Stidd 
Manor Farm was in 1867 transferred by 
Thomas George Walmsley to the use of 
the Rt. Rev. William Turner, Bishop of 


44 


Salford, and others as an endowment for 
the almshouses. The income, after pro- 
viding for repairs and £10 worth of coals 
for the inmates, is divided equally among 
these. 

101 Frances Roades in 1696 bequeathed 
her house and land for the benefit of ‘ poor 
distressed housekeepers of Dilworth for all 
eternity." The yearly rent is now £12, 
of which between £8 and {£10 is distri- 
buted annually on St. Thomas's Day in 
sums of Is, to 55. 

103 Henry Townley in 1776 left personal 
estate amounting to £100 for ‘poor 
necessitous persons.’ The money was 
applied in 1824 to the building of a work- 
house, interest being paid out of the rates 
until 1862, when the poor law auditor 
disallowed it. 

Bishop Gastrell mentions a gift of £20 
by Hugh Shireburne to Ribchester and 
Dilworth, and another of £10 by Grace 
Ward to Dilworth ; Notitia Cestr. ii, 474. 

103 Henry Townley, Ann his wife and 
their descendants Jennet Ward and Town- 
ley Ward between 1747 and 1790 gave 
sums amounting to £125 to be laid out 
in cloth. The capital, with accumulations, 
is now represented by £255 consols, pro- 
ducing £7 a year. The distribution of 
calico is made about the end of January, 
some thirty families receiving doles of 7 to 
24 yds. 

104 Richard Hoghton in 1613 left a close 
called Wood Crook in Whittingham 
charged with various sums for the poor, 
including {£1 10s. to be distributed ‘at 
the cross near Longridge Chapel in Alston.” 
The whole income of the land (now sold) 
was applied to the charity, and Alston now 
has £6 115. 10d. from the endowment. 
Alston also has a share (a sixth) of the 
income of the charity founded by Thomas 
Hoghton of Woodplumpton in 1649 ; it 
now amounts to {9g 125. 

105 For ¢ Jenkinson’s charity’ 8s. a 
year was paid out of the rates in 1826, 
but nothing is now known of it. 

Thomas Gregson in 1742 and Thomas 
Eccles in 1777 left sums for the poor, but 
these had been lost before 1826. 

James Berry of Alston was stated to 
have given Seth Eccles £200 with a 
verbal injunction to distribute the interest 
to the poor. Seth died in 1822, but his 
son Thomas continued an annual distribu- 
tion of £8. This gift has, however, long 
ceased, 

16 In 1826 there was paid yearly from 
the rates gs. or 105. for the poor, distri- 
buted in small doles about Christmas, the 
endowment being attributed to Robert 
Jenkinson. Nothing has been paid for a 
long time, and the cottages supposed tv 
have been built for the poor are now 
claimed as private property. 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


RIBCHESTER 


Ribelcastre, Dom. Bk. ; Ribbecestre, 1202 ; Ribbel- 
cestre, 1227 ; Rybchestre, 1292. The forms Rib- 
and Ribbel- occur together till about 1360, when the 
former prevailed. 

The little town takes its name from the Roman 
station founded by the Ribble. The township has 
an area of 2,211% acres,’ and in 1go1 there was a 
population of 1,237. The general slope of the 
surface is down from north to south, the greatest 
height on the side of Longridge Fell being nearly 
goo ft. above the ordnance datum. Boyce’s Brook 
flows south-east through the township to join the 
Ribble. 

Roads branch out from the town eastward to 
reach the bridge across the river about a mile away, 
northward to join the road from Longridge to 
Mitton, near the hamlet of Knowl Green, and north- 
westward to join the same road nearer Longridge. 
Buckley is central. 

Few relics of the Roman occupation remain in 
the town. In the main street, forming a portico to 
the ‘ White Bull Inn,’ are four columns with debased 
capitals, said to have been taken out of the river. 
They rudely resemble the Roman Doric in appear- 
ance and are 6 ft. 7 in. high; their dressing also 
admits the possibility of their Roman origin. In 
the rectory grounds are three Roman vases, said to 
have been dug up in the churchyard, and there is a 
fourth at Lower Alston Farm. At the rectory there 
is preserved also a Roman altar, without inscription 
and focus, which was found in 1888 built into a 
cottage wall." 

There are some 17th-century houses remaining, 
one with an interesting stone door-head dated 1680, 
and in the main street is a block of two houses of 


RIBCHESTER 


of brick, with moulded stone architraves to the 
windows and a stone cornice, is well preportioned 
and simple in design. 

Three fairs used to be held in Ribchester, but 
have been discontinued.? 

The stocks were used as late as 1829.8 

There was till recently some hand-loom weaving. 
There are two small weaving-mills and two bobbin- 
works. 

The Preston Union Workhouse is situated here. 

In 1066 RIBCHESTER, assessed as 
two plough-lands, was a member of the 
Preston fee held by Earl Tostig*; it then 
probably included Dutton also. After the Conquest 
it was given to Roger of Poitou,5 and later is found, 
together with Dilworth and Dutton, as a member of 
the honor of Clitheroe. Through the Lacys the 
manor descended to the Earls and Dukes of Lan- 
caster, and thus to the Crown. 

Robert de Lacy gave a moiety of Ribchester to 
Robert son of Henry in or before 1193.’ John Con- 
stable of Chester early in the 13th century granted to 
Walter Moton a moiety of the vill of Ribchester with all 
its wood and the mill, just as the grantor’s father and 
brother had held it, two gloves or 4d. being payable 
at Michaelmas. About the same time Alan de 
Windle granted all his land of Ribchester and of 
Dilworth to Walter Moton in free marriage with 
Amabel his daughter,® and John de Lacy gave Walter 
all the farm, aid and service which had been due 
from Alan de Windle for the same rent as for the 
above-named moiety. Thenceforward the whole 
manor was held by the Moton family. 

Walter Moton wasa benefactor to Stanlaw Abbey}! 
and also to the hospital at Stidd.1? He died in or 
before 1246, when his widow Amabel, who had 
married Robert de Ribchester, was suing his son 


MANOR 


some architectural merit, the lead rain-water heads 


The building, which is 


of which are dated 1745. 


12,224 acres, including 21 of inland 
water ; Census Rep. 1901. 

la J. Garstang, Roman Ribchester, 5. 
(Report of Ribch. Excavations, 1898.) 

2T. C. Smith, Ribchester, 71. 

STbid. 72. In 1599 the people of 
Ribchester were fined 3s. 4d. because there 
was no cuck-stool ; Clitheroe Ct. R. 

4 V.C.H. Lancs, i, 288. 

5 Ibid. 

6 There is no record of the gift of 
Ribchester and Dilworth as there is of 
Dutton. It is doubtful whether the fine 
of 1187 recording the acquisition of the 
vill of Ribbec’ refers to Ribchester or not ; 
Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 13 ii, 185. If it does, it shows that 
Robert de Lacy purchased it from William 
son of Rosselin or else confirmed it to 
him. 

TIbid. ii, 185, quoting an abstract 
found at Pontefract in 1325; Duchy of 
Lanc. Misc. cxxx, fol. 20d. The moiety 
was to be held in thegnage by a rent of 
7s. The advowson of the church and 
‘the forest of buck and doe, wild boar 

and sow’ were reserved. One Robert 
son of Henry was lord of Lathom about 
that time. 

In 1202 Alan de Windle and Agnes 
his wife made grants of portions of Rib- 
chester; Final Conc. i, 13, 21. The 
plaintiffs in these fines—Henry son of 
Bernard and John son of Robert—claimed 
by inheritance. Agnes may have been 


the daughter of the Robert son of Henry 
named in the text. 

8 Kuerden fol. MS. (Chet. Lib.), 77. 
John de Lacy became constable of 
Chester in 1211 and Earl of Lincoln in 
12323 he died in 1240. It is not clear 
whether this is the other moiety of Rib- 
chester or a new and more complete 
grant of the same moiety. 

9 Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 17. The sur- 
name is spelt in many ways—Mutun, 
Motoun, &c. ; sometimes a de is pre- 
fixed. It may be derived from Mitton, 
though this spelling rarely occurs. 

10 Ibid. fol. 23. There was among the 
Stonyhurst deeds a grant by John de 
Lacy to Walter Mutton of the manor of 
Ribchester and Dilworth for the same 
service as Alan de Windhull and his 
predecessors had rendered—viz. a pair of 
gloves or 4d.; Shireburne Abstract Bk. 
at Leagram. In accordance with these 
charters it was found in 1258 that Rib- 
chester rendered 2s. and one pair of gloves 
(or 4d.) to Edmund de Lacy ; Lancs. Ing. 
and Extents (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), 
i, 217. 

Walter Moton in 1219 acquired an 
oxgang of land in Ribchester from Sieg- 
rith, Wynniva and Maud, daughters of 
Godwin ; Final Conc. i, 40. 

He gave the monks Hulliley (or 
Hilliley), from the Stonyway on the east 
to Godrichley Croft on the west, and from 
a syke on the south to an oak cross- 


45 


William Moton in respect of her dower.# 
also was a benefactor of Stanlaw,!* and gave land to 


This son 


marked on the north, also 3 acres of 
wood. He desired their prayers espe- 
cially for the soul of that venerable man 
his lord Roger de Lacy; Whalley Couch. 
(Chet. Soc.), iii, 868. He also gave 
them the mill with its rights, reserving 
multure of his own house, desiring that 
he might be buried at Stanlaw ; ibid. 869. 
Amabel daughter of Alan de Windle and 
widow of Walter Moton confirmed the 
gifts, and her second husband released 
any right he might have in the same ; 
ibid. 870-2. 

To Roger de Hurst he gave part of 
his land in Ribchester in Turnley, the 
bounds commencing at a stone house, 
and including (in part) Chester Brook ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 493 (fol. 330). 

2 His gift of land in Godrichley in 
Ribchester to the hospital of St. Saviour 
at Stidd is mentioned in a charter in 
Towneley’s MS. DD, no. 889. He also 
gave land in Shipenley, adjoining Turnley 
at one point, confirmed by his son 
William ; Dugdale, Mon. Angl. vi, 687. 

13 Assize R. 404, m. 3d. She and 
her husband also claimed certain land 
and a moiety of the mill against the 
Abbot of Stanlaw; ibid. m. 2d. This 
suit affords an approximate date for their 
charters already quoted. 

'4 Whalley Couch. iii, 872-4. William 
son of Walter Moton confirmed his 
father’s gifts and added land between 
Lauediley Clough and Godrich Clough, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Sawley !5; others of his charters arc known." 
was described as lord of the whole vill.!” 
about 1278,'* and in 1282 and again in 1292 his 
widow Edusa or Edith appears in the records.'” 
Robert Moton, 


seems to have left several sons.?’ 


Ls Harl. MS. 112, fol. 815. 

16 To Henry son of Helewise he gave 
land, the bounds of which went north up 
the clough of Godrichley to Hulliley, 
thence east to Stonygate, south to the 
land of Robert the Kirkman, and then 
west to the starting-point. A rent of 
12d, was to be paid; Kuerden MSS. iii, 
R.g. The seal bore a fleur de lis and 
the legend siGitt : WILL : DE : MVTVN. 

B; another charter he gave Robert the 
Skinner part of his waste within bounds 
which went down Crinsil Brook to its 
junction with Chastel or Castel Brook, 
and up the latter brook to Ruddegate, 
&c.; ibid. Josce the clerk was a witness, 
and the seal was the same as before. 

William de Singleton and Alan his son 
granted a rent of 3s. from Dilworth to 
William son of Walter Moton and Edith 
his wife ; Dods. MSS. lIxx, fol. 157. 

To Josce the clerk William son of 
Walter Moton gave half an oxgang of 
land in Ribchester at a rent of 12.4; 
Add. MS, 32106, no. 2-1. To Richard 
son of Robert Boys (de Bosco) he gave 
land in Nutbrook strinds, at a rent of 
four barbed arrows; ibid. no. 314. In 
128-y he gave Sir Adam de Hoghton 
the homage of Robert for Ametehalit in 
Ribchester, with the rent of 2s. due 
therefrom ; Dods. MSS. cxlii, fol. 20. 

'" He was so described in a gift by 
Beatrix de Kuerden, referring to his 
charter made to her father Richard son 
of John de Kuerden ; Add. MS. 32109, 
no. 14 (Edw. III), no. 54 (s.d.). 

18 He was living in 1278, when toge- 
ther with Roger de Chippenley and 
Richard son of Hugh de Ribchester he 
was found to have disseised Adam de 
‘Mutton’ of his free tenement in Rib- 
chester. Adam had been over sea and was 
reported dead ; Assize R. 1238, m. 33. 

19In 1282 Edusa as widow claimed 
dower in various tenements in Ribchester 
held by Richard son of William son of 
William Moton and Denise his mother, 
Richard son of Adam and Richard his 
son, Richard son of Ellis and Henry his 
son and Richard son of Ellis; De Banco 
R. 47, m. 4d. A Richard son of William 
Moton gave an acre in Ribchester to 
Richard de Hurst ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 
867. 

In 1292 Edusa, then wife of Richard 
le Sothron, claimed in right of her former 
marriage with William Moton dower in 
a messuage and land held by Alice de 
Lacy ; Assize R. 408, m. 62. 

*" The pedigree at this point is inde- 
terminate, but from the charters preserved 
by Towneley and Kuerden it is obvious 
that there were several branches of the 
family having estates in Ribchester and 
Dutton. William Moton, William his 
son and Robert Moton attested an un- 
dated charter ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 265. 
In 1332 Robert, Richard and Henry 
Moton contributed to the subsidy in Rib- 
chester and William Moton in Dutton ; 
Exch, Lay Subs, (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and 
Ches,), 36—>, 

"The uncertainty arises from the 
Possibility of two Williams. In 1302 
Robert Moton, lord of Ribchester, de- 
mised to Walter de Lofthouse, chazlain, 


He 


a part of his waste in Ribchester between 
the close of land called Beteleyfield, be- 
longing to St. Saviour’s, and the Nut- 
brook; Towneley MS. DD, no. 985. 
Henry and Adam Moton attested this 
charter; from another deed it appears 
they were Robert’s brothers; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 273. 

Robert son of William Moton released 
to Master Richard de Hoghton in 1298 
his right in lands held in Ametehalgh in 
Ribchester; ibid. no. 233. In 1309 
Robert son of William Moton gave his 
brother Adam land called the Berridding 
Bank, bounded on one side by the high 
way to Ribchester Church ; ibid. no. 272. 
From the plea of 1282 above cited it 
would seem that a Richard Moton was 
the heir ; perhaps he died and Robert, a 
younger brother or else an uncle, suc- 
ceeled. There was an escheat to the 
chief lord, or a guardianship, for in 1292 
Robert Moton claimed two-thirds of a 
messuage and lands in Ribchester and 
5 markates of rent against Alice widow 
of Edmund de Lacy, and the other third 
against Edith widow of William Moton ; 
Assize R. 408, m. 73, 4d. In 1293 
— de Lacy released to Robert Moton a 
capital messuage and a moiety of the 
rents, services, &c., which had come into 
his hands by the death of William Moton 
father of Robert ; Shireburne Abstract Bk. 
Robert Moton was lord of Ribchester in 
1302; Towneley MS. DD, no. 985. 

Uncertainty is created by the appear- 
ance of Robert and William sons of Adam 


Moton in other suits of 1292 (Assize © 


R. 408, m. 36d., 36), and by the claim 
of Thomas son of Orm de Ribchester 
against Richard son of William Moton, 
Cecily daughter of Robert Moton and the 
above-named Edusa wife of Richard le 
Sothron, the last-named holding in dower; 
ibid. m. 31. 

Robert son of Adam Moton and Richard 
his brother frequently occur in the Rib- 
chester deeds in Add. MS. 32106. Adam 
son of Roger son of William de Ribchester 
gave lands to Robert son of Adam Moton 
in free marriage with Alice his sister ; 
ibid. no. 239. 

2 Robert was probably living at that 
time, for in 1309 Robert son of William 
Moton agreed with his brother Adam re- 
specting certain land which Robert was to 
grant from his waste; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 496, fol. 330. Henry Moton was a 
witness. In 1313 Beatrix de Kuerden 
successfully claimed certain pasture in 
Ribchester against the representatives of 
Huzh de Dilworth, whose son Richard 
had had a grant of it from Robert son of 
William Moton, lord of Ribchester ; 
Assize R. 424, m. 3. Richard was then 
dead, and Robert also, Henry Moton 
appearing for the defendants. 

William son of Robert Moton (Mittun) 
and Alice his wife in 1305 claimed 
a tenement against Avice daughter of 
Richard son of William de Ribchester ; 
De Banco R. 153, m. 29. At the same 
time Robert Moton was defendant ; ibid. 
m. 317d. 

In 1317 William son of Robert Moton, 
with the consent of Alice his wife, de- 
mised six butts of land to Henry Moton 


46 


He a son or grandson, succeeded to Ribchester,?! but 
He died — in 1305 Rubert’s son William occurs.*? The exact 
succession at this point is obscure. Henry son of 


Wiiliam Moton in 1317 gave a release to the Abbot of 
Whalley.** William Moton, son of Robert, and Isabel 


for the term of Alice’s life; Add. MS, 
32106, no. 308. Alice widow of William 
was in 1331 the wife of William Bisset, 
as appears by a pleading cited below. 

William son of Rovert Moton of Rib- 
chester confirmed to Robert his brother a 
place in his waste lying on the west side 
of Fallonwelhalgh ; ibid. no. 452, fol, 
322. 

Alice widow of Robert (? William) 
Moton had dower in 13303; Shireburne 


Abstract Bk. 


23 Whalley Couch. iii, 874. Robert son 
of John de Hilliley granted to Henry son 
of William Moton all his lands in Rib- 
chester, with the homages of various 
tenants ; Towneley MS. C8, 13 (Chet. 
Lib.), H 285. About 1300 Henry Moton 
had from Adam de Blackburn the homage 
of Richard de Hurst and the rent of 
10d, for his lands ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 
244. Henry also obtained a small grant 
from Simon son of Richard son of 
Ellis de Ribchester; Kuerden MSS, iv, 
Reap: 

From the release to Whalley and from 
the fact that Henry’s name is almost 
invariably placed before those of others of 
the family in local deeds of the latter part 
of the reign of Edward II, it appears that 
he was the head of the family or at least 
its senior member. William son of Henry 
Moton and Agnes his wife were in 1334 
accused of having, so far back as 
1320, struck a woman at Dutton so 
that ehe died ; Coram Rege R. 298, Rex 
m. 18. 

Henry had several sons, As ‘Henry 
de Moton of Ribchester the elder’ he 
granted his son Walter land in the Hagh, 
with meadow, buildings, &c., in 13283 
Kuerden MSS. iii, R 9. Walter son of 
Henry Moton in 1359 made a feoffment 
of lands he had had from his brother 
Henry ; Towneley MS. C8, 13 (Chet. 
Lib.), M77. Henry son of Henry Moton 
leased some of his land to William son of 
Henry Moton in 1329 ; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 291. In the same year a grant was 
made to Henry son of Henry Moton and 
Nicholas his brother ; ibid. no. 482, fol. 
328. Henry Moton in 1337 gave half 
an acre in Erley in Ribchester, William 
Moton, Robert his brother and Robert 
son of Adam Moton being witnesses; 
ibid. no. 264. In 1346 Henry Moton 
released a rent he had received from 
Erley, Robert son of Robert Moton and 
Robert son of Adam Moton being the 
first witnesses; ibid. no. 470, fol. 325. 
Nicholas Moton occurs again in Dutton ; 
ibid. no, 288. He was living in 1360, 
when he and his wife Cecily obtained a 
quitclaim from Richard son of Adam le 
Seinture of Aighton respecting lands of 
Richard’s mother Diota, formerly belong- 
ing to Richard Willison de Ribchester ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 8, m. 1203 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 254. The same 
lands were in 1369 released by Cecily 
widow of Nicholas Moton and Alice her 
sister ; ibid. no. 302, 

In 1329 various acres in Ribchester 
were claimed against Henry Moton the 
younger, William Moton, Richard Moton 
and Nicholas son of Henry Moton; De 
Banco R, 279, m. 405 4. 


BLACKBURN 


William died in or before 
1342, in which year his widow Isabel was suing Robert 
Moton his brother for two-thirds of the manor of Rib- 
chester.2® In 1337 Robert Moton, perhaps the same 
or else son of William, was stated to hold the manor 
of Isabella Queen of England by the service of 55. 
yearly.2° Robert was again in 1346 called chief lord 
of Ribchester.27 Katherine, the heiress in 1361, was 
apparently his daughter, or perhaps a granddaughter.”8 


his wife occur in 1331.4 


34 William as lord of Ribchester at- 
tested a charter in 13293 Add. MS. 
32107, no. 14.97. 

The manor of Ribchester was given to 
William Moton and Isabel his wife in 
1331 by Robert Ragh, chaplain ; Robert 
son of Adam Moton was a witness ; 
Towneley MS. OO, no. 1195. In the 
same year Adam de Clitheroe appeared 
against William Moton concerning the 
manor of Ribchester and against William 
Bisset and Alice his wife concerning 16 
acres of land in the township ; De Banco 
R. 287, m. 380d.; 290, m. 77d. The 
latter suit was prosecuted in the following 
year, when William Moton appeared and 
stated that the 16 acres were part of his 
inheritance, held by Alice in dower, while 
the plaintiff alleged that they had be- 
longed to his father Hugh de Clitheroe 
until Robert Moton had disseised him ; 
ibid. 292, m. 98 d. 

William Moton was styled ‘lord of 
Ribchester’ in 1338 and 1341, according 
to the Towneley transcripts ; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 245, 301, 463, fol. 324. 
William and Robert his brother attested 
Ribchester charters in 1338 and 1342; 
ibid. no. 230, 300. 

% De Banco R. 332, m.30. The de- 
fendant is called Robert Moton of Rib- 
chester. Isabel ‘continued her suit in 
1344 against Robert for two-thirds of the 
manor (except a messuage and 1o4 acres), 
and against some others; ibid. 340, 
m. 557d. Two years later Robert Moton 
summoned Robert son of William Moton 
to warrant him as to the two-thirds of 
the manor; ibid. 348, m. 427. In 
1347 Isabel widow of William Moton 
came to an agreement with Robert son 
of Robert Moton ; Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

6 In an inquiry as to the proposed en- 
dowment of Bailey Chapel; Ing. p.m. 
10 Edw. II (2nd nos.), no. 10. 

Robert son of Adam Moton is fre- 
quently named. He is probably the 
Robert Moton who, with his sons Adam 
and William, was in 1334 alleged to hold 
§ acres wrongfully, by Amery widow of 
Roger at Kirkstyle; De Banco R. 300, 
m. 13. 

7 Add. MS. 32106, no. 249. By a 
charter of the same year Robert son of 
Henry son of Walter Moton, chief lord of 
Ribchester, reduced the free rent due from 
certain tenements from 2s. to 20d.; ibid. 
no. 242. A William Moton attested this 
deed. The descent here stated is not 
otherwise known, but it is clear there were 
many Roberts as contemporaries. The 
date may have been copied wrongly. 

In 1349 Robert son of Robert Moton 
was lord of Ribchester ; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 450 (fol. 322). This deed was a 
grant by Robert son of Adam Moton to 
his sons William and Thomas ; a witness 
was Robert son and heir of Robert son of 
Adam Moton. In the same year Robert 
son of Robert Moton granted a messuage 
and land called Falwelshalgh, Walter 
Moton being a witness; ibid. no. 293. 
On the other hand in 1355 Robert son 


Sir 


of William Moton granted his manor of 
Ribchester to William de Whalley (no 
doubt as trustee), with all homages, 
services and rents; Kuerden fol. MS. 
250. 

Not long before (in 1353) Richard 
Moton of Ribchester had settled his lands 
on his daughter Agnes and her issue, with 
remainder to William son of Robert 
Moton, chaplain ; ibid. no. 299. William 
Moton was a subdeacon in 13503; ibid. 
no, 253. In 1361 his brother Robert, 
here styled Robert son of Robert de Rib- 
chester, released all his claim in the estate 
of the above-named Richard Moton ; ibid. 
no, 262. William was still living in 1408 
(ibid. no. 256), and seems to have been 
one of the chief promoters of the chantry 
at the north side of the church, even if he 
were not the true founder, and he was 
specially named as one of those to be 
prayed for ; ibid. no. 364. 

28 Katherine widow of Robert Moton 
in 1361 released her claim for dower 
against Katherine daughter of Robert 
Moton ; Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

29 Final Conc. ii, 185 ; the manor was 
settled on William de Lynalx and Kathe- 
tine his wife, with remainders to the issue 
of Katherine, and in default to Richard 
son of Alexander de Lynalx and his issue. 
William de Lynalx occurs at Ribchester in 
13693 Towneley MS. DD, no. 512. In 

«1386 he was to go to Ireland on the 
king’s service, but the protection was re- 
voked as he did not go; Cal. Pat. 1385-9, 
Pp: 156, 274. 

A release of lands which had belonged 
to Robert Moton was made to William de 
Lynalx and Katherine his wife in 1395-6; 
Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

The Lynalx family occurs in Pember- 
ton. The name is spelt in many ways ; 
e.g. Linales, Lennox, &c. 

80 Kuerden fol. MS. 247. As widow 
she had made a feoffment of her lands in 

1402 ; Shireburne Abstract Bk. She gave 
all her lands to John her son in 1405 ; 
ibid. 

81 John son of William Lynalx made 
Thomas Lynalx his attorney to receive 
from his mother Katherine certain lands 
in Ribchester ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13, 
L259. It appears that Thomas was also 
a son of William Lynalx, receiving from 
his father land in Mayridding, &c., in Rib- 
chester; Towneley MS. DD, no. 516. 
Richard son of John Bradley of Dodhill 
was in 1408 pardoned for the death of 
Thomas Lynalx of Ribchester; Pal. of 
Lanc. Chan. Misc. 1/9, m. 33. 

The next in possession was Thurstan 
Lynalx, named in 1416 (Shireburne Ab- 
stract Bk.) and in 1418, when a certain 
William Hill, an idiot, was found to have 
held of him land called Sprodpoolhey by a 
rent of 22d.; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), 
i, 130; Dep. Keeper’s Rep. xxxiii, App. 14. 
In 1421 Thurstan granted a messuage 
in Ribchester to Christopher Hoghton ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 1552. 

John Lynalx occurs from 1430 on- 
wards, and Richard Lynalx from about 


47 


HUNDRED 


In or before 1373 she married William de Lynalx,”® 
and was living, a widow, in 1407, being then de- 
scribed as lady of Ribchester.*° 
Lynalx succeeded *! ; but though the family retained 
the lordship till 1581, when Robert Lynalx sold it to 
Hugh Shireburne, second son of Sir Richard Shire- 
burne of Stonyhurst,®? practically nothing is known 
of their history.*3 
Richard Shireburne,?4 and descended in the 


RIBCHESTER 


Their son John 


From Hugh the manor passed to 


1470, Thusin 1432 Thomas Southworth 
held land in Ribchester of John Lynalx ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 46. Again 
in 1449 John regranted Richard Towneley 
a parcel of land in Ribchester ; Add. MS. 
32104, no. 1117. He was styled lord of 
Ribchester in 1456 3; Shireburne Abstract 
Bk. 

Richard Lynalx in 14.69 gave a lease to 
Ellis and Edward Cottam, Cecily widow 
of Thurstan Lynalx being apparently still 
living ; ibid. Richard attested a deed in 
1472 ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 485, fol. 328. 
In 1491-2 he and Thomas his son and 
heir-apparent were also witnesses; Add. 
MS. 32107, no. 1006. Richard, who in 
1512~13 married Elizabeth widow of John 
Elston of Ribbleton (Shireburne Ab- 
stracts), occurs in inquisitions, &c., down 
to about1522. In 1516 he made a feoff- 
ment of his messuages and lands in 
Ribchester and Dilworth; Kuerden fol. 
MS. 246. 

From various inquisitions (Robert Sin- 
gleton and others) it appears that Thomas 
Lynalx was lord in 1525, John Lynalx his 
son (Shireburne Abstracts) in 1530-40 and 
Robert Lynalx in 154.7 onwards. Isabel 
widow of Thomas Lynalx had dower in 
15365 Shireburne Abstract Bk. Robert 
Lynalx in 1548 was one of the defendants 
in a plea respecting chantry lands in Rib- 
chester ; Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), i, 
225. In 1575 Robert is called son and 
heir of John Lynalx when claiming Hall 
heys, &c., in the manor of Ribchester 
against John Talbot and Robert his bastard 
son ; ibid. ii, 328 ; iii, 23, 29. 

3? Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 43, 
m.155. The Lynalx family do not appear 
to have retained the whole manor, for in 
1588 Hugh Shireburne purchased the 
manor, with messuages, free fishery, &c., 
from John Talbot and his bastard son 
Robert, whose wife Elizabeth also agreed ; 
ibid. bdle. 50, m. 87. Two years later 
still Hugh purchased the manor, with 
messuages in Ribchester and Dilworth, 
fishery in the Ribble, and the advowson of 
the church, from John Squire ; ibid. 
bdle. 52, m. 31. It does not appear how 
these manors originated ; the latter vendor 
may have had some claim through the 
Lynalx family by purchase or descent. 
The Talbot ‘manor’ is named in Ducatus 
Lanc. (Rec. Com.), i, 304 3 iii, 228. 

88 Neither pedigree nor inquisition is 
known. They were styled ‘gent.’ not 
‘esq.’ Their arms are given in Whitaker, 
Whalley (ed. Nicholls), ii, 459 n. 

84 Hugh Shireburne of Esholt in York- 
shire left no sons, and in his purchase of 
Ribchester may have been acting for his 
father; Sherborn, Family of Sherborn, 
102-3. 

Sir Richard Shireburne died in 1594 
holding the manor, with messuages, water- 
mill, &c., in conjunction with Hugh Shire- 
burne ; the tenure was unknown ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvi, no. 3. The Shire- 
burnes seem to have had a tenement in 
Ribchester much earlier than this; see 
ibid. viii, no. 27. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


same way as Stonyhurst > until 1831, when it was 
sold to Joseph Fenton of Rochdale, and it has since 


descended with Dutton.** 


A manor of Ribchester is named among the 


Osbaldeston estates in 1625.37 


A number of the neighbouring landowners had 


85 In 1593 the manor was settled on 
Richard Shireburne (son of Sir Richard) 
and his heirs male, and as his son Henry 
died without issue it went to his second 
son Richard, aged thirty-seven, in 1628 5 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvi, no. 4. 
The tenure was unknown. The manor 
is again named among the estates of 
Thomas Duke of Norfolk and Mary his 
wife in 17193 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 284, m. 81. Also in later re- 
coveries—1737 and 1777 (Weld). 

36 Baines, Lancs, (ed. 1836), ili, 382. 
Courts used then to be held twice a year, 
in May and October. The court rolls 
are extant from 1$21 only. 

% Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 107, 
m. 36, Sir Edward Osbaldeston, John 
his son and heir, and others were de- 
forciants. No ‘manor,’ however, was 
claimed at the death of Sir Edward or 
of his son John, but only a messuage 
called the Boathousefield in Ribches:er, 
the tenure of which is not stated ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvii, no. 15, 40. 

88 This family's holding was of ancient 
date, and some of their charters have been 
cited in the account of the Moton family. 

Sir Henry Hoghton in 1424 held lands 
in Ribchester of the king as duke ; Lancs. 
Inz. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ti, 45. William 
Hoghton held lands in 1500 of the king 

services unknown ; ibid. ii, 127. This, 
Gr ‘in socage by fealty,’ was the usual 
record in the later inquisitions. 

89 Robert Singleton of Brockholes died 
in 1525 holding a messuage, &c, in 
Ribchester of Thomas Lynalx by a rent 
of 154. ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. vi, 
no. 64. His son William held it in 1573 
of Robert Lynalx by a rent of 16d. ; ibid. 
ail, ie: $4. 

John Singleton of Chingle Hall held a 
mes:uage of John Lynalx in 15303; ibid. 
vi, no. 32. John Singleton held the 
same of Robert Lynalx in 1571 ; ibid. 
xiii, no. 16, 

40 Thomas Southworth of Samlesbury 
in 1432 held a messuage of John Lynalx ; 
Lanes. In. p.m. (Chet. Soc.) ii, 46. 
In 1502 it was found that the tenement 
was held of Richard Lynalx by a rent of 
1d.; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, 
no. 41. 

41 The Talbots may have succeeded the 
Clitherce family. Henry de Clitheroe 
claimed land in 1292 as brother and heir 
of Alice who had been wife of Adam de 
Blackburn ; Assize R. 408, m. 18, 31d. 

Disputes afterwards arose between the 
Biackburn and Clitheroe families ; Assize 
R. 1299, m. 16d. ; De Banco R. 152, m. 
89. See also Final Conc. ii, 643 Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 42. 

Sir John Talbot of Salesbury held land 
in Ribchester of Richard Lynalx in 1511 ; 
ibid. r44. John Talbot in 1588 held 
lands of the Crown, formerly the Hos- 
pitallers; ibid. 161. John Talbot had 
made several purchases; Pal. of Lane 
Feet of F, bdles. 37, m. 64 3 39, m. 72 ; 40, 
m. 106. 

42 The Ribchester family or families 
have occurred in former notes. One of 
the earliest named is Ellis, a clerk ; Final 
Conc. i, 51. Richard de Turnley granted 


estates in Ribchester, including Hoghton,® Single- 
ton,*? Southworth,!? and Talbot.!! 
families some used the local surname,‘ but the most 
noteworthy was that of Boys, which can be traced 


Of the minor 


back to the 13th century.43 John Boys died in 


part of his land in Turnley to William 
son of Adam son of Ellis de Ribchester ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 546. Richard son 
of Ellis complained in 1292 that Master 
Henry de Clayton was detaining a charter 5 
Assize R. 408, m. 94. He claimed 
reasonable estovers in the wood against 
Thomas de Singleton ; ibid. m.54d. He 
was perhaps the Richard de Ribchester, 
clerk, who was non-suited in his claim 
for a tenement against Richard son of 
Adam de Ribchester and Adam de Lingard ; 
ibid. m. 42. 

Robert son of Ellis was concerned in 
several suits of the same year. He com- 
plained that Richard son of William de 
Ribchester, Isabel his wife and William 
his son had disseised him of a strip of 
land, but was non-suited ; ibid. m. 49 d. 
In 1313-14 Robert son of William son 
of Robert son of Ellis de Ribchester 
sought four messuages, 26 acres of land, 
&c., against his elder brother Henry (a 
minor), William de Livesey and William 
son of Robert de Osbaldeston, alleging a 
grant from his father, and succeeded ; 
Assize R. 424, m.2 d. 

Roger son of William de Ribchester 
gave land in Turnley to his son Richard ; 
Kuerden MSS. iii, R. 9. Richard son of 
Roger Willison in 1331 claimed land (by 
grant of one Simon) against John son of 
Richard Franceys and Amery his wife 
(tenants in right of Amery, who was 
sister and heir of Simon), and against 
Adam son of Richard Franceys ; Assize 
R. 1404, m. 26. 

Simon son of Richard son of Ellis de 
Ribchester made a grant to Henry Moton 5 
Add. MS. 32107, no. 368. Diana widow 
of Adam son of Simon released her dower 
in certain land to William son of Richard 
de Ribchester, who had purchased the 
land from her daughters Margery and 
Maud ; Kuerden fol. MS. 357. The seal 
bore the inscription s’ 10RDA .. CLERICI. 
Joha son of Richard son of Simon occurs 
in 1340, when he gave lands to Roger de 
Elston and Amabel his wife for life ; 
Kuerden MSS. iii, R.g. Roger son of 
Roger de Elston was plaintiff in 1346, 
Robert son of Robert Moton being de- 
fendant ; Assize R. 1444,m.7. The Elston 
family occur later ; Kuerden, loc. cit. 

Uctred son of Warine de Ribchester 
gave land in Shippenley to Adam son of 
Ellis de Ri>chester ; ibid. Richard son 
of Adam de Hurst in 1313 gavea moiety 
of his land between Bolingbrook and 
Shippenley Clough to William son of 
Uctred de Ribchester ; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 869. The grantee afterwards (1314) 
gave his capital messuage (lying in Rib- 
chester between John de Preston's land 
and the Brendeyerd) to Henry son of 
Beatrice de Kuerden; ibid. no. 456, 
fol. 323. Wiliam son of Uctred was 
living in 1342 ; ibid. no. 260. 

Thomas son of Orm in 1285 sought 
a messuage and an oxgang of land against 
Robert son of Ellis de Ribchester; De 
Banco R. 60, m. 83. d. The same Thomas 
gave to Roger de Turnley a toft near 
Shippenley Clough in 1316; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 428, fol. 318. 

Cecily daughter and heir of Richard 


48 


July 1551 holding three messuages and various lands 


son of William Atkokson in 1341 gave 
to Henry de Ribchester, chaplain, all her 
meadow in Exgangedoles in the Town 
meadows; ibid. no. 289. To the same 
Henry Roger son of William Atkokson 
made a grant in Turnley ; ibid. no. 265. 
Alice and Cecily, daughters of William 
son of Richard de Ribchester, in the same 
year granted to Adam son of Robert son 
of Adam Moton a plat called the Fall, 
lying between the outlane from Cornleyyeth 
to Tillycarr and Robert Franceys’ lands, 
and between the outlane to Hothersall 
and land of Robert son of William son of 
Nicholas ; ibid. no. 429, fol. 318. John 
son of William Atkokson occurs in 1342 ; 
ibid. no. 491 (fol. 329). 

Robert son of William Ribchester in 
1403 acquired the lands of Agnes wife of 
Dawkin de Claughton and sister of Henry 
Hodgson ; Kuerden fol. MS. 73. In 
1421 Katherine widow of Robert Rib- 
chester made a feoffment of the lands, 
&c., she had had from her husband ; ibid. 
357. Percival Ribchester and Robert his 
brother occur in 1443-4 3 ibid. 87. In 
1447 Percival gave land in the place called 
Shorton to Robert Halgh; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 269. It may be added that 
Robert Halgh gave his lands to John 
Talbot of Salesbury as trustee, and that 
the latter’s son John in 1474 released 
them to John Halgh son of Robert ; ibid. 
no. 278, 810, Robert son and heir of 
John Ribchester occurs in 1539 5 Kuerden 
tol. MS. 396. 

John Ribchester in 1542 gave his son 
Richard the reversion of a house tenanted 
by Robert Ribchester the elder, brother 
of grantor ; ibid. 357. Froman indenture 
of 1588 it appears that Robert Ribchester’s 
lands, after two transfers, were acquired 
by John Dewhurst ; ibid. 3843 Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 27, m. 67. 

Of the other minor families—some of 
whom, as Shippenley, Hilliley, Turnley 
and Franceys, have been named —only occa- 
sional notices are found. Alice daughter 
of Thomas son of Roger de Shippenley and 
her son Henry in 1306 claimed a mes- 
suage and land against Adam the son and 
heir of Thomas and Amabel the widow 
of Thomas ; Assize R. 420, m. §. Alice 
daughter of Avice de Shippenley obtained 
a judgement in 1358 against Henry de 
Kuerden and Eva his wife respecting a 
tenement in Ribchester ; Assize R. 438, 
m. 3. For the Kuerden estate see Finul 
Conc. ii, 156. John de Hilliley gave his 
son Robert the land of Stanlaw Abbey 
except what he had given with Agnes his 
daughter to Henry de Dutton; Kuerden 
MSS. iv, R. 14. Cecily widow of William 
de Hilliley was complainant in 13583 
Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 6,m.4d. She 
may have been the Cecily who in 
1352 was wife of John son of Robert de 
Turley ; ibid. 2, m. 1d. Richard le 
Franceys was called to warrant William 
son of Roger son of William de Ribchestet 
in 1303, when Agnes widow of Richard 
de Turnlache sought dower in certain 
land ; De Banco R. 145, m. 171d. 

43 An early grant to Richard son of 
Robert de Boys (Bosco) has been cited 
above. A William son of Robert de 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


in Ribchester of Robert Lynalx in socage by a rent of 
His daughter Grace, then aged twelve, was 
first married to Robert Talbot, but separating from 
him was married to John Dewhurst of Wilpshire,‘5 
and carried the Boys’ estate to this family.* 

Roger Shireburne of Buckley died in 1605 hold- 
ing various lands of the king by knight’s service, and 
leaving as heir a son Richard, then aged six.!7 
Buckley Hall, which stood about a mile to the 
north-west of the town, was pulled down in 1895. 
It was a picturesque gabled stone house with 


2s. 3.44 


Boys had land in Dutton about 1250; 
Add. MS, 32106, no. 133. John son of 
Alexander de Boys in 1292 claimed a debt 
from his brother Jordan ; Assize R. 408, 
m. 98. In 1390-1 Cecily widow of 
William de Healey and Cecily his 
daughter and heir settled certain lands 
in Ribchester with remainders to Nicholas 
de Boys, Alice his wife, John son of 
Robert de Turnley and Alice sister of 
John; Townley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. 
Lib.), R 7o. Henry son of Nicholas 
Boys was living in 1435; ibid. T 128. 
John Boys was witness in 1403 ; Kuerden 
fol. MS. 73. Robert brother and executor 
of John Boys was plaintiff in 1445 ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R. 8,m.2. Ellis Boys of Rib- 
chester found security for £20 in 14573 
Pal. of Lanc. Chan. Misc. 1/1, no. 50. 

Lawrence Cottam of Garstang in 1488 
released to John son of the late Henry 
Boys his right in the lands, &c., recently 
owned by Roger Elston in Ribchester ; 
Kuerden fol. MS. 87. In 1520 John 
Talbot of Salesbury granted Henry Boys a 
messuage on lease (ibid. 397); and in 
1524 Sir Thomas Southworth exchanged 
lands in Ribchester for Henry’s lands in 
Mellor and Samlesbury ; ibid. 386. Henry 
Boys made a feoffment 'of his lands, &c., 
in Ribchester (except Moton House) in 
1543; Add. MS. 32104, no. 698. 

# Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xi, no. 64. 
He had also a tenement in Oswaldtwistle. 
From later pleadings it appears that John 
was the son and heir of Henry Boys. 

4 The divorce was granted in or about 
1562, because the marriage had taken 
place in childhood without the consent of 
Grace ; Furnivall, Child Marriages (Early 
Engl. Text Soc.), 16. Robert Talbot and 
others in 1563 became bound to William 
Dewhurst of Wilpshire and John his son 
to abide the award of an arbitration con- 
cerning Boys House and other lands, &c., 
in Ribchester ; Add. MS. 32104, no.714. 
John Dewhurst and Grace his wife de- 
mised a plat of land called Cockcroft to 
Richard Watson in 1565; Kuerden fol. 
MS. 95. They were still living in 1590, 
when they made a feoffment of the 
capital messuage called Boys House, &c. ; 
ibid. Again, in 1599, they made a settle- 
ment by fine ; ibid. 94. 

There is a pedigree in the 1613 Visit, 
(Chet. Soc.), 96 ; see also the account of 
Wilpshire, and T. C. Smith, Rébchester, 
235-7- 

46 There were a number of suits before 
the succession was settled. In 1565 
Robert Talbot complained that, whereas 
Boys House should be in his possession 
in right of his wife Grace, the Dewhursts 
had entered, and were cutting down 
hedges, destroying ‘the great timber 
woods and underwoods,’ &c. The de- 

fendants alleged the divorce and new mar- 
ciage of Grace to John Dewhurst ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Plead. Eliz. Ixv, T 5. 

In 1576 William Boys of Great Fa’ing 


7 


inquisitions.>! 


in Middlesex, son of Edward and grand- 
son of Henry Boys, sought to recover 
Boys House, the ferry over the Ribble 
known as ‘the ferry of Osboston,’ &c., 
alleging that Grace, the child of his uncle 
John Boys, was illegitimate. The de- 
fendants stated that John Boys was 
divorced from his first wife Anne Dew- 
hurst before he was married to Alice 
Rodes, and that it had been decided in 
court in 1557 that Grace should enjoy the 
Boys estate; Duchy of Lanc. Plead. 
Eliz. xcix, B18; cvi, B15 ; ccx, D7. 

William Dewhurst, son of John and 
Grace, died at Ribchester in 1621 hold- 
ing Boys House, &c., of Richard Shire- 
burne ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, 
and Ches.), ii, 284. The surname long 
remained known in the township. 

47 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 58-61. The holding was a 
composite one. Two messuages with 
land called the Hagges were held of the 
king as of his duchy of Lancaster by the 
zooth part of a knight’; fee, a half 
rood of land was held by the 300th 
part of a fee, 2 acres called Sprodspool 
by the 200th part, and the rest by the 
twentieth part of a fee. A settlement is 
recited, made by Richard Shireburne, the 
father of Roger, in 1589-90, relating to 
the capital messuage called Buckley, and 
giving the names of fields, lanes, &c.—as 
Turnley, Chester gate and Kendal heys. 

In the pedigree by Mr. C. D. Sherborn 
(Fam. of Sherborn, 104-8) it is stated that 
Richard the father was a son of Roger 
Shireburne of Wolfhouse in Chipping, 
and that Richard the son (who built New 
Buckley in 1662) died in 1674 without 
issue. It appears, however, that Richard 
the father was a brother of Roger of 
Wolfhouse (ibid. 57-9), for in 1554 a 
settlement of an estate in Ribchester 
which seems to be certainly that of Buck- 
ley was made by Robert Shireburne and 
Margery his wife in favour of their son 
Richard. In default of issue the lands 
were to go to Richard son of Sir Richard 
Shireburne of Stonyhurst ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 15, m. 65. 

Buckley is named in a 13th-century 
grant by William Moton to Thomas son 
of Ralph de Ribchester ; Towneley MS. 
OO, no. 1210. 

In the 18th century Buckley Hall was 
tenanted by a family named Pye ; Smith, 
op. cit. 253-6. 

48 Smith, Hist. of Ribchester, 240. 

49 Roger de Walmersley in 1360 had 
lands in right of his wife Alice, who seems 
to have been an Ellel ; Dep. Keeper’s Rep. 
xxxii, App. 343. Robert de Walmerlegh 
alias Walmesleye of Ribchester received a 
pardon in 1400-1; Pal. of Lanc. Chan. 
Misc. 1/9, m. 146. 

In 1550 or later Alexander Walmsley 
of Elston, Margaret his wife and Robert 
and Thomas their sons acquired various 
lands, which seem to have passed to the 


49 


RIBCHESTER 


mullioned windows, but for some time before its 
demolition had been spoiled externally by a thick 
coating of whitewash. 


On the front was inscribed : 


NEW BUCKLEY IS MY NAME, 
RIC SHERBVRNE BVILT THE SAME 
ANNO 1662, aGeD 62.8 


The Walmsleys of Dunkenhalgh # and Showley °° 
acquired estates, and other owners occur in the 
The late T. H. Rymer of Calder 
Abbey inherited in 1902 a considerable estate here. 


Dewhurst family; Add. MS. 32104, 
no. 1128, 693, &c.; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F. bdle. 19, m. 64 3 45, m. 169, 

Thomas Walmsley, father of Sir 
Thomas and Richard, purchased a mes- 
suage, &c., from Richard Singleton and 
Alice his wife in 1562; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 24, m. 10, He added 
other lands, more especially for his 
younger son; but in 1584, in the in- 
quisition after his death, the tenure of his 
estate in Ribchester is not recorded; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 72. 
The son, Sir Thomas Walmsley of 
Dunkenhalgh, at his death in 1612 held 
his moiety of lands here in socage ; Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 
249, 252. The tenants’ names are given. 

In 1653 Dame Anne Lucas of Dunken- 
halgh and Thomas son and heir of 
Nicholas Walmsley of London sought 
allowance of their title to a tenement in 
Ribchester leased to Thomas Dewhurst 
in 1597. Two-thirds had been seques- 
tered for the recusancy of Leonard 
Walmsley, deceased, husband of Eliza- 
beth Dewhurst (one of the lives); Cal. 
Com. for Comp. iv, 3126. 

50 Richard Walmsley of Showley 
(brother of Sir Thomas) had part of his 
father’s lands; his principal acquisition 
was that of the Preston family’s estate in 
15933 Pal. of Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 55, 
m. 92. He died in 1609 holding Fasten- 
fields of the king by knight’s service ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), i, 149. This 
had belonged to the Hospitallers. 

At one time the family resided at 
Ribchester, Richard Walmsley being 
described as ‘of Ribchester’ when he 
registered his estate as a ‘Papist’ in 
17173 Estcourt and Payne, Eng. Cath. 
Non-jurors, 100. Part of their estate was 
in 1867 given to the support of the alms- 
houses ; End. Char, Rep. 

51 In the earlier fines and pleadings 
names of owners occur, but these have 
usually to be recorded also in other town- 
ships; e.g. Dodhull and Hurst, 1335, 
and Hayhurst, 13553; Final Conc. ii, 96, 
147. Shaw of Elston held land in 1446 ; 
ibid. iii, 112. 

A small part of the land given to the 
Hoghton chantry in 1407 was held of 
Robert Townley by the rent of 25.; Ing. 
a.q.d. file 435, no. 26. Henry son of 
Robert Townley had lands in Cliviger, 
Ribchester and Dutton in 1420; Towne- 
ley MS. DD, no. 2020. Alice widow of 
John Anderton of Ribchester in 1453-4 
leased her lands to John Towneley of 
Birtwistle and afterwards sold them; 
Towneley MS. C8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 
A4g, 50. Richard Towneley had lands 
in the township in 1447 and 1473 ; ibic, 
B 297, 301, 304. Richard Townley of 
Dutton in 1618 held his lands in Rib- 
chester and Dilworth of Richard Shire- 
burne by 6d. rent ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. 
Soc, Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 137. 


7 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


In 1524 Robert Walmersley and Henry Boys con- 
tributed to the subsidy for their lands in Ribchester 
and Dilworth.*? In 1543 Robert Linalx, Henry 
Boyes and Robert Walmsley the elder so contri- 
buted.53 John Rodes and Richard Ward were free- 
holders in 1600.54 In the 1626 Subsidy Roll no 
landowners are named; John Osbaldeston was a 
convicted recusant, and a large number paid as non- 
communicants.°> John Ward paid {£10 on re- 
fusing knighthood in 1631.5° The Civil War does 
not seem to have affected any of the resident land- 
owners,” but in 1717 two or three had to register 
estates as ‘ Papists.’ °° 

A rental of the wapentake compiled in 1662 59 
shows that Richard Shireburne paid 2s. 4¢. for the 
manor of Ribchester and 1s. for a house there; 
another Richard Shireburne paid 11¢. for Buckley, 


Richard Ward 6¢. for Ward Green, Richard Darwen 
1s. for Swinglehur:t, William Dewhurst 7¢. for 
Boys House, Richard Dewhurst and Thomas Shaw 3.2. 
for Idesforth and Edward Walmsley 3¢. for Rodes 
Mill. There were other tenants. 

In 1354 Adam Bibby demised land in Ribchester 
to William de Bradley, ferryman, who was to hold it 
by paying 12¢. rent and ferrying men across the 
river. Ifthe men of the place should wish to build 
a wood or stone bridge, then the rector of Rib- 
chester or the lord of Osbaldeston might sell the lands 
and apply the money to the bridge.*° The date of 
the building of the bridge is uncertain ®! ; the ferry 
continued in use until 1903. The ferryman was 
the occupant of Boathouse Farm, about half a mile 
south-west of the church and opposite Osbaldeston 
Hall on the other side of the Ribble.*? 


Henry Preston of Preston died in 
1549 holding land in Ribchester of the 
king as of the late priory of St. John of 
Jerusalem by a rent of 6d.; Duchy of 
Lanc. Inq. p.m. ix, no. 19; x, no. 10. 
The estate, including a fishery in the 
Ribble, was sold in 1593 to Richard 
Walmsley as above. A Preston family 
is of early occurrence, for in 1292 Robert 
son of Adam de Preston held the moiety 
of a messuage and qo acres in Ribchester 
in right of his wife Margery ; they were 
claimed by Margery the infant daughter 
of Adam son of Bernard de Ribchester ; 
Assize R. 408, m. 15d. Adam son of 
Robert de Preston in 1313-14 claimed 
messuages and lands against John de 
Preston (apparently his son) and others ; 
Assize R. 424, m.2d. Robert Preston 
was in 1472-82 the feoffee of Alexander 
Halgh’s estate at Goddisbrook in Rib- 
chester ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 270, 1016. 

William son of Richard Blackburn was 
in 1552 reputed to be an idiot. He had 
sold his lands, and his father’s heirs, 
Roger Salebury and Ellen wife of Henry 
Seed, put in a claim as kinsmen and heirs ; 
they were aged twenty-six and forty 
respectively, and Ellen was William’s 
sister; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. ix, no. 
135; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 13, 
m. 121. Both Blackburn and Seed are 
names of long standing in the district. 
William Blackburn had land there in 
1443 ; Add. MS, 32106, no. 341. Robert 
Seed in 1564 held three messuages, &c. ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 26, m. 125. 
Robert Seed, senior and junior, were pur- 
chasers in 1589 and John Seed in 1590; 
ibid. bdles. 51, m. 2123 52, m. 4o. 
Roger Seed sold to William Charnley 
in 1577, and the purchaser and his wife 
Alice settled their lands in Ribchester and 
Dilworth in 15§79 ; ibid. bdles. 39,m. 55 ; 
41, m. 123. 

Hugh Ash’s lands in Ribchester were 
held of the Crown ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
p-m. x, mo. 35. See the accounts of 
Aighton and Dutton. George Ash, the 
son, appears to have sold his Ribchester 
lands to Richard Walmsley; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F, bdles. 43, m. 1433 44, 
Mm. 205; 

Hugh Swansey of Chorley in 1566 held 
a little land in Ribchester of Robert 
Lynalx ; Duchy of Lane. Inq. p.m. xi, no. 
29. John Swansey in 1548 had held 
lands, &c., in Ribchester and Mellor, but 
they seem to have been sold to John 
Southworth in 1559; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F, bdles. 13, m. 1903; 21, m. 96. 

William Burley died in 1558 holding 


a messuage of the queen by knight’s 
service and the rent of 2s. 8d.3; Robert 
his son and heir was four years old; 
Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. xi, no. 57. 
Robert died in 1617 holding as before 
and leaving as heir a son William, forty 
years of age ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), 
uy 77+ 

George Newsham of Newsham in 1585 
held a messuage, &c., in Ribchester of 
Hugh Shireburne, younger son of Sir 
Richard, by a rent of 6d¢.; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 88. Henry 
Newsham held of Richard Shireburne in 
1619 by the same rent; Thomas his son 
and heir was twenty-three years of age ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 123. 

Thomas Sowerbutts died in 1594 
holding a messuage in Ribchester, for- 
merly part of the chantry endowment ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvi, no. 20. 

The Halgh family has been named 
several times in former notes, It appears 
that Richard Crompton of Bury in 1545 
purchased four messuages and a water- 
mill in Ribchester and Hothersall from 
Nicholas and George Halgh; Pal. of 
Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 12, m. 199, 211. 
The purchaser made a settlement of his 
estate in 1556, the remainders being to 
George (son of John) Harper of Radcliffe, 
and to Richard (son of John) Crompton 
of Prestall ; ibid. bdle. 17, m. 134. The 
estate is very soon afterwards (1565) 
found in possession of Thomas Green- 
halgh, Jane his wife and Richard his son ; 
ibid. bdle. 27, m. 42. See T. C. Smith, 
Ribchester, 53. 

Michael Clarkson died in 1615 holding 
Whitecarr fall in Ribchester of Richard 
Shireburne; he bequeathed this to a 
younger son John. William the son and 
heir was only seven years old; Chan. 
Ing. p.m. dxx, 67. 

52 Subs. R. Lancs. bdle. 130, no. 82. 

58 Tbid. no. 125. 

54 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 235 3 Smith, op. cit. 244. 

John Rodes purchased a messuage from 
Henry Preston in 1588; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 50, m. 57. He died in 
1620 owning Halgh House in Ribchester 
and other lands there of Richard Shire- 
burne by 4s. rent ; also lands in Dutton, 
Clayton-le-Dale and Preston; Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 
216. John his son and heir, then thirty 
years of age, died in 1623, leaving two 
daughters as co-heirs, viz. Ellen and 
Margaret, aged four and three respec- 
tively ; ibid. iii, 360. The Jauden House 
was part of the estate. 


50 


Richard Ward was one of the pur- 
chasers from William Blackburn the 
idiot ; Ducatus Lane. ii, 177, 2193 iti, 
120, &c. For the family see Smith, 
op. cit. 256. 

5§ Subs. R. Lancs. bdle. 131, no. 317. 
John Osbaldeston, described as of Rib- 
chester, compounded for his recusancy in 
1630 by paying £2 10s. a year; Trans. 
Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xxiv, 174. 

56 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 218. 

‘7 The estates of the Dewhursts, 
Walmsleys and Talbots suffered. 

88 Estcourt and Payne, op. cit. 91, 92. 
They were Richard Trafford, brother of 
John Trafford of Croston, and John 
Higgison, miller. 

59 In the possession of W. Farrer 
(‘Honor of Clitheroe’). 

60 Towneley MS. OO, no. 1508 ; the 
*Maydya ford of Ribble’ is named. 
Adam the Ferryman is known from a 
much earlier deed ; he paid a rent of 8d, 
for his land to William son of Richard de 
Dutton, who released it to Adam de 
Blackburn ; Towneley MS. DD, no. 
141, 1196. 

The Bibby family is of frequent 
occurrence. Richard son of Bibby was 
in 1292 non-suited in a claim against 
Robert son of Ellis de Ribchester respect- 
ing certain lands; Assize R. 408, m. 
57d. William son of Richard son of 
Bibby attested a charter of about the 
same time; Add. MS. 32106, no. 


144. 

Adam Bibby, no doubt the benefactor, 
made claims for common of pasture in 
1356 against Sir Adam de Hoghton and 
others ; Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 5, m. 
tod. In the same year he granted to 
John de Osbaldeston and William Moton, 
chaplains, certain lands he had had from 
William his father and John his brother, 
lying in landoles in the field called Erley ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 456 (fol. 323). 
He had given a messuage to his brother 
Thomas in 1354; ibid. no. 208. 

The land for the ferry may be the 
Boathouse field named in the Osbaldeston 
inquisition already cited. 

61 In 1669 an old bridge was replaced 
by one destroyed in 1772 by a flood; 
the present one was built two years 
later ; Smith, op. cit. 263. 

62 Boathouse Farm was purchased from 
the Warren heirs (de Tabley) in 1854 by 
Jonathan Openshaw ; information of Mr. 
James Openshaw, who adds that there 
was formerly a ford a little above the 
ferry. 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


The Hospitallers ® and Whalley Abbey had lands 
in Ribchester.“! 

From the land tax return of 1788 it appears that 
Mr. Walmsley and esquire Hinks were the chief 
landowners.® 

An Inclosure Act for Chipping, Mitton and Rib- 
chester was passed in 1808,8° and under it the 
boundaries of the manors of Ribchester and Dutton 
were fixed,§7 

The parish church has been described. There is 
a Church of England Evangelical Protestant Mission- 
room in the town. 

The history of the Congregational cause at Know! 
Green goes back to preaching begun at Lum Mills 
in 1814, but afterwards discontinued,®® and the 
chapel, 1827-31, owes its rise to the zeal of an 
artisan. A new chapel was built in 1867.% 

Of the persistency of the Roman Catholic religion 
in the township and district there are numerous 
tokens. Various persons were presented to the Bishop 
of Chester in 1622 as ‘seducers and harbourers of 
seminary priests.’7° Again in 1635, when trade rivals 
sought to check one John Cutler, a Ribchester shop- 

keeper, they said he was ‘by his confession a con- 
victed recusant, an utter enemy of the blessed word 
of God both in argument and life,’ who ‘commonly, 
for the most part weekly, used to go to where priests 
of his profession [were] harboured to say mass,’ and 
they wished him to be summoned before the assize 
judges and required to take the oath of supremacy, to 
discover ‘whether there be in him any loyalty to his 
Majesty or not.’ 71 

James Standford, the benefactor, in 1695 left 
£500 


for the maintenance of a good priest for ever at Stidd or Bailey 
Hall Chapel, if times permitted that public service could there be 
had ; otherwise to be for one who should serve in the country 
two miles round about the places of Stidd and Bailey Hall ; and 
he desired that the privilege of nominating one to enjoy the 
benefice should remain to Mr. Tempest and Mr. Westby and 
their families for ever, if they remained in the Catholic faith, 
otherwise should redound to some eminent Catholic of good repute 
in the said circuit; provided that he whom they nominated 
should be a very exemplary, virtuous, careful, vigilant and 
sufficiently learned person, and that he should not be absent 
from his flock for above two or three days and that only upon 
extraordinary business; and he obliged him who enjoyed the 
benefice to say four masses every year for him and his family.7? 


The mission was served from Showley during the 
times of proscription. It is worthy of note that in 


68 The rental of 1609 shows that their 


About 1540 Geoffrey Dewhurst held 


RIBCHESTER 


1706-10 some baptisms and marriages are entered in 
the parish church registers as performed by a Roman, 
Romish, or Papist priest. ‘The present chapel of 
SS. Peter and Paul, situated close to the boundary of 
Stidd, was opened in 1789. ‘The priest in charge 
acts as chaplain to the adjacent almshouses.”$ 


DILWORTH 


Bileuurde (for Dilewrde), Dom. Bk. ; Dileworth, 
1227; Dillesworth, 1284; Dilleworth, 1292. 

This township lies on the southern and western 
slope of Longridge Fell, the altitudes ranging from 
300 to 700 ft. above sea level. On the southern 
border is a large reservoir of the Preston Waterworks. 
The area of the township is 1,248 acres,! and there 
was a population of 2,439 in 1901.” 

The greater part of the little town of Longridge 
lies in the extreme west corner of the township, 
having a railway station, the terminus of a line from 
Preston, opened in 1840,3 and owned by the London 
and North Western and Lancashire and Yorkshire 
Companies. From the town two main roads branch 
off, one to the north-east and east along the northern 
side of the Fell, and the other to the east, along the 
southern side. An intermediate road, on the same 
side of the Fell, but much higher, is not much used. 

Written Stone Farm, to the east of Longridge, 
takes its name from a long stone inscribed :— 


RAVFFE RADCLIFFE LAID THIS 
STONE TO LYE FOR EVER. a.b. 1655, 


It is at the entrance to the farmyard. ‘There are 
various legends connected with it.4 

The Longridge gild day is 10 August.® 

Longridge has been governed by a local board 
since 1883 ; this has now become an urban district 
council of nine members. The area includes the 
township of Alston and Dilworth. Gas is supplied 
by a local private company and water by the Preston 
Corporation, which has several reservoirs in the 
township. 

Cotton-spinning and manufacture are carried on 
to some extent. Nails are made and stone quarries 
are worked. It is the stone trade, begun about 
1830, which has caused the growth of Longridge.® 
A century ago there was a thriving besom trade.7 
There are several fairs for cattle, &c. The land is 
mostly used for grazing. 


capital was lost. In 1844 Sir Charles 


lands in Ribchester were then held by 
Robert Burley (grandson of Robert, living 
1544), who paid 2s. 8d. rent; John 
Rodes, 2s. 11¢,; John Greenwood, 
2s. 2d.3 Richard Walmesley, Fastand- 
field, 1s. 64, &c.; Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 
1326. It was in 1544 that Richard 
Crombleholme purchased Fastandfield, 
land at Boys Bridge and other parts of 
the Hospitallers’ estate in Ribchester and 
Dutton ; Pat. 36 Hen. VIII, pt. xvii. 
He sold much of it in parcels. 

The lands held by the Holts of 
Gristlehurst perhaps included both 
Hospitallers’ and Whalley lands ; Duchy 
of Lance. Inq. p.m. xxvi, no. 25. 

4 The grants have been recited above. 
In 1365 Robert de Kendal claimed from 
Alice daughter of John Wilcockson, John 
de Turnley and Cecily his wife acquit- 
tance of the services demanded by the 
Abbot of Whalley; De Banco R. 421, 
m. 157 3 424, m. 266d, 


land in Ribchester at a rent of 2s. 1d. ; 
Whalley Couch. iv, 1242. 

6 Returns at Preston. 

6 48 Geo. III, cap. 79. 

@T, C. Smith, Ribchester, 70-13; 
Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 56 (award dated 1812) 

68 Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. ii, 
113. 
69 Ibid. 115—17. 

An Anabaptist was living at Dilworth 
in 1699, as appears by an entry in the 
church registers. 

70 Visit. P. at Chester Dioc. Reg. 

71 Smith, Ribchester, 56. For the con- 
victed recusants in Ribchester and Dutton 
c. 1670 see Misc. (Cath. Rec. Soc.), v, 
155-6. 

72 End. Char. Rep. (Ribchester), 12. 
His first trustees were Stephen Tempest 
of Broughton and John Westby of Alston. 
The bequest, at that time illegal, was 
faithfully observed, though part of the 


51 


Robert Tempest claimed the right to 
nominate a priest to serve Stidd Chapel, 
and withheld the endowment from the 
Bishop of Salford’s nominees, until advised 
by counsel that he had no right to do so. 
‘The trusteeship of the charity having 
thus proved to involve no privilege,’ the 
legal estate was in 1884 transferred 
to the Bishop of Salford and other 
trustees. 

73 Smith, op. cit. 210-13. 

1 Including 33 acres of inland water. 

2 Including Crumpax. 

3 T. C. Smith, Longridge, 42. It was 
originally worked by horses, the first loco- 
motive being used in 1848. 

4 Ibid. op. cit. 27-30. 

5 Ibid. 34. About 1800 the festival 
occupied two days, on one of which was a 
horse race and on the other a foot race ; 
ibid. 40. 

» © Ibid. 44. 

7 Ibid. go. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


In 1066 DILWORTH was a member 


MANOR of Earl Tostig’s Preston fee, and was 
afterwards given to Count Roger of 
Poitou.8 Its two plough-lands probably then in- 


cluded Alston and Hothersall. It is not known how 
Dilworth proper became not only separate but 
merged in Ribchester, so as to be accounted merely a 
hamlet of the central township and part of the 
honor of Clitheroe.® 

From the scanty notices of the place it may be 
gathered that it was held by Alan de Singleton about 
1200, and of him in moieties by the lord of 
Ribchester and a local family or families. The 


former moicty was granted by William Moton of 
Ribchester to Richard son of Alan de Singleton," 
and scems to have become part of the main family 
estate, being held in demesne. The lordship de- 
scended regularly from Singleton to Banastre of 
Bretherton,!? Balderston and Harrington’? and 
Osbaldeston,! but was usually considered only a 
moiety of the manor.!® The second moiety was 
acquired from Osbert de Dilworth by Adam de 
Hoghton,!® descending like Hoghton.7 In 1566 
Thomas Hoghton acquired the Osbaldeston estate in 
Dilworth,!8 and thus became lord of the undivided 
manor.!9 In 1772 it was sold by Sir Henry 


8 V.C.H, Lancs. i, 2880. 

° It was probably acquired by the Lacys 
together with Ribchester, perhaps in 1187, 
but the manner is not certainly known. 

1° This is inferred from the account of 
Sir William Banastre’s estate in a subse- 
quent note. 

11 William de Mutun granted to Richard 
son of Alan de Singleton the whole moiety 
of land and wood, hawks, honey and mill, 
the bounds beginning opposite the Strid- 
thorn by Thornley, down Longshaw 
Brook to Dilworthsed Brook, up this to 
the upper head of Dilworth, across to 
Hothersall ; then by the boundaries of 
Hothersall, Alston, Whittingham, Wheat- 
ley and Thornley to the starting-point. 
The grantor reserved to himself certain 
easements, including mast fall, within 
these bounds, as well as a rent of four 
barbed arrows; Kuerden MSS. iv, R 9. 
Sir Robert de Lathom was the first 
witness ; the others included Alan de 
Singleton, William his son and Hugh de 
Osbaldeston. 

A Richard de Singleton is soon after- 
wards (1246) found to be brother of some 
religious house—probably Cockersand ; 
Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 103, 150. 

This may be a grant of half the lord- 
ship, but it was not the first acquisition 
by the Singleton family, for Alan son of 
Richard—father of the above Richard— 
confirmed to Jordan le Blund (Albus) 
half an oxgang of land in Dilworth, which 
Adam de Stiholmes had formerly held of 
Alan; Add. MS. 32106, no. 395 (fol. 
311). The same Alan granted to the 
canons of Cockersand 4 acres and a toft 
froin his land in Dilworth, between Wite- 
kerbrook and Cronkeshaw Brook, with 
easements of his fee in the vill aforesaid, 
for the souls of Robert and Roger de Lacy, 
&c. 3 Cockersand Chartul, (Chet. Soc.), i, 
227. 

In 1246 William de Hawksworth suc- 
cessfully claimed land in Dilworth against 
Richard son of Alan; Assize R. 404, 
m.4d. Richard son of Alan de Singleton 
gave Richard son of Alexander de Pen- 
wortham, chaplain, a toft in Dilworth, of 
1 perch in extent, on the west side of 
Adam de Cartmel’s house, at arent ofa 
pair of white gloves ; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 100. As Richard de Singleton he 
granted land touching Cronkeshaw Brook 
to Adam son of Adam de Hoghton ; ibid. 
no.11g. Bernard the clerk was a witness. 

William son of Alan de Singleton 
granted half an oxgang of land to Hugh 
son of Siegrith daughter of Jordan le 
Blund (Albus) of Dilworth, at a rent of 
3s. ; Towneley MS. DD, no. 1534. 

a The Singleton heiress Joan widow of 
Thomas Banastre made a settlement of 
her estate in 13033 Final Conc. (Rec, 


Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 201. In 1306 
she allowed the beasts of Robert de Dil- 
worth within her wood and pasture in 
return for a rent of 6d. to be levied on all 
Robert's tenements within Ribchester ; 
Add. MS, 32106, no. 122. 

Sir William Banastre in 1311 held one 
plough-land in Dilworth of the heir of 
Henry de Lacy by the rent of 2s. payable 
on St. Giles’s Day ; De Lacy Ing. (Chet. 
Soc.), 17. Again in 1324 it was found 
that William Banastre had died seised of 
the hamlet of Dilworth, held of Thomas 
Earl of Lancaster and Alice his wife by a 
rent of 2s.; one half was in demesne and 
the other in service ; Ing. p.m. 17 Edw. II, 
no. 45. 

Sir Adam Banastre gave Adam de Yor- 
drawes a messuage with curtilage abutting 
on Longridge, another parcel on the High- 
field, and another on the Greenhurst, all 
in Dilworth ; Add. MS, 32106, no. 125. 
This was probably the origin of the estate 
of two messuages, &c., in Ribchester held 
by Thomas de Yordrawes and Margery his 
wife in 1383 5 Final Conc. iii,17. Adam 
Banastre in 1336 granted to Henry de 
Kuerden of Ribchester and Alice daughter 
cf Henry for life the lands in Whiteley 
Fall in Dilworth they had had from John 
and Nicholas sons of Sir Thomas Banastre; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 123, 679. 

Lands in Dilworth were included in 
Edward Banastre’s estate in 1385 ; Lancs. 
Inq. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 16. 

18 Dilworth occurs among the Palders- 
ton manors; Kuerden MSS. iii, B 3-7. 
For the descent see the account of Bal- 
derston ; also Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 71. It was probably in right of this 
descent that Sir William Harrington in 
1466 granted lands in Ribchester to Roger 
son of Nicholas Elston ; Kuerden MSS. iii, 
R 9g. 

Dilworth was among the manors granted 
to Thomas first Earl of Derby after the 
Harrington forfeiture ; Lancs. and Ches. 
Rec, (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 309. 

In right of the Balderston inheritance 
lands in Dilworth are named in the in- 
quisitions of Thomas Earl of Derby, 
Edmund Dudley, Osbaldeston, Radcliffe 
of Winmarleigh and Gerard, but the 
tenure is not separately recorded. 

14 On the partition of the Balderston 
manors in 1565 Dilworth was allotted to 
John Osbaldeston ; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 
216, m. 10. 

15 This is evident from the grants to 
Ravenshaw quoted below. 

16 This is inferred from the tenure as 
recorded later. Osbert would hold of 
Singleton and he of the Earl of Lincoln, 
One grant has been preserved by which 
Osbert de Dilworth gave Adam de Hogh- 
ton land within bounds, beginning at the 
Sandy way and including the Carr, Hurst, 


52 


Greenlache and High Way ; to be held by 
a rent of 15. and a pair of white gloves ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no, 120, Richard le 
Eoteler, then sheriff (? 1243), was a 
witness. Osbert le Blund (Albus) after- 
wards released to Adam the service speci- 
fied ; ibid. no. 313. 

Adam son of Adam de Hoghton about 
the same time released to Alan de Single- 
ton the lands formerly Osbert le Blund’s 
(Blundi) ; ibid. no. 116. 

In 1227 a partition was made of an 
oxgang of land and three-quarters between 
Avice widow of William Brun, Robert 
Plumb and Cecily his wife on one side 
and Robert son of Ulfy on the other, 
whereby the last named obtained a moiety 
to be held of Avice and Cecily and their 
heirs at a rent of 22d, at St. Giles’s Day, 
of which 21d. was due to the chief lord ; 
Final Conc. i, §3. Maud daughter of 
Robert Plumb and Cecily his wife released 
to Adam de Hoghton any claim she might 
have in Adam's land in Dilworth ; Add. 
MS. 32106, no, 118. 

William son of Richard de Singleton 
released to Adam de Hoghton all claim in 
his father’s lands within Dilworth ; ibid. 
no. 279. 

Thomas de Singleton and Adam de 
Hoghton in 1291, as lords of the vill and 
soil of Dilworth, complained of encroach- 
ments by Robert son of Ellis de Ribchester, 
Richard Franceys, Robert de Anyetehalgh, 
Robert the Eyre and others, and recovered; 
Assize R. 407, m. 1d. There were some 
counterclaims the following year; ibid. 
408, m. 12d, The same lords, in con- 
junction with Katherine widow of Alan 
de Singleton (father of Thomas) and then 
wife of Thomas de Clifton, and Agnes 
widow of Adam de Hoghton were in 1292 
sued by Robert de Pocklington, rector of 
Ribchester, for having disscised him of an 
eighth part of certain wood, moor and 
heath in Dilworth ; ibid. m. 63, 18d. It 
would seem from this that the rector of 
Ribchester held 1 oxgang of land in 
Dilworth. 

Sir Henry Hoghton was in 1425 found 
to have held a moiety of the manor of 
Dilworth of the heirs of Osbert de Dil- 
worth; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 12. 

The later Hoghton _ inquisitions 
merely state that the lands in Dilworth 
were held of the king as duke by services 
unknown or in socage; e.g. Duchy of 
Lanc, Ing. p.m. iii, no. 66 ; xxvii, no. 13. 

18 Pal. of Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 28, 
m. 186. The ‘manor’ is not named, the 
estate being described as twenty messuages 
and various lands in Dilworth and 
Haighton. 

19 The manor of Dilworth is named ina 
Hoghton settlement of 1585 ; ibid, bdle. 
57, m. 178. 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


Hoghton and Frances his wife to William Shaw the 
The present lord is stated to be Mr. 
William Cross of Red Scar in Grimsargh. 

In 1357 the tenants of Dilworth and those of 
Ribchester arrived at a settlement of various disputes 
as to the wastes and common rights.” 

Few of the minor landowners’ names occur, but 
some of those in Ribchester seem to have held in this 
The Knights Hospitallers had some 
Dilworth * and Moton,™ Catterall and 
Ravenshaw,* have left some record of themselves.” 
Later the Cottam family, who seem to have had the 
Of this family was the 
B. Thomas Cottam executed for his priesthood 


younger.” 


township also. 
land.” 


mill, became prominent.” 


0 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 387, 
m. 114. 

1 Add. MS. 32106, no. 763. Sir 
Adam de Hoghton, Thomas son of Sir 
Adam Banastre, William de Hornby, 
tector of Ribchester, Robert de Singleton 
the elder, Richard de Catterall and Richard 
de Knoll are the tenants of Dilworth 
named; those of Ribchester including 
William de Whalley, Adam Bibby, Henry 
de Kuerden, Robert Moton, Simon de 
Preston. Ribchester is called a vill and 
Dilworth a hamlet. 

22 Alan son of Richard de Singleton 
confirmed his father’s gift of 4 acres to 
the hospital of St. Saviour under Long- 
ridge and the brethren there serving God. 
The land was between Cronkshaw Brook 
and Whitacre Brook; Dugdale, Mon. 
Angi. vi, 686. See the account of Stidd. 

In 1284 it was found that Juliana 
widow of Hugh de Dilworth had died 
seised of two-thirds of a messuage and 
land in Dilworth, tenanted by Margery 
daughter of Hugh. Richard son of Hugh 
and Juliana seems to have been the plain- 
tiff. The tenant called the Prior of St. 
John to warrant her; Assize R. 1265, 
m. 4. 

Uctred de Dilworth granted to his son 
William lands held of Sir Adam de 
Hoghton ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 109. 
A rent of 6d. was due to the Hospitallers. 

Margery daughter of Adam de Dilworth 
gave lands to Sir Richard de Hoghton in 
13393 ibid. no. 113. 

24 This seems to have been a junior 
branch of the Moton of Ribchester family. 
In 1344-5 Thomas son of Gilbert son of 
Alan de Singleton claimed portions of 
land in Dilworth against Robert son 
of Adam Moton and Henry and William 
his sons, against Adam de Dilworth the 
younger and Margery his wife, and 
against Henry son of Beatrix de Kuerden ; 
De Banco R. 339, m. 109 ; 344, m. 162, 
The plaintiff was a minor. 

Sir Adam Banastre had in 1331 given 
the third part of his approvement in 
Hesmundehalgh to Henry son of Robert 
Moton of Ribchester and William his 
brother ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 87. 

25 Richard de Catterall of Whittingham 
and Isabel his wife gave lands in Dil- 
worth, &c., to their son Alan in 1369; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 96-7. 

26 Adam de Eller in 1327 gave all his 
land in Osbern riding to Adam Chyry of 
Ribchester ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 102. 
William son of Adam Chyry gave it to 
John son of John de Ravenshaw in 1355 ; 
ibid, no, 86. From this deed it appears 
that the land had earlier been granted by 
Alan son of William de Singleton to his 
daughter Agnes. 

William son of Hugh son of Hugh 
de Dilworth granted land to Randle de 


in 1582.” 
hamlet.” 


RIBCHESTER 


Whitacre is named as if it were a 


In 1788 the principal owners were John Cottam, 
double assessed for his religion, Margaret Wharton 
and William Bowen. 


Longridge Church is in Alston ; it has a chapel of 


in 1836. 


Singleton and Mabel his wife in 1343 ; 
ibid. no. 99. Margaret widow of Thomas 
de Knoll and daughter of Randle de 
Singleton in 1358 granted her land in 
the high field of Dilworth together with 
half a messuage to the above John son of 
John de Ravenshaw ; ibid. no, 126, 106. 
The same John and Ellen his wife in 
1376 obtained other grants from the lords 
of the manor, Sir Adam de Hoghton and 
Sir Thomas Banastre ; ibid. no. go, &c. 
In 1386 Ellen de Ravenshaw his widow 
held his lands, with remainders to his 
daughters Agnes, Christiana, Isabel and 
Margaret ; ibid. no. 83. 

27 Edward Radcliffe in 1617 had lands 
in Dilworth and Alston, held of Sir 
Richard Hoghton ; Henry, his son and 
heir, was of full age; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc.), ii, 52. Ralph Radcliffe of 
the ‘Written Stone’ was probably a 
successor. 

?8 In 1466 Henry son of Sir Richard 
Hoghton granted to William Cottam of 
Alston and his sons Ellis and Edmund 
certain land in Dilworth for their lives, 
the lease to begin at his father’s death ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 94. Uctred 
Cottam appears in 1483; ibid. no. 98. 
Uctred and Robert his son and heir made 
a feoffment of their messuages, lands and 
water-mill in the same year ; ibid. no. 92. 
Uctred’s wife Ellen, perhaps a second 
wife, appears in the same year; ibid. 
no. 103. Their lands seem to have been 
given to Lawrence son of Edmund Cottam 
in 1503 and 15113; ibid. no. 105, 107, 
&c. From Lawrence Cottam Sir Richard 
Hoghton purchased in 1529, and Robert 
cousin and heir of Uctred Cottam 
(perhaps a grandson) released his right at 


the same time ; ibid. no. 89, ror. 


One branch of the family recorded a 
short pedigree in 1613; Visit. (Chet. 
Soc.), 100. 

Lawrence Cottam, Dorothy his wife 
and Thomas his son made a settlement 
in 1605; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 296, 
m.2d, Lawrence died in 1619 holding 
a messuage and land of Sir Richard 
Hoghton by a rent of 25.3; Lancs. Ing. 
p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 115. 
Thomas his son and heir, then thirty 
years of age, died two years later holding 
the same estate and leaving as heir his 
son Thomas, aged fifteen ; ibid. ii, 232. 
These Cottams were of High House ; some 
further particulars of them will be found 
in Smith’s Ribchester, 242-3, from which 
it appears that Lawrence Cottam, who 
was fined for recusancy in 1667 and 1680, 
died in 1682. His son and heir, also 
Lawrence, registered his estate as a 
“Papist’ in 17173 he had a leasehold 
house valued at £27 a year; Estcourt 
and Payne, Engl. Cath. Non-jurors, 106. 

The Cottams of Knowl Green had a 


53 


ease in Dilworth, St. Paul’s, built in 1890. 

The Wesleyan Methodists opened their first chapel 
It was called Mount Zion, and situated on 
the Alston side of the boundary. ‘The present chapel 
was built in 1884-5." The Particular Baptists had a 
Sunday service in 1888.% 
began to hold meetings in 1860, the minister of 
Knowl Green leading ; the chapel was built in 1865.™ 


The Congregationalists 


house at one time called Dilworth Hall 
and now the manor-house ; for an account 
of them see Smith, op. cit. 243. Jobn 
Cottam of Ribchester paid £10 on refusing 
knighthood in 1631; Misc. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 218. The lands of 
Richard Cottam of Dilworth were ordered 
to be sold by the Parliament in 1652 ; 
Index of Royalists (Index Soc.), 42. A 
later John Cottam (son of Ellis), as a 
*Papist,’ registered his small estate at 
Ribchester, Dilworth and Wrightington 
in 1717 ; Estcourt and Payne, op. cit. gt. 

John Walmsley also registered a small 
estate ; ibid. 104. 

29 Thomas Cottam, brought up as a 
Protestant, was educated at Brasenose 
Coll., Oxf. (M.A. 1572), and taught a 
school in London. Here he was recon- 
ciled to the Roman Church and then 
went abroad, his desire being to preach 
the Gospel in the East Indies. Being 
rejected by the Jesuits on account of ill- 
health, he returned to the seminary at 
Rheims, was ordained priest and sent on 
the English mission in 1580. On land- 
ing at Dover he was recognized from the 
report of a spy, arrested and imprisoned. 
He was racked and tortured in the Tower, 
but remaining constant was at last exe- 
cuted at Tyburn 30 May 1582, together 
with four other priests. One of these 
was B. Lawrence Richardson or Johnson 
of Great Crosby. Cottam was allowed to 
hang till he was dead. His beatification 
was allowed by Leo XIII in 1886. See 
Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. i, 574 3 
Pollen, Acts of Martyrs, 280, 3733 
Challoner, Miss. Priests, no. 15. He is 
claimed as a Jesuit in Foley, Rec. S. J. vii, 
174 (portrait). 

80 Adam son of Adam de Morca of 
Euxton and Ellen his wife in 1309 
granted Isabel daughter of Jordan de 
Dutton clerk all their land in Whitacre 
in the hamlet of Dilworth; Add. MS. 
32106, no. gi. Roger son of Thomas 
Topping and John son of Roger de Bolton 
in 1318 granted land in Whitacre to 
William the Tailor, son of Henry Moton ; 
ibid. no. 84, 95. Six years afterwards 
Henry Moton in exchange for this land 
gave his son William the Newhey in 
Ribchester, obtained from Robert Moton ; 
ibid, no. 85. 

In 1357 Richard son of Adam de Rib- 
chester acquired a messuage and land in 
Whitacre and Dilworth from John de 
Turnley and Cecily his wife ; Final Conc. 
ii, 152. 

"ar'T, C. Smith, Longridge, 80; 
A. Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 103 
—the old chapel. 

82 Smith, ibid. 

38 Ibid. 78 ; Nightingale, Lanes. Nonconf. 
ii, 117, where it is recorded that efforts 
had been made to establish a church in 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


The Roman Catholic church of St. Wilfrid was 
opened in 1886; it had been preceded by a smaller 
building, now the school, in 1869. The mission 
was an offshoot from Alston Lane. The church 
possesses the head of an old processional cross, found 
in the neighbourhood about 1830." 


DUTTON 


Dutton, 1258 and usually. Ditton is found very 
rarely. Dunton occurs 1289. 

This township includes the extra-parochial place cr 
chapelry of Stidd, formerly belonging to the Knights 
of St. John of Jerusalem. ‘The area of the whole is 
1,8984 acres,! of which Stidd has 752. The popu- 
lation in 1901 numbered 229. 

The land slopes down from nearly the highest point 
of Longridge Fell, over 1,100 ft., to the Ribble, 100 ft. 
above the ordnance datum, the length in this direction, 
from north to south, exceeding 3 miles. Starling 
Brook, on the east, divides it from Aighton, and Stidd 
Brook, on the west, from Ribchester, while Dutton 
Brook flows south through a wooded valley in the 
centre to join the Ribble. Stidd proper is in the 
south-west corner of the township, and its district 
stretches north along the western border for some 


distance, St. John’s Well being nearly a mile to the 
north ; then it extends across the township as far as 
the eastern border, and returns to the west. here 
are four small detached portions at the south end of 
Dutton and one in the north end. In the northend 
also is a detached part of Aighton, Bailey and 
Chaigley, known as Lennox’s Farm. In recent times 
these anomalous boundaries have been removed for 
local government purposes. 
Ribchester Bridge is in this township ; it provides 
a passage between Longridge and Ribchester on the 
north and Blackburn on the south. Another road 
from Ribchester turns to the north through the 
township, passing Dutton Hall and Pan Stones, to 
join the road from Longridge to Mitton. It continues 
north through Huntingdon to join the higher road 
between the same places. 
In 1066 DUTTON was probably a 
MANORS part of Ribchester, not having a separate 
record in Domesday Book, but in 1102 
it was given, as one plough-land, to Robert de Lacy by 
Henry I.?- From that time it became a member of 
the honor of Clitheroe, and the land was held by a 
number of tenants. The immediate lordship of the 
manor seems to have been held by a family using the 
local surname,® from whom it passed to a younger 
branch of the Claytons of Clayton-le-Dale about 1290.4 


Longridge in 1816 and again in 1830. 
Also Hewitson, op. cit. 101. 

34 Smith, op. cit. 73. While an old 
house was being pulled down a boy play- 
ing about found the cross and some other 
religious objects on a ledge. The church 
also possesses a carved oak chair made 
for John Towers, Bishop of Peter- 
borough, 1631. See also Hewitson, op. 
cit. 99. 

11,908 acres, including 24 of inland 
water; Census Rep. 1901. The addition 
of Lennox’s Farm accounts for the differ- 
ence of area. 

2 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 382. It was 
given together with Aighton and Chip- 
pingdale. There is but little evidence of 
the dependency upon Clitheroe, but in 
1258, after the death of Edmund de Lacy, 
it was found that Dutton paid 5s. to the 
lord ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lanes. and Ches.), i, 217. 

8 As the deeds of the Dutton and 
Clayton families do not seem to Le known, 
and as few references occur in the 
pleadings, only a very imperfect account 
can be given of the descent of the 
manor. 

Uctred de Dutton granted land to Ellis 
son of Leising within bounds including 
Netherhalgh, Overhalgh, the Crook and 
Wilmescroft ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 172. 
Swain de Hothersall and Benedict de 
Dutton were among the witnesses. 

Richard son of Uctred de Dutton gave 
lands to Lambert de Anderton and his 
heirs by Avice de Cundecliffe, the bounds 
of which name Horsegate and Rakedenes- 
cliff; ibid. no. 133. It may be added 
here that Lambert’s son Thomas was 
surnamed ‘de Dutton,’ and acquired 
various lands in the township; he was 
living in 1292; ibid. no. 132, 153, 188. 
Richard de Dutton occurs in 1241 5 Final 
Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 79. 
In 1249 Hugh Gogard claimed 2 oxgangs 
of land in Dutton against Richard de 
Dutton and another oxgang against 
Richard son of Vivian, but all three were 
acknowledged to be the right of Richard 


de Dutton ; ibid. i, 97. Richard son of 
Uctred de Dutton and Alice his wife 
granted lands to Sawley Abbey; the 
bounds of one portion name Redisnape, 
Huuerbeleisick and Huntingdon Brook ; 
the other portion was in his wood, near 
‘the great stonyway’; Harl. MS. 112, 
fol. 785, Other grants by Richard son 
of Uctred are in Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 2175 
Add. MS, 32107, no. 1476-7. 

Richard de Dutton and William his 
son were among the witnesses to a grant 
of land in Withinlache in the upper head 
of Dutton Holme, made by Adam son of 
Henry de Blackburn in 1256-7 to Robert 
de Cunliffe; Towneley MS. DD, no. 
1793- 

William son of Richard de Dutton 
confirmed his father’s gifts to Sawley ; 
Harl. MS. 112, fol. 786. As William 
de Dutton he granted to Jordan the 
Clerk son of William de Stainburgh, 
clerk, these lands: A piece the bounds 
of which began at the outlane (via 
exitus), followed the new ditch which 
Geoffrey son of Godith made, as far as 
Dodhill Brook, with all holmes (Ao/mis) ; 
part of Broadridding, on the east side of 
the high road to Lancaster; and the toft 
which had belonged to Robert son of 
Ellis de Ribchester ; to be held by a rent 
of 3d.; ibid. no. 173. Jordan the Clerk 
occurs down to about 1320. To him 
Robert son of William de Dutton con- 
firmed the ‘old garden’ given by his 
father ; ibid. no. 144. The same Robert 
gave Jordan de Dutton, clerk, and Emma 
his wife five ridges in the Heys between 
land of Henry de Clayton and land held 
in dower by the grantor’s mother, Emma 
widow of William de Dutton; ibid. 
no. 167. Further, in 1309 he released 
his right in the land to Jordan and his 
heirs by Emma formerly his wife ; ibid. 
no. 142. It may be added that Jordan 
had a son Thomas and a daughter Avice 
or Alice; to the son in 1321 he gave the 
Old Orchard and land in Stonyfurlong ; 
ibid. no. 165. About the same time he, 
his son and his daughter made various 


54 


grants to Richard son of Amery and Alice 
his wife; ibid. no. 163, 166, 148. 
Richard son of Ellis de Ribchester com- 
plained in 1290 that Jordan the Clerk of 
Dutton had disseised him of a tenement 
in the township; Assize R. 1288, m. 
12. 

It appears that Robert de Dutton was 
living in 1316 ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 149. 
His son William seems to have been in 
possession a year later; ibid. no, 141. 
There was another son Thomas; ibid. 
no. 134. William son of Robert de 
Dutton in 1321 claimed a tenement in 
Dutton against William son of William , 
de Dutton; De BancoR. 237, m. 724.3 
240, m. 261. 

The elder William de Dutton (father 
of Robert) was defendant in 1279; De 
Banco R. 30, m. 33d. He was perhaps 
living in 1292, when Adam aon of Richard 
de Entwisle recovered seisin of certain 
land against William de Dutton and 
Robert son of Robert de Halghton; 
Assize R. 408, m. §2. It appeared that 
William had enfeoffed one Alimun, whose 
daughters Avice and Agnes married re- 
spectively Roger de Ribchester and John 
de Whittingham, and forfeited the tene- 
ment to Robert de Halghton. William 
son of William de Dutton occurs down 
to 1340; he had a son Thomas; Add. 
MS. 32106, no. 140, 156. 

4 The alienation of the manor was made 
by William de Dutton, for his son Robert 
released to Henry de Clayton all right in 
the vill of Dutton, ‘which my father gave 
to the said Henry’; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 129. 

Henry was probably the son of Ralph 
de Clayton who together with his father 
attested a Dutton charter about 12503 
ibid. no. 133. In 1292 he released to 
Jordan the Clerk 8d. out of the gd. rent 
due from land on Broadridding, and 
the meadow which Jordan had by the 
grant of Adam de Blackburn ; ibid. no. 
161. 

Henry’s sons appear to have had Dutton, 
but the Huddleston family, who succeeded 


LNOUT HLAOG + TIVE] NOLLAQ 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


The inquisition after the death of Ralph de Clayton 
(1324) was taken in 1329, when it was found that 
he had held lands in Dutton of the honor of the 
castle of Clitheroe by the service of 5s. yearly; there 
were a capital messuage worth 12d. a year ; 30 acres 
of land, worth 6d. each ; a pasture, 25. 6¢.; an acre 
of meadow, 124. ; rents of {ree tenants amounted to 
6s. 6¢. Henry the son and heir of Ralph was thirty 


years of age and more.** 


In the Clayton family the manor descended regu- 
larly,** coming about 1400 to the Belfields of Clegg 
From their heirs the manor was 
acquired in or about 1578 by Sir Richard Shireburne 
of Stonyhurst,® and descended in due course to 


in Rochdale.® 


to Clayton-le-Dale, also had rights in 
Dutton, as appears by various pleadings ; 
De Banco R. 272, m. 20, &c. In 1314 
Adam de Huddleston, lord of Billington, 
made an exchange of lands in the Halgh 
with Jordan the Clerk ; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 187. 

Henry de Clayton left sons Ralph and 
Philip, of whom the former was living in 
1322 and the latter in 1340 ; ibid. no. 138, 
158. Henry gave to Philip his son 
Hordischale or Longridge in Ribchester, 
Milnholme in Dutton, Colicroft, and the 
service (13¢.) of John de Huntingdon ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 1178. Ralph de 
Clayton in 1308 granted to William son 
of William de Dutton a plat of his waste ; 
Add, MS, 32106, no. 174. In 1311 it 
was found that Ralph held his tenement 
as of the dower of the Countess of Lincoln, 
doing suit to the court of Clitheroe from 
three weeks to three weeks ; De Lacy Ing. 
(Chet. Soc.), 18. 

Philip gave some land in Hayhurst in 
1297 to Robert de Clitheroe, clerk ; 
Towneley MS. OO, no. 1206. In 1318-19 
he granted land in Seedcroft to Richard 
son of Amery and Alice his wife; Add. 
MS. 32106, no. 989. In 1338 four 
messuages with land, mieadow, and 
wood in Dutton and Bailey were settled 
upon Philip de Clayton, Isabel his wife 
and Robert their son; Final Conc. ii, 
10g. See the account of Towneley for 
tbe Clayton-Towneley connexion. 

In 1321 William son of Robert de 
Dutton appears to have made an attempt 
to regain his grandfather’s lands, at least 
in part. Against Ralph de Clayton and 
Sarah his wife he claimed 20 acres of 
land, &c., and ros. ofd. rent in Dutton, 
which William de Dutton gave to Robert 
de Dutton, Agnes his wife and their issue ; 
De Banco R. 240, m. 138d. He made 
other claims against John son of William 
de Greenhill, Agnes his wife and Margery 
widow of Adam de Greenhill, also against 
Jordan the Clerk; ibid. m. 115d. He 
was eventually (1324) non-suited ; ibid. 
250, m. 2. 

4a Ing, p.m. 3 Edw. III (1st nos.), 
no. 39. 

Ralph de Clayton died during 1324, 
for in Trinity term in that year Henry de 
Osbaldeston and Isabel his wife claimed 
the fulfilment of an agreement made with 
him in 1320 concerning a messuage and 
lands in Dutton. Ralph had died and 
Henry his son had entered into possession. 
Henry appeared, alleging a grant from 
Henry de Clayton to his son Ralph and 
Alice his wife, their son and heir being 
Henry the defendant; ibid. 252, m. 
158d. The dispute went on some little 
time (Assize R. 426, m. 2d.), but was 
concluded in 1328 by an agreement be- 


James. 


RIBCHESTER 


Thomas Weld, who became a cardinal in 1829, and 
in 1831 sold Dutton to Joseph Fenton of Bamford 
Hall, a manufacturer and banker of Rochdale.7 
Fenton, who also purchased the adjacent manors of 
Bailey and Ribchester, died in 1840,8 and was suc- 
ceeded by his son James, who in turn at his death in 
1857 was succeeded by his eldest son, also named 
He died in 1902, the present lord of the 


Mr. 


manor of Dutton being his eldest surviving son, 


1380.9 


tween Henry de Clayton and Margery his 
wife with Henry de Osbaldeston and 
Isabel ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 191. 

4> One of Henry de Clayton’s early acts 
(1330) was to make a release to the free 
tenants of Dutton Huntingdon, of com- 
mon of pasture in the vill; Add. MS, 
32107, no. 1497. Henry was in 1337 
called lord of Dutton, being said to hold 
the whole vill of the Lady Isabella, queen 
of England, mother of the king, as of her 
manor of Clitheroe, by the service of 4s. 
yearly ; Ing. p.m. 11 Edw. III (2nd nos.), 
no.10, The tenure was stated a little 
differently in 1362, when Henry held it of 
the Earl of Lancaster by thegnage service 
and 5s. yearly; Ing. p.m. 36 Edw. III, 
pt. ii (2nd nos.), no. 45. 

Henry de Clayton seems to have lived 
for a few years after this, being named in 
1366, Cecily widow of Adam de Clitheroe 
m 1346 made a claim against Henry and 
Ralph his son, and there were cross-suits ; 
Assize R. 1435, m. 31, 15. In 1349 
Henry granted his son Adam a house and 
garden formerly held by Alice daughter of 
Ralph de Clayton, and five ridges in 
Dutton Heghes, with remainders to other 
sons—John, Hamlet and Ralph; Add. 
MS. 32106, no. 175. In 1357 Henry's 
feoffees regranted him his lands and manor 
in Dutton; ibid. no. 162. Again in 
1364 a similar refeoffment was made to 
Henry son of Ralph de Clayton of the 
manor of Dutton, with the services of all 
the free tenants (except for lands of Cecily 
widow of Nicholas Moton), with re- 
mainder to Henry son of John de Clayton ; 
ibid. no. 194. 

This Henry son of John was no doubt 
the grandson of the elder Henry. In 1376 
he granted his right in a plat of meadow 
between land formerly belonging to Philip 
de Clayton and to Nicholas Moton ; ibid. 
no. 150. Five years later he released his 
right in a moiety of land called Hayre- 
wasbank, Highacre and Stubbing; ibid. 
no. 177. 

Thomas son of Henry de Clayton was 
in possession in 1388, when he granted 
land in the Milncroft; ibid. no. 139. 
Thomas died in 1393 holding a messuage 
and lands in Dutton of the Duke of Lan- 
caster by the service of 5s. yearly at the 
feast of St. Giles. Ellen his daughter and 
heir was only five years old ; Lancs. Rec. 
Ing. p.m. no, I, 2. 

5 The descent in the 15th century is 
unknown. In 1445-6 the heir of Ellen de 
Clayton held the manor in socage ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, no. 20. 
The manor does not seem to be mentioned 
again until 1572, when it was part of the 
inheritance of the Belfields of Clegg ; Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 34, m. 98; 
38, m. 40. See the account of Clegg 


i) 


Mr. Robert Kay Fenton, born in 1853. 
have been held for a long time. 

After the decay of the Claytons the principal family 
in the township was that of Townley, appearing about 
Their estate is of uncertain origin. 


No courts 


John 


in Butterworth, and Fishwick, Rochdalc, 
353. 

6 The manor of Dutton was included in 
a Shireburne settlement in 1579; Pal. of 
Lance. Feet of F. bdle. 41, m.199. Earlier 
Shireburnes were stated to hold lands in 
Dutton of the Abbot of Whalley in socage; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iv, no. 46, &c. 
Their ancestor John de Bailey had held of 
the heir of Henry de Clayton in 1391 ; 
Lanes. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 44. 

In a dispute as to closes called Hich- 
haugh and Stonyfurlong in Dutton in 1550 
Richard Shireburne claimed them as heir 
of Hugh, who had demised them to James 
Tarleton, chantry priest of Ribchester 
deceased. John Talbot of Salesbury, on 
the other hand, asserted that they had 
belonged to the chantry endowment and 
were included in the lease made by Ed- 
ward VI; Duchy of Lanc. Plead. Edw. VJ. 
xxvii, Tg. The iands are named in the 
chantry endowment in Raines’ Chantries 
(Chet. Soc.), 196, and seem to have been 
regarded as within Ribchester. 

In 1565 Sir Richard Shireburne pur- 
chased a messuage, &c., from Christopher 
Wilkinson, and another in 1581 from John 
Woodcock ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 
27, M. 553 43, m. 190, In 1583 a 
messuage, &c., in Dutton was settled on 
Sir Richard Shireburne ; ibid. bdle. 45, 
m.172. At Sir Richard’s death it was not 
known of whom or by what tenure the 
manor of Dutton and other lands there 
were held ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xvi, 
NO, 3} XXVI, MO. 4. 

The manor continued to be named in 
Shireburne and Weld settlements down to 
1777; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 625, m. 10d. 
16). 
ee of Mr. R. K. Fenton 
through Messrs. Greenall & Co, 

8 The particulars of the descent are 
taken from Burke, Landed Gentry. 

® An account of the family by W. A. 
Abram is printed in Lancs. and Ches. 
Antiq. Notes, i, 182-190. Gilbert de 
Legh, Richard de Towneley and John de 
Towneley attested Dutton deeds in the 
time of Edward III and later. They 
belong to the principal family, and held 
land in Dutton, Ribchester and Hother- 
sall; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 
59. The lands were held of the Hogh- 
tons ; ibid. ii, 112. 

Of the local line Robert de Townley in 
1379-80 granted land in Huntingdon to 
Richard Woodroff for life; Add. MS. 
32107, no. 926. He was a witness to 
Dutton charters in 1406-7 ; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 179, 131. Henry son of 
Robert Townley in 1420 enfeoffed John 
White, vicar of Preston, of lands in 
Cliviger, Ribchester and Dutton ; Towne- 
ley MS. DD, no, 2020, Henry Townley 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Townley in 1562 described the tenure of his estate 
as socage or in the nature of socage.® Richard 
Townley of Dutton in 1618 
held his lands in Dutton of 
Richard Shireburne of Stony- 
hurst by the service of a red 
rose yearly ; he alsoheldlands fk 


in Ribchester, Dilworth and 
Hothersall.!! A pedigree was re] 
Res ry . 


recorded in 1665. The 

esiates descended to Abraham 

Townley, who died in 1701, 

leaving two sons, Henry and 

Richard, the latter of whom Fires: of Dutton: 

is noticed in the account of Per fae Bieri tad cath 

Belfield in Rochdale. Henry = 4.67955 dovetailed, in the 

Townley died in 1731, leav- i a 
second and third a tre- 
foil slipped all counter- 

changed. 


ing three daughters as co- 
heirs. The eldest, Jane, 
married Edward Entwisle of 
Ribchester, and by a partition 
in 1738 the Dutton estate descended to their 
children.13 ‘In 1805 Mr. W. Joule purchased 
the estate, and in 1823 sold it to Mr. James 
Rothwell, whose nephew, the late Marquis de 
Rothwell, of Bolton, was the owner till his death’ 
in 1890.14 

DUTTON HALL isa picturesque two-story stone 
house, with balled gables and mullioned windows, 
finely situated on the southern slope of Longridge 
Fell, and commanding a magnificent view to the south 
over the Ribble Valley. The house is said to have 
been erected by Richard Townley about 1670-80,}5 
but there is no date or inscription anywhere on the 
building itself. It is now used as a farm-house, and 
the west wing is unoccupied. The front, facing 
south, is 63 ft. in length, and consists of two end 
gabled wings with a recessed middle part containing 
the hall, the plan being a later adaptation of the 
general type of the preceding century. The doorway, 


however, is in the east wing, and the principal feature 
of the front elevation is the great square bay window 
of the hall, which occupies nearly the whole of the 
space between the wings in the west angle. The bay 
is externally 14 ft. wide with a projection of 6 ft., and 
goes up both stories, terminating as a kind of tower 
with lead flat and balustraded parapet, forming an 
exceedingly picturesque feature. It has a large 
mullioned and transomed window of seven lights 
placed at the angle with three lights on the return, 
and the rest of the windows of the house being low 
and without transoms a good effect is produced by 
the contrast. The windows of the disused west 
wing retain their original leaded lights in good 
geometrical patterns. ‘The walling is generally of 
large gritstone blocks, but the east wing is faced 
with rough coursed sandstone pieces and gritstone 
quoins, and may be a rebuilding. The roofs are 
covered with modern blue slates. In the recess 
between the great bay window and the east wing 
is a wooden bell-turret containing a bell. The 
interior is somewhat modernized, but the arrange- 
ment of the hall and staircase is interesting, and 
in the upper room over the bay is a good plaster 
panel over the fireplace, with conventional floral 
ornament within a moulded border. The hall is 
flagged diagonally and has a wide open fireplace, and 
woodwork of late 17th or early 18th-century date. 
The porch is an open one with four-centred arch, 
and a stone seat on one side. The lay-out of 
the garden on the south side has been effective ; 
it is inclosed on either side by outbuildings, giving 
something of the appearance of a forecourt, and 
the two tall stone gate piers, with balls and 
original wooden gates, surmounted by quaintly 
carved lions, form a very picturesque foreground. 
The grass plots, however, have been planted as an 
orchard, and the trees now almost completely hide 
the front of the house. 

Among the older landowners were the families 


of Dutton had variance with Richard 
Towneley in 1452 respecting boundaries 
in Cliviger ; W. A. Abram, loc, cit. 

Richard Townley of Dutton in 1531 
married Joan daughter of Roger Winkley 
of Winkley ; DD, no. 668. Shortly after- 
wards he and his wife gave to trustees a 
part of ‘my hall of Townley’ and certain 
lands in Dutton ; ibid. no. 646. 

10 From his will, printed in Richmond 
Wills (Surtees Soc.), 151. He gave 
various lands to his wife Katherine for 
twenty-one years and £10 to Jane his 
daughter. To James Lingard, vicar of 
Ribchester, he left 135. 4d., and to two 
other priests 10s. each, In 1537 John 
son and heir-apparent of Richard Townley 
had disputes with Richard Crombleholme 
and others respecting land called Carling- 
hurst in Dutton; Ducatus Lanc. (Rec, 
Com.), ii, 60. It was probably the same 
John Townley who was plaintiff in 1549 ; 
ibid. i, 246. According to the pedigree, 
however, Richard was succeeded by a son 
Henry Townley, probably the same who 
in 1583 held eight messuages, a dovecote 
and various lands in Dutton, Ribchester, 
Hothersall and Dilworth, of which he 
enfeoffed John and Edward, sons of 
Edmund Shireburne ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F, bdle. 45, m. 184. Henry Townley 
of Dutton had a dispute with Robert 
Lynalx in 1582 respecting a right of way ; 


T. C. Smith, Ribchester, 54. He was 
among the freeholders in 1600; Mise. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 234. He 
was living in 16083; Lancs, Ing. p.m 
(Rec. Soc.), i, 89. 

The estate was in 1595 secured by 
Henry Townley from John Townley by 
a fine, the meaning of which is not clear ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. $75 
m. 17. 

! Lancs, Ing. pom. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, 
and Ches.), li, 137. Richard’s wife 
(Anne), brothers and children are named ; 
the heir was his son Henry, aged fourteen. 

Henry Townley of Dutton married 
Alice Coulthurst (Burnley) at Ribchester, 
26 June 1626; Reg. He paid £10 in 
1631 on refusing knighthood; Misc. 
(Rec. Soc.), i, 217. 

© Dugdale, Visit, (Chet. Soc.), 310. 
Richard the son of Henry Townley was 
thirty-four years old. He died in 1670 
and was succeeded by his brother Abra- 
ham. 

'3 This part of the descent is from 
W. A. Abram, loc. cit. The younger 
daughters of Henry Townley were Janet, 
who married the Rey. Henry Ward of 
Ingatestone, and Margaret, who married 
Lawrence Wall of Preston. The family 
were benefactors of the poor. 

The deforciants in a fine respecting the 
Townley estate in Dutton, Ribchester, 


56 


Bailey and Burnley (1739) were Edward 
Entwisle, Jane his wife, Henry Ward, Janet 
his wife, Margaret Townley, John Nock 
and Anne his wife; Pal. of Lanc, Feet 
of F, bdle. 320, m. 133. Anne was the 
widow of Henry Townley. Richard his 
brother had lands in Ribchester in 1744 3 
ibid. bdle. 330, m. 124. 

Edward Entwisle died in 1776 and 
was buried at Ribchester ; his wife died 
at the end of 1799. ‘Their eldest son, 
Townley Entwisle, a surgeon, had died in 
1779, leaving three daughters. A younger 
son, Edward Entwisle, died at Ribchester 
in 1828, See T. C. Smith, Ridbchester, 
252-3. 

It may be added that this surname 
occurs early, for William de Dutton in 
the 13th century granted to Adam son of 
Richard de Entwisle land in Dutton, the 
bounds of which name Ormsclough and 
Rakedanclough where Bailisti falls into 
it ; Towneley MS. DD, no. 1149. Henry 
son of Robert Franceys in 1342 gave land 
at Whitecarfall (or Quittarfall) in Rib- 
chester to John de Entwisle, afterwards 
held by Adam del Hull of Clayton ; Add. 
MS. 32107, no. 1028, 1105. 

4 T. C. Smith, op. cit. 232. For the 
Rothwell family see the accounts of Hoole 
and Sharples. 

15 Ibid. ; an illustration of the house is 
given. 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


of Blackburn,'® Clitheroe,” Talbot" of Salesbury, 
Moton,”® and Hoghton of Hoghton.% 


16 Adam de Blackburn gave his son 
Richard lands in Dutton and Hayhurst, 
part of them being held of St. Saviour’s, 
for the rent of a pair of white gloves ; 
Towneley MS. OO, no. 1191. Amabel 
widow of Adam de Blackburn claimed 
dower in 1291 in two messuages, &c., in 
Hayhurst and Dutton against William de 
Blackburn ; De Banco R. go, m. 87. 

Adam de Blackburn and others were 
accused of assault in 1292 by Jordan the 
Clerk of Dutton (son of Emma) ; Assize 
R. 408, m. 95d. In the same year Adam 
son of Master Adam de Blackburn re- 
leased an annual rent which Jordan owed 
him for land and meadow in the vill of 
Dutton ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 176. Six 
years later he demised to Adam de 
Huddleston for a term Whitworth in 
Dutton and two-thirds of a culture called 
the Coltepark ; Towneley MS. DD, no. 
2061. 

Robert de Cofhill granted land in the 
Hough and the Berecroft in Dutton to 
Adam de Blackburn, a rent of 6d. being 
payable to St. Saviour’s ; Towneley MS. 
DD, no, 2131. Adam son of Robert de 
Cofhill in 1297-8 claimed certain land 
against William de Blackburn, who replied 
that he (William) was a villein of Thomas 
le Surreys and held the said land in 
villeinage ; De Banco R. 116, m. 1174.3 
122, m. 48d, William, however, gave 
to Adam de Cofhill land in Hayhurst 
between the brook running from Cunuyld 
Wall to the Ribble and Wyarde Burn; 
Towneley MS. OO, no. 1207, 1193. A 
little earlier William son of Adam de 
Blackburn had obtained land from Adam 
son of Adam de Blackburn; De Banco 
R. 114, m. 863; 115, m. 179d. Robert 
de Clitheroe, clerk, obtained land from 
William de Blackburn in 13043; Assize 
R. 419, m. 11. Adam de Clitheroe in 
1327 complained that William and others 
had cut down his trees in Dutton; De 
Banco R. 269, m. 70d. 

The above-named Richard son of Adam 
de Blackburn seems to have been the 
founder of the family of Blackburn of 
Shevington and Dutton ; their deeds are 
in Add. MS. 32107, no. 1462, &c 
Richard son of Adam obtained lands 
from Henry de Cunliffe and also from 
William son of Richard de Dutton ; the 
latter grant included parts of Middes- 
holme, Bradridding and Dodhill (under 
the Stanrays); ibid. no. 1485, 1489. 
Richard also had from Richard de Dutton 
his part within the fields of Dodhill per- 
taining to 2 oxgangs of land in Dutton ; 
and from William de Dutton land in 
Dodhill, the bounds of which touched 
Karkesti ; ibid. no. 1506, 1510. Richard 
de Blackburn gave his son Thomas land 
in Dutton to the east of Dodhill Brook ; 
ibid. no. 1475. Thomas obtained other 
grants; ibid. no. 1496, 1501. 

V7 Ralph de Clayton gave Hugh de 
Clitheroe a moiety of the mill on the 
Ribble in a place called Harewas in 
Dutton ; Towneley MS. DD, no. 1177. 
William de Blackburn exchanged land on 
the Hough for another piece in Hayhurst 
with Hugh de Clitheroe ; ibid. no. 1157. 
Adam son of William de Dutton gave 
Roger de Clitheroe all his land in Dutton ; 
ibid. no. 2063. In 1316-17 Alice daughter 
of Geoffrey son of Godith de Dutton 
granted all her land in the township to 
Adam son of Hugh de Clitheroe ; ibid. 
no, 2069, 


7 


Others as Ash,”! 


In 1335 Cecily widow of Adam de 
Clitheroe recovered dower in land in 
Dutton against Philip de Clayton; De 
Banco R. 304, m. 235d. Some years 
later (1349) an agreement as to pasture 
was made between Henry de Clayton of 
Dutton on the one side and on the other 
Cecily widow of Adam de Clitheroe, 
William de Rilston and Sibyl his wife, 
Robert son and heir of Robert de 
Clitheroe and Adam de Blackburn ; DD, 
no. 2138, 

18 This family inherited the Clitheroe 
estate and made other purchases. 

Isabel daughter of Richard brother of 
Sir Robert de Clitheroe, who married John 
Talbot, had lands in Dutton and Rib- 
chester ; Lancs, Ing, p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 
42,55. Later the lands in Dutton are 
stated to be held of the Abbot of Whalley ; 
ibid. ii, 144, 161. 

19 William son of William de Dutton 
demised for his life to William son of 
Henry Moton a moiety of his land in 
Balbanridding at a rent of 2s. gd. ; Add. 
MS, 32106, no, 180. Jordan de Dutton, 
clerk, gave William the Tailor, son of 
Henry Moton, land in Mossiley Carr in 
13173 ibid. no. 147. In the same col- 
lection will be found other grants of land 
in Old Carr and New Carr, &c., to the 
same William son of Henry; some of 
them were made by Richard son of 
Amery and Thomas his son, In 1361 
William Moton of Dutton and Cecily 
widow of Nicholas Moton appear to have 
sold their lands to Henry de Clayton; 
ibid. no. 183, 178, 156. 

Richard son of William Moton was 
defendant in 1360, the plaintiffs being 
Richard son of Simon Ball of Farington, 
Alice his wife, Henry del Scholes of 
Cuerdale and Maud his wife ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Assize R. 8, m. $d. 

20 From the charters it appears that the 
Moton lands came into the possession of 
Sir Richard Hoghton about 1407; Add. 
MS. 32106, no. 129, &c. Sir Richard 
also acquired the lands of Hitche 
(Richard) son of Amery, which have 
been mentioned previously ; ibid. no. 145. 
One or two further references may be 
added: William son of William son of 
Maud de Ulnes Walton, together with 
Margery (his wife) and Hawise, daughters 
and heirs of William Baskit, in 1316-17 
granted the reversion of a toft in Dutton 
to Richard son of Amery (fem.) de Brad- 
hill and Alice his wife; ibid. no. 244. 
From another charter it appears that the 
grantors were the heirs of Adam son of 
Alice de Wheatley ; ibid. no. 138. Roger 
de Wheatley son of Richard the Smith of 
Chipping a little later gave them the right 
he had in a certain toft after the death of 
Alice his wife ; ibid. no. 130. In 1330 
Richard son of Amery gave his lands in 
Dutton and Ribchester to his son Thomas, 
with remainders to other sons William and 
John ; ibid. no. 484 (fol. 329). Thomas 
son of Richard made a feoffment or sale 
of his lands and the rent of gd. due from 
the land of William son of Robert de 
Ribchester in 1372; ibid. no. 171. 

Land in Dutton was held by Sir Henry 
Hoghton in 1424 3 Lanes. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soc.), ii, 43. The tenure of the Hoghton 
lands in Dutton was unknown in the 
16th century ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
xiv, no. 26 3 xv, no. 39. 

21 Deeds of this family are in Add. 
MS, 32107, no. 874, &c., and reference 


57 


RIBCHESTER 


took their names from places within Dutton, 


Dodhill,” 


Hayhurst * 


may be made to the account of Aighton 
and Bailey already given. 

Alexander del Ash (de Fraxino) demised 
land in Dutton to Richard del Ash for a 
term of years; ibid. no. gor. Henry de 
Clayton gave the same Richard Roughfall 
in Hayhurst; no. 890. Richard also 
obtained other lands in the same part of 
the township ; no. 880, goo. Richard del 
Ash made the following grants: In 
1320-1 to John his son a messuage in 
Hayhurst (no, 913); in 1335 to Hugh 
his son Willeriddings in Dutton, which 
Richard del Ash the younger seems to 
have confirmed (no. 911, 914) 3 and in 
1336 to Robert his son Roughfall 
(no. 907). Hugh son of Richard del Ash 
in 1361 granted all his land in Dutton to 
Robert de Bailey ; no. 887. In the same 
year Margery daughter and heir of Robert 
de Hayhurst by Emota his wife released 
all her right in Dutton to Robert del Ash ; 
no. 876. 

Robert son of Richard del Ashes in 
1347 recovered a messuage and lands in 
Dutton and Aighton against his brother 
Richard and others; Assize R. 1435, 
m. 33d. Robert del Ash in 1360 claimed 
messuages, &c., in Dutton against Hugh 
del Ash; it appeared that Richard del 
Ash had in the time of Edward II granted 
them to John del Ash and to William and 
Robert, the brothers of John, and that 
John and William had died without issue ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 7, m. 53 8, 
m. 6. Robert del Ash in 1366 claimed land 
against Robert de Leyland and Katherine 
his wife ; De Banco R. 425, m. 504. 

The descent cannot be traced accurately, 
Richard son of Robert in 1378-9 married 
Ellen de Aighton; Add. MS. 32107, 
no. 878. Richard appears to have had 
sons John and Thomas; ibid. no. 886, 
gtg. Robert son and heir of Thomas 
Ash in the time of Edward IV married 
Elizabeth Crumbleholme ; ibid. no. 912. 

Hugh Ash died in Sept. 1554 hold- 
ing messuages in Dutton of the king 
and queen in chief by knight’s service ; 
his son George was a year old ; Duchy of 
Lance. Ing. p.m. x, no. 35. George Ash 
appears in 1583; Pal. of Lance. Feet of F. 
bdle. 45, m. 172. 

Edward Ash in 1609 held Clough Bank 
of the lord of Dutton; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec, Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), i, 165. 
Edward Ash of Dutton in 1630 com- 
pounded for his recusancy by paying £3 
yearly ; Trans, Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xxiv, 
174. 

Robert Ash of Dutton in 1652 desired 
confirmation of a house and land seques- 
tered for the recusancy of John Talbot of 
Dinckley ; Cal. Com. for Comp. ii, 1449. 

2 This family appears from an early 
time, and some references to it will be 
found in deeds already quoted. Thomas 
de Bradhurst of Dutton granted a toft to 
John son of Thomas de Dudhill in 
1316-17; Add. MS. 32107, no. 1525. 
Richard de Dudhill in 1342 granted land 
in Ribchester to Adam son of Richard 
Award de Dutton ; Towneley MS. OO, 
no. 1198. Thomas son of William de 
Dudhill made grants of land in Hunting- 
don in 1364 and 1375 ; Add. MS. 32107, 
no. 1524, 1462. 

Part at least of the Dudhill lands ap- 
pears to have descended to the Bradleys 
mentioned later. 

23 Deeds of this family are contained 
in Towneley’s MS. OO, no. 1191, &c. 


8 


and Hunting- 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


don.4 =A few sadditional 


township. 


For their lands the following contributed to the 
subsidy of 1524 : Edmund Bradley, Robert Goodshaw, 
John Hayhurst and Richard Townley.*? Similarly to 
that of 1543 Richard Townley and Robert Ash the 
elder.22 To that of 1597 Thomas Holt, Henry 
Townley, Edward Ash, John Hayhurst and Richard 


A noteworthy grant was one by the 
prior of the Hospitallers to Richard son 
of Adam Award de Dutton of lands called 
Canfall (by Dodhill Moss), Hichetleys, 
by the Stonebridge, Codee, Bernardacre 
and four butts in landoles; a rent of 
6s. 6d. was to be paid, and half a mark 
at death; ibid. no. 1196. In 1508 
accordingly 6s. 8d. was paid for the 
‘obit’ of Henry father of John Hayhurst; 
ibid. no. 1217. 

Robert son of William de Dutton 
granted land in Hayhurst belonging to 
the vill of Dutton to Otes son of John 
son of Roger de Hayhurst. The bounds 
name Ash House, Wyardburn to Ribble, 
down the Ribble to land held of St. 
Leonard; ibid. no. 1192. Otes de 
Hayhurst and Margery his wife appear in 
13353 no. 1215, 1202. Margery was 
a widow in 1338, and there were several 
sons, William, Richard and John being 
named; no. 1455, 1430, 1432, 1440. 
John son of Otes de Hayhurst and Alice 
his wife are mentioned from 1348 to 
1372, and Alice was a widow in 1379; 
no. 1216, 1205, 1200. Alice was 
probably one of the three sisters and 
heirs of an Adam Award and had a son 
John ; no. 1212, 1197, 1476. John son 
and heir of Otes Hayhurst in 1g01 gave 
lands in Dutton to William son of 
Richard Hayhurst; no. 1435-6. See 
also an undated testimony as to the 
possessions of William Hayhurst; no. 
1476. Oliver son and heir of Robert 
Hayhurst had landin Dutton in 1446-7 5 
no, 1194. The will of Percival Hayhurst, 
1499-1500 names his son and heir John ; 
no. 1457. John ton and heir of John 
Hoyhurst dij homage for his lands (in 
Bailey) at the court of Aighton in 1549 3 
no. 1441.  Jenet widow and executrix of 
Henry Hayhurst of Hayhurst in 1574 
became bound to John, the son and heir, 
an executor; no. 1226, 

Thomas son of Robert son of William 
de Hayhurst in 1364 claimed a messuage, 
&c.,in Dutton against John de Hayhurst ; 
De Banco R. 417, m. 2143 419, m. 
22d. 

John Hayhurst died in 1619 holding 
Hayhurst, Furtherhouse and Hough- 
wellfall of the heirs of Richard de 
Dutton by a rent of sd. His heir was 
his son Henry, aged forty-two ; Lancs. 
Inj. pam. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
ii, 121. For Houghwellfall cf. Fallwel- 
halgh in the account of Ribchester. 

The Hayhursts were Puritans ; one of 
them was vicar of Leigh 1646-62, and 
founded the library at Ribchester. Sce 
the account of the family in T. C. Smith, 
Ribchester, 232-4. On the opposite side 
Lawrence Hayhurst of Dutton, yeoman, 
registered his house and land in 17137 a8 
a ‘Papist’; Estcourt and Payne, Engi. 
Cath, Non-jurors, 104, 

4 In 1277 Robert de Huntingdon, liy- 
ing at the abbey of Selby, came to Dutton 


owners, 
Harrison 26 and Thorpe,”’ are also known. 

The abbeys of Whalley ** and Sawley 29 and the 
hospital of St. Leonard at York 30 had land in the 


at Bradley,?* | Goodshaw.*8 


this list.#4 


and buried his son Roger, and then entered 
upon half his land, whereupon Beatrix 
widow of Roger, Robert her son, Richard 
de Wulnesbooth, John le Surreys, Hugh 
the Clerk and Henry de Blackburn made 
complaint ; Assize R. 1235, m. 12. 

It may be added that Thomas son of 
Richard de Ulvesbooths and Jordan his 
son, a clerk, attested a local charter ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 1137. 

25 In 1466 William Bradley, chaplain, 
granted to John son of Henry Bradley 
lands in Dutton inherited from his 
mother; Add. MS. 32107, no. 1464. 
From a feoffment of 1370 it would seem 
that this land had belonged to John son 
of Adam de Bradley in right of his 
marriage with Beatrice daughter of John 
de Dudhill ; ibid. no. 1518. 

Edmund Bradley died in 1529 holding 
a messuage in Dutton of the king aa 
duke by the hundredth part of a knight’s 
fee and the rent of 1d, or a pair of white 
gauntlets. The heir was his grandson 
John Bradley (son of John), aged seven- 
teen years in 1539, and an idiot ; he had 
sisters Anne and Alice, aged nineteen and 
fifteen. James Sharples was the uncle 
and guardian of the said John ; Duchy of 
Lanc, Ing. p.m. viii, no. 22. From a 
later pleading it appears that John 
Bradley died in 1545; Anne married 
Alexander Bimson and Alice Thomas 
Wynhart, and a division was made in 
15503; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 184, m. 
4d.3; 190,m. 2. See also Ducatus Lane. 
ii, 220, for a claim to a moiety of 
Dudhill by the Bimsons. In 1609 a 
fourth part of Dudhill was held of the 
Crown (as of the Hospitallers) by Richard 
Thornley and John Bimson, and the 
remainder by John Bimson, by a total 
rent of 2s.; Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 1334. 

26 The estate was known as Smithy- 
bottom. Richard Harrison, who died in 
Oct. 1587, had made a settlement in 
1578 in favour of his son Richard (aged 
twenty-four in 1589), and afterwards, 
his daughter Jane marrying one Thomas 
Jones, he granted them a third part of 
the messuage for twenty-one years. The 
whole was held of the queen by the 
2ooth part of a knight’s fee and a 
rent of 3s. 7d.; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. 
p.m. xv, no. §7. For fines relating to 
the estate see Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdles. 49, m. 1423 56,m.54 3 59,m.218. 

From the Ducatus Lanc. it appears that 
a number of disputes soon afterwards 
broke out; op. cit. iii, 215, &c. Richard 
Harrison in 1594 complained that 
Thomas Jones, his brother-in-law, 
Richard Goodshaw and others retained 
possession of Smithybottom and its lands. 
At his father’s death he said he had been 
a minor, T. Jones being his guardian ; 
Duchy of Lance. Plead. Eliz. clxiv, 
H12. John Lynalx or Lennox after- 
wards claimed a third part ; Ducatus Lanc. 


iil, 399, 442. 


58 


To that of 1626 Henry Townley, 
John Hayhurst, Edward Ash and Robert Good- 
shaw ; various non-communicants are entered on 


Richard Duckett of Dutton paid {10 in 1631 on 
declining knighthood.* 

The land tax return of 1787 shows that Thomas 
Weld, Sir George Warren, Lord Petre and Mrs. 
Jane Entwisle were then the chief landowners. 

The manor of ST/DD*® was acquired by the 
Hospitallers about 


1265 from a more ancient 


Edward Houghton died 30 June 1621 
holding a messuage and land called 
‘Smeathbottom’ by the 6ooth part 
of a knight's fee and the third part 
of a rent of 3s. 7d. Edward his son and 
heir was twenty-nine years old ; Lancs, 
Inq. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
ii, 276. 

37 John Thorpe died in 1588, leaving a 
son and heir John, aged fifty-six ; Duchy 
of Lance. Ing. p.m. xv, no, 52. 

The Walmsleys purchased lands in 
Dutton as well as in Ribchester, and 
Thomas Walmsley was in 1584 found 
to have held land in Dutton ; ibid. xiv, 
no. 72. 

Robert Reade of Aighton held land in 
Dutton in 1610; Lancs. Ing. pm. (Rec. 
Soc.), i, 177. 

Bartholomew Barker of Salesbury was 
a landowner in 16413 Duchy of Lane. 
Ing. p.m. xxx, no, 11. 

In these cases the tenure 
recorded. 

28-The land at Harrows Banks in 
Dutton produced a rent of £2 55. about 
1540. The tenants at will were Dew- 
hurst, Green and Bolton; Whalley 
Couch, (Chet. Soc.), iv, 1219. From a 
preceding note it is known that the 
Shireburnes of Stonyhurst had also part 
of the abbey land, In 1557-8 Kenning- 
field and Harrows Banks in Dutton and 
Clayton, lately belonging to Whalley 
Abbey, were sold by the Crown to Richard 
Shireburne ; Pat. 4 & 5 Phil. and Mary, 
pt. viii. Dutton Lee, &c., were in 1564 
granted to Charles Jackson and William 
Mason ; Pat. 6 Eliz. pt. x. 

» The grants by the Dutton family 
have been recorded above, Thomas 
Sowerbutts died in 1594 holding Reedy- 
snape, part of the lands of Sawley 
acquired by Sir Arthur Darcy in 1538; 
it was held by the 2ooth part of a 
knight's fee ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
xvi, no. 20, His grandson Thomas (son 
of Robert) died in 1623 holding the same 
lands and leaving a son Robert, under 
age; ibid. xxv, no. 37. 

® The ‘land of St. Leonard’ has been 
named in a Hayhurst charter already 


is not 


quoted. In 1299 the master of the 
Hospital of St. Leonard of York 
recovered lands in Dutton against 
Richard son of Robert del Hes of 


Hayhurst, John son of Avice and Otes 
son of John ; there was some suspicion 
of fraud or evasion of the statute; De 
Banco R. 130, m. 243. 

81 Subs. R. Lancs. 
82. 

89 Ibid. no. 125. 

88 Ibid. bdle. 131, no. 274. 

54 Ibid. no. 317. 

85 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lanes. and Ches.), 
i 217. 

86 The old spelling was some form of 
Stede; ‘Le Styde,’ 1343. Stydd is a 
common form at present. 


bdle. 130, no, 


Dutron Hatt: Tue Gareway 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


hospital.37_ Grants which have been preserved indicate 
that there had been an organized community there 
for at least fifty years,*® the endowments being given 
‘to God and B. Mary the Virgin and the hospital of 
St. Saviour under Longridge and to the master and 
Some of the masters 
or wardens granted or attested 13th-century charters.‘ 
In 1338 it was reported that the camera of St. Saviour 
called the Stidd, under the preceptory of Newland in 
Yorkshire, was demised to farm at 10 marks yearly, 
but the farmer was bound to pay a chaplain singing 
From this it may be assumed that divine 
service was maintained down to the Reformation.” 


brethren serving God there.’ 39 


there.*! 


87 In 1292 it was found that the 
Knights Hospitallers had acquired from 
a certain Adam, chaplain-warden of the 
house of St. Saviour at Dutton, two 
plough-lands, with wood and moor, and 
40s. rent in Dutton, Ribchester and 
Aighton during the minority of Henry de 
Lacy and with the assent of Alice de 
Lacy ; Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 


376. The date must lie between 1258 
and 1271. See B.M. Add. Charters, 
no. 7364. 


83 The earliest part of the chapel may 
be dated about 1190. 

89 Charters of land in Ribchester and 
Dilworth have been quoted in the accounts 
of those townships; see also Dugdale, 
Mon. Angl. vi, 686-7. 

40 Alexander the Chaplain, master of 
the hospital of St. Saviour, and the 
brethren of the same place made a grant 
early in the 13th century regarding land 
in Salesbury; Towneley MS. DD, no. 
2021. Land in Hothersall was held of 
the hospital by Richard de Ametehalgh 
and to one of the deeds regarding it the 
first witnesses were ‘ Brother Alexander, 
rector of the hospital of St. Saviour ; 
brother Adam of the same place’; Add. 
MS. 32106, no. 5 (fol. 241). Brother 
Alexander the prior and Adam the chap- 
lain also occur; note by Mr. Weld. 

A somewhat later deed was attested by 
Adam de Blackburn and John his son, 
master of St. Saviour; Add. MS. 32106, 
Noe 119. 

In 1269—70 Richard son of the master 
of the Stidd, or son of Alexander de la 
Stidd, was defendant; Cur. Reg. R. 
199, m. 27d.3 202, m. 26d. It does 
not appear that Alexander was then 
living, so that he may be identical with 
Alexander the chaplain. 

Adam Prior of St. Saviour occurs as 
witness to a Dutton charter which men- 
tions land in Hayhurst belonging to the 
house of St. Saviour ; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 170. 

The hospital may not have become 
extinct on its transference to the Knights 
of St. John, for Walter the Chaplain, 
warden of the house of St. Saviour in 
Dutton, was the first witness to a local 
charter in 1314; Add. MS. 32106, no. 
187. In 1339 Walter de Lofthousum, 
warden of St. Saviour’s by Ribchester, 
was one of the defendants in a dispute 
about land in Ribchester involving several 
Dutton people. The chief plaintiffs were 
Hugh son of John de Huntingdon and 
Joan his wife ; Assize R. 427, m.2 d., 3d. 

41 Hospitallers in Engl. (Camd. Soc.), 
111. In 1351 the Prior of St. John 
granted the manor of St. Saviour called 
the Stidd to Richard Tomelay (? Townley) 
for life. The lessee was to maintain the 
buildings and the chantry and pay £8a 
year to the treasury at Clerkenwell 


hurst.46 


others.48 


(Fontis clericorum), A mark was to be 
paid at death as obit. When the pre- 
ceptor or warden of Ribston should come 
(not more than once a year) to hold the 
prior’s court, provision for men and horses 
was to be made by the lessee ; M/SS. Var. 
Coll. (Hist. MSS. Com.), ii, 228. 

In 1292 Robert Spendloue and Amery 
his wife were non-suited in a claim against 
the Prior of the Hospitallers as to a tene- 
ment in Dutton; Assize R. 408, m. 22. 
In 1337 the prior did not prosecute his 
claim against Thomas de Dudhill of 
Dutton ; Assize R. 1424, m. 11d. 

William Hall (see Chipping) in 1506 
held a messuage, &c., in Dutton of the 
Prior of St. John of Jerusalem by a rent 
of 7s. 6d.; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m, iii, 
no. 19. 

42Tn 1501 Nicholas Talbot appointed 
a priest to sing for twelve months at 
Stidd, ‘where father and mother are 
buried’; Whitaker, Walley (ed. Nicholls), 
ii, 465. In 1535 Thomas Bradley was 
chaplain at Stidd ; Valor Eccl. (Rec. Com.), 
vy, 68. The bailiff there was John Talbot ; 
he had a fee of 305. ; ibid. 69. 

48 Pat. 35 Hen. VIII, pt. iv. The 
manor, with many other estates, was held 
by the thirtieth part of a knight’s fee ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xi, no. 46, It 
is regularly named in settlements and 
inquisitions ; e.g. Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 1583 ti, 81; 
iii, 371. 

44 An estate called Stidd in Dutton 
belonged in 1716 to John Shireburne, 
younger brother of Richard Shireburne 
of Bailey; Payne, Engl. Cath, Rec. 144. 
In 1725 John Shireburne of Shefield— 
where he was agent to the Duke of Nor- 
folk—was engaged to marry Margaret 
Nelson of Fairhurst, £40 being settled 
on her from ‘the capital messuage called 
Stidd, and demesne lands in Stidd, Rib- 
chester and Blackburn’; Piccope MSS. 
(Chet. Lib.), iii, 228, from roll 11 of Geo. I 
at Preston. Next year John Shireburne 
made his will, To Elizabeth widow of 
his brother Richard he gave £15 a year 
out of Bailey Hall ; to his cousin Richard 
Walmsley of Showley (who was one of 
the residuary legatees) £10 for the poor 
of Bailey, Stidd, &c., and £10 for a piece 
of plate. His executors were to build a 
good almshouse on his estate at Stidd for 
five poor persons to live separately therein, 
and to endow it with £30 a year, viz. 
£5 for each inmate and £5 for repairs. 
He died in Dec. 1726. See C. D. Sher- 
born, Sherborn Fam. 73-6. 

49 Pat. g Jas. I, pt. xxvii, At the 
same time an extent was made ; Kuerden 
MSS. ii, fol. 1325-36. It appears that 
Stidd was occupied by Robert Goodshaw, 
who paid 4s. rent. There was a consider- 
able number of farms, &c., in Dutton and 
the adjoining townships. 


a9 


RIBCHESTER 


Nothing definite, however, 's known, for the manor 
was extra-parochial. 

After the Suppression the manor was given to 
Thomas Holt of Gristlehurst 4? and remained in his 
family for more than a century. 
acquired later by Shireburne of Bailey, founder of the 
Stidd Almshouses.44 In 1609, however, an independent 
grant was made to George Whitmore and others,* 
who in 1613 sold to Richard Shireburne of Stony- 
Apart from these manors the Crown had 
sold various lands to Richard Crombleholme 4” and 
The manor was in later times claimed by 
the Shireburnes and their representatives.‘? 


It may have been 


This second manor may have been due 
to a regrant to the Hospitallers by Queen 
Mary of Stidd with numerous dependen- 
cies ; Pat. 4 & § Phil. and Mary, pt. iv. 

4° Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 132. The 
sale included the manor of Stidd, formerly 
belonging to the Knights of St. John of 
Jerusalem, with customary rents in 
Chipping, Barbing, Thornley, Chaigley, 
Aighton, Bailey and Belingfield, &c., 
together with perquisites of the court of 
Stidd ; but a rent of £4 10s. ofd. for 
Stidd, Forton and Cunscough was to be 
paid to the Crown. 

In 1543 Sir Alexander Osbaldeston had 
a lease of ‘the manor or capital messuage 
of the Stidd,’ by purchase from John 
Cowell, who had it from the Crown at a 
rent of £5 1s. 8d.; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 1076. 

47 The grant to Richard Crombleholme 
in Dutton, Huntingdon, Milneclough, &c., 
appears to have been from part of the 
Hospitallers’ possessions ; Pat. 38 Hen. 
VIII, pt. xvii. In the extent of 1609, 
above referred to, Richard Crombleholme 
is stated to have held Huntingdon and 
‘Bailey in Dutton’ by the twentieth part 
of a knight’s fee and 35. 1d. rent, and to 
have granted out many portions of the 
lands. y 

Richard Crombleholme the elder held 
a messuage ‘in Huntingdon in Bailey in 
the township of Dutton’ and various 
lands, and made a settlement of part 
thereof in 1576. His son William hav- 
ing died before him, he was succeeded by 
a grandson Richard the younger (son of 
William), who died at Dutton in 1588 
holding Huntingdon, &c., of the queen by 
the hundredth part of a knight’s fee, and 
other land in Dutton of Sir Richard 
Shireburne as of his manor of Dutton. 
Richard, the son and heir of the younger 
Richard, was seven years old ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 40. See further 
in T. C. Smith, op. cit. 238-9. 

William Crombleholme of Dutton was 
arrested in 1584 on his way to the Con- 
tinent to be educated for the priesthood 
and was imprisoned in the Tower for some 
time ; Misc. (Cath. Rec. Soc.), ili, 17 5 
Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. iii, 4.10 
(quoting Bridgewater's Concertatio). He 
is supposed to have become a missionary 
priest in Lancashire. 

Huntingdon is now the property of 
Mr. Holt of Stubby Lee in Spotland. 

48 Carlinghurst was in 1560 granted to 
Thomas Reeve and Richard Pynde; Pat. 
2 Eliz. pt. iii, Afterwards it was held 
by the Shireburnes. 

49 In a fine of 1686 respecting the manor 
of Stidd and various messuages, lands, &c., 
in Stidd, Ribchester and Blackburn the 
plaintiff was Edward Burdett and the 
deforciants were James Stamford, Richard 
Chorley, Richard Husband, Richard 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


After the Reformation an allowance 
of 405. was ordered from the manor estate 
towards the stipend of a chaplain at 
Stidd,®® but this became merely a perquisite of the 
vicar of Ribchester,*! who held a service in the 
dilapidated chapel several times a year. The 
extra-parochial district has now been formally united 
to the parish of Ribchester, and service is performed 
once a month and more frequently in the summer. 

The chapel of ST. SAVIOUR at Stidd* stands 
amongst fields in a pleasant situation about half a mile 
to the north-east of Ribchester. It is an exceedingly 
interesting and rather picturesque ** building sub- 
stantially of late 12th-century date, with subsequent 
alterations, in plan a plain rectangle 46 ft. 6 in. long 
internally by 20 ft. 6 in. wide, and with a small 
south porch. The walls, which are 3 ft. thick, are 
faced with rubble masonry, but at a later date, 
probably in the 13th century, square buttresses of 
two stages have been added at each angle, built with 
dressed stone and with chamfered plinths. The north 
wall retains all its original 12th-century features 
unaltered, having two narrow semicircular-headed 


labelled windows, with g-in. lights splaying on 


CHAPEL 


CM 152 Century 
£3 152 Century 
[-] MoDERN 
WO. 10 


[Sacousevse: 


SCALE OF Teer 


Pian oF Sr. Saviour’s Cuaret, Stipp 


the inside to 3 ft. 10 in., and between them a door- 
way, 2 ft. 4 in. wide, now built up, with semi- 


Shireburne, John Shireburne, Richard  donative from the 


Lord Archbishop of 


circular head, chamfered jambs, and hood mould 
with plain zigzag ornament. On the south side a 
single 12th-century window remains, similar in 
character to those on the north, but of greater height 
and widened out in its lower half toa width of 12 in. 
The other windows on the south side are of 15th- 
century date, each of three lights under a square 
head. They, however, differ in detail, and were 
probably not inserted at the same time, that at 
the eastern end, which is the earlier, having no 
hood mould but with cusped heads to the lights, 
the opening going right up under the eaves. 
The other is slightly lower, with external hood 
mould and without cuspings, and may be of 16th- 
century date. The lower part of both windows is 
now built up. The south doorway is at the western 
end of the wall, and is a good example of early 1 3th- 
century work, probably inserted soon after the original 
building was finished. It has a pointed arch of two 
moulded orders springing from moulded imposts, and 
angle shafts with carved caps. The detail of the 
carving is transitional in character, but the appearance 
of the doorway has been spoiled by successive coats 
of whitewash. On the east side the detached outer 
shaft has gone. ‘The door is the original oak nail- 
studded one. A plain open porch 6 ft. 6 in. square 
has been built at a later date in front of the doorway, 
consisting simply of two rough stone walls with stone 
lintel and rubble gable. 

The east window is a modern pointed one of three 
lights, the mullions crossing in the head, but internally 
it has a segmental arched head. ‘The gable above is 
quite plain, and below the window is a dwarf buttress. 
The east wall, unlike those on the north and south, 
has a plinth suggesting its entire reconstruction at 
the time the angle buttresses were added. On the 
south wall below the easternmost window is a portion 
of a string 13 ft. in length, detached at each end, 
between the buttress and the 12th-century window. 

At the west end, high up in the wall, is a late 
two-light pointed window, the sill of which is 10 ft. 
above the floor of the chapel, and in the south-west 
corner a pointed doorway, the threshold of which is 
8 ft. 6 in. above the floor. On the outside, where 
the ground has probably risen all round, the height 
of the door from the ground is only 6 ft. 6 in. Both 


tithes (by composition) £1 14s. 1d. In 


Walmsley and John Walmsley ; Pal. of 
Lance. Feet of F. bdle. 216, m. 38. The 
Shireburnes here named were those of 
Bailey Hall, and the ‘manor’ may be 
that of the Holt family. 

On the other hand the manor of Stidd 
is named among the Shireburne of Stony- 
hurst possessions in 1737 and 17273 Pal: 
of Lance. Plea R. 544, m. 13; 625, m. 
tod. (16). 

*“ This was directed in the sale to 
Thomas Holt. The tithes of the district 
seem also to have been paid by custom to 
the chaplain, but by compositions they 
became very trifling in amount. 

5! At first there seems to have been a 
separate chaplain, for one John Moss was 
there in 1574. He gave acertificate that 
Edward Ash had received the communion 
from him at Stidd Church in Passion 
week that year. Ash had been sum- 
moned before the Bishop of Chester for 
his omission in that matter; Chester 
Consistory Ct. Rec. 

About 1610 Stidd was described as ‘a 


Canterbury’; there was ‘no minister 
there resident’; Hiss. MSS. Com. Rep. 
xiv, App. iv, 9. On 21 Jan, 1616-17 
Richard Learoyd, B.A., was admitted to 
the church of Stidd on the presentation of 
Francis Holt ; Act Bk.at Chester, 1579- 
1676, fol. 65. The vicars of Ribchester 
were therefore in charge, and the con- 
venient custom remained in force. The 
right of patronage or donation was exercised 
by Francis Holt, but on the decay of this 
family and the apparent extinction of the 
manor the vicar of Ribchester seems to 
have been regarded as the patron, Stidd 
thus becoming a curacy. In 1650 it was 
regarded as Mr. Holt’s donative, and was 
worth £6 13s. 4d., this sum being paid 
‘to the minister at Rilchester, being 
accounted parson at Stidd.’ ‘There were 
only seventeen families in the parish ; 
Commonw. Ch. Surv. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), 170. 

About 1717 Bishop Gastrell found the 
income to be £3 19s. 1d., being £2 from 
Stidd Hall, from three other estates Gis, 


60 


1690 the ‘vicar of Ribchester [? was] 
instituted to Stidd and invested with all 
the rights belonging to it.’ The ancient 
burial-ground was in use ; Noritia Cestr. 
(Chet. Soc.), ii, 476-8. 

5? In Gastrell’s time it was ‘served by 
the vicar on New Year's Day, Good 
Friday and some other Sundays in sum- 
mer time’; ibid. i, 478. A century 
later Whitaker wrote that divine service 
was performed ‘only twice a year’ ; nce 
reading desk was ever erected and prayers 
are read out of the pulpit’ ; Whalley (ed, 
Nicholls), ii, 465. 

58 A monograph entitled ‘The History 
of Stydd Chapel and Preceptory near Rib- 
chester, Lancashire,’ by George Latham, 
architect, was published in 1853. It 
contains fourteen plates, mostly measured 
drawings, The letterpress is of little 
value, 

*4 Its ‘picturesque beauty’ in 1801 is 
noticed in Whitaker's Whalley, loc. cit. 
A view of the building is given by T. C. 
Smith, Longridge, 166. 


Durron: Stipp Cuapet From THE Norru 


Durron: Stipp CHareL: Nave and CHANCEL 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


window and door are now built up, and the south 
buttress at the west end is broken at the top. The 
doorway was probably the means of access from the 
formerly existing buildings of the hospital to a gallery 
at the west end of the chapel, the condition of the 
external masonry at the south-west angle of the 
building indicating a structural connexion at this 
point. 

The roof, which is covered with stone slates, is for 
the most part ancient, though patched and mended, 
and consists of simple tie-beam trusses without king 
posts, but with a species of very small collar and king 
post close to the top. One of the tie-beams has the 
sacred monogram carved on its underside, and another 
has a floreated ornament, and the space between the 
spars is plastered. The floor is flagged, and the 
interior is generally in a rather neglected condition. 
The walls are plastered and whitewashed, and there 
being no means of heating the building, which is 
little used but in the summer months, it has naturally 
suffered in the course of years. The piscina remains 
at the east end of the south wall, and has a trefoiled 
head, but the bowl has gone. The sanctuary is still 
marked by a late 17th or early 18th-century oak 
screen standing 13 ft. from the east wall, now in a 
very dilapidated condition, the framework with some 
turned balusters along the top being all that is left. 
The screen is 5 ft. 11 in. high, and finishes at the 
south end against the pulpit, which stands against the 
south wall immediately to the east of the 12th-century 
window. It is of oak, with nine sides, and stands 
on a rough stone base 3 ft. 3 in. high, with stone 
steps on the west side, the topmost one of which is 
level with the sill of the window. The pulpit is 
probably of late 17th-century date, and is 4 ft. high 
with plain panelled sides. It appears to have formerly 
had a suspended canopy, the chain of which with 
turned oak spindle still remains. The font is in- 
teresting, and belongs to the first half of the 16th 
century. It is of dark gritstone, octagonal in shape, 
each side with a shield bearing sacred, heraldic and 
other devices, some of which have been differently 
interpreted.*> Against the north end of the screen 
facing the nave is a long oak seat with panelled back, 
and there is a square oak pew in the north-east corner 
of the sanctuary. The altar table is of oak, and is 
probably the one given in 1703.°° There are no 
communion rails, and the seats in the church are 
modern benches without backs. 

The floor of the sanctuary is slightly raised round 
the table and along the north side. Below the table 
is a 14th-century double sepulchral stone, 3 ft. 9 in. 
square, with two floreated crosses marking the burial- 


22See Smith, Ribchester, 134-5, John. 


Smith suggests they are the initials 


RIBCHESTER 


place of Sir Adam and Lady Alicia de Clitheroe. 
The inscription, which is very much worn and 
defaced, is read as: ‘AMEN. HIC JACET DOMINVS ADA 
DE CLIDEROV M(ILES) (P)ROPICIETVR DEVS—HIC JACET 
. os. ADE. Cvivs ATE PRopicieTvr peEvs.” 57 On 
the south side of the sanctuary are two other 
sepulchral slabs, one 6 ft. long with an incised cross, 
broken at the top, and the other 5 ft. 9 in. long 
with raised floreated cross within a circle. In the 
floor close by, now partly hidden by seating, is the 
tombstone with Latin inscription of Bishop Petre, 
vicar apostolic of the northern district, who died in 
1775 at Showley Hall. 

A scheme for the restoration of the chapel in 1888 
was abandoned.®® There is a small cemetery on 
three sides of the building, and a public path through 
the fields passes it on the west side. On the south 
side is the base of an old cross. 


ALSTON WITH HOTHERSALL 


Alston, 1292 ; occasionally an 4 is prefixed. 

Hudereshale, 1199 ; Hudersale, 1212 ; Huddres- 
hal, 1254; Hordeshal, 1256; Hudersale, Huderis- 
hale, Hodereshale, 1292 ; Hothersall, xvi cent. 

This township is within the hundred of Amounder- 
ness. Its area is 3,0784 acres, of which Alston has 
2,040 and Hothersall 1,038%.' The population in 
1go1 numbered 2,007.2. The two portions, Hother- 
sall being to the east and Alston to the west, are now 
considered independent townships. Norcross is in 
the south-west of Hothersall. The surface is hilly, 
the general slope being from north to south, and 
many brooks flow southwards through wooded valleys 
to join the Ribble. In the bends of this river lie 
areas of level land. There are no villages or note- 
worthy hamlets in the greater part of the area, but 
on the extreme northern edge lies a part of Long- 
ridge. 

The principal road is one from Preston to Long- 
ridge, and there is another near the northern border 
from this town to Ribchester. The Preston and 
Longridge line of the London and North Western 
and Lancashire and Yorkshire Companies’ railways 
runs along the north-western boundary. 

At Hothersall Hall ‘a demon is supposed to be 
“laid” under a laurel tree until he can spin a rope 
from the sands of the River Ribble, which runs near 
the house.’ 3 

Before the Conquest it is supposed 
that Alston was a part of Dilworth. 
Afterwards, when Dilworth proper be- 
came part of the honor of Clitheroe, Alston and 


MANORS 


57 Smith, op. cit. 136. There is an 


where illustrations of the font and the 
carved shields are given. The shields, 
beginning at the west, are as follows: 
(1) I-H*C; (2) the sacred heart, hands 
and feet ; (3) the initials T.P.; (4) a 
quatrefoil, on a chief a cross ; (5) arms 
of Clitheroe of Salesbury.; (6) arms of 
Hothersall of Hothersall ; (7) five bulls’ 
heads caboshed in cross; (8) arms of 
Newport of Salop. ‘Every effort has 
been made to identify nos. 4 and 7, but 
without success.’ It has been suggested 
that the initials T. P. refer to the name 
of the donor, that P. stands for Prior and 
that the letters stand for Turcopolier, one 
of the official titles in the Order of St. 


of Sir Thomas Pemberton, preceptor of 
Newland, under which Stidd was a camera 
and that the font was a gift from the 
Preceptory. Whitaker assigns no. 4 to 
the Knights Hospitallers, but gives no 
explanation of the other arms. Smith 
acknowledges indebtedness in his inter- 
pretations to Sir Henry Dryden, bart., 
F.S.A., and to Mr. Joseph Gillow. 

56 (Dec. 11703. This day Mr. Ogden, 
vicar of Ribchester, gave y® communion 
table at Stid Church and caused the long 
seat in the church to be fixt under the 
south window’; Church Book quoted by 
Smith, Ribchester, 132. 


61 


illustration in Cutts’s Sepulchral Slabs, 
plate Ixiv. 

58 A report on the state of the structure 
with suggestions for its repair, a copy of 
which has been communicated by the 
present rector, was made in that year. 
Some portions of it are quoted by Smith, 
op. cit. 132-3. 

1 Alston, 2,037 acres; Hothersall, 
1,056; including 46 and 24 acres of 
inland water respectively ; Census Rep. 
1901. 

2 Of these 1,865 were in Alston, in- 
cluding Longridge. 

8 Harland and Wilkinson, Legends and 
Traditions, 24.0. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Hothersall remained in the king’s hands, being held 


of him in thegnage. 


In the survey of 1212 it was found that Thomas 
de Burnhull held half a plough-land in chief by the 
This was ALSTON. 
descend like Brindle, but became divided between 
the lords of Samlesbury and Lathom, each holding 
nominally a moiety, but the former paying 3s. rent 
The original partition was pro- 
bably in the ratio of the thegnage rents—into 3 
oxgangs of land and 1 oxgang—for William son of 
Roger de Samlesbury about 1230 granted 3 oxgangs 


service of 45.4 


and the latter 15.° 


4 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 50. Peter de 
Burnhull paid 4s. for half a plough-land 
in Alston held in thegnage in 1226 ; 
ibid. i, 139. The 4s. rent was paid to 
the Earl of Lancaster in 1297, but the 
tenants’ names are not recorded ; ibid. 
289. 

$In 1324 Nicholas D’Ewyas and 
Robert de Holland held a moiety of the 
manor of Alston by the service of 3s. 
yearly ; the other moiety was held by 
Robert de Lathom, who rendered 124. ; 
Dods. MSS, cxxxi, fol. 39. 

Again in 1346 Gilbert de Southworth, 
in right of his wife, and Robert de Holland, 
held the fourth part of a plough-land in 
Alston by a rent of 3s., and Thomas de 
Lathom also held the fourth part of a 
plough-land by a rent of 12d. 5 Survey of 
1346 (Chet. Soc.), 48. 

A century later Richard Hoghton was 
said to hold the fourth part of a plough- 
land by a rent of 12d, (for 3s.), and 
Sir Thomas Stanley similarly by 124. 
rent ; Extent of 1445-6 in Duchy of 
Lanc. Knights’ Fees, bdle.2, no. 20. In 
the former case the intermediate lordship 
has been ignored. 

§ Add. MS. 32106, no. 226. A rent 
of 3s. gd. was to be paid to the grantor 
and his heirs. The witnesses included 
Sir William le Boteler (who died in or 
before 1233) and Emery his son. 

In 1282 William son of Jordan de 
Preston and Alice his wife claimed the 
latter’s dower in half an oxgang of land 
in Alston against Adam de Hoghton ; 
De Banco R. 47, m. 49. 

7 In addition to the manor the Hoghtons 
purchased other Jandsin Alston. William 
de Bury released to Richard son of Adam 
de Hoghton all claim in Alston and in 
Elmetridding in Chipping and Goos- 
nargh, and Richard de Bury, brother of 
William, in 1306 undertook to see that 
the sale was carried through when William 
should come of age; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 218, 225. Other acquisitions are 
noticed later. 

In 1312 Richard son of Adam de 
Hoghton granted to Richard his son his 
manors of Alston, Hothersall and Dil- 
worth, together with the services of all 
the free tenants; ibid. no. 708. At the 
same time he notified the free tenants 
concerning this gift; ibid. no. 721. A 
year later, by fine, a moiety of the manors 
of Alston, Hothersall and Dilworth was 
settled upon Richard son of Richard de 
Hoghton by Richard son of Adam de 
Hoghton ; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 14. Thomas son of Sir 
Adam de Hoghton in 1316 released to 
Richard son of his brother Richard de 
Hoghton all his claim to the manor of 
Alston and lands in Hothersall, Dilworth, 
Goosnargh, &c. ; ibid. no. 710. 

John son of William Jonesson de 


It did not 


1690. 


Alston in 1349 made a feoffment of 
3 acres lying together in the western part 
of his field; the bounds began at Sir Adam 
de Hoghton’s land and went across the 
grantor’s field towards the east ‘until 
3 acres of land were fully complete’ ; 
ibid. no. 217. 

Agnes wife of Adam de Bowland in 
1350 gave 2 acres of arable land and an 
orchard to her husband for his life ; ibid. 
no. 196. Afterwards (1362) she gave 
him all the land descending to her after 
the death of John son of William son of 
John ; ibid. no. 222, Two years later 
Adam and Agnes granted the whole to 
Sir Adam de Hoghton ; ibid. no. 213. 

In 1377 Sir Adam de Hoghton and 
Ellen his wife made a settlement of a 
moiety of the manors of Alston, Dilworth 
and Hothersall ; the remainder was to 
Sir Henry, son of Sir Adam, and his 
heirs male; Final Conc. iii, 3. The free 
tenants in Alston appear to have been 
Robert de Alston, William Albyn, Adam 
de Ellel and John son of Adam de Ellel. 
The settlement was probably varied, for 
in 1386 Sir Adam de Hoghton released 
his manors to the feoffees; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 720. Sir Henry de Hoghton 
does not seem to have had anything in 
Alston (Lancs. Ing. p.m. [Chet. Soc. ], ii, 
43), but Sir Richard (son of Sir Adam) 
de Hoghton gave to the feoffees his 
manors, specially naming the moiety of 
the manor of Alston ; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 718. Again in 1415 Sir Gilbert de 
Kighley and Ellen his wife (formerly wife 
of Sir Henry de Conway and Sir Adam de 
Hoghton) granted Sir Richard de Hoghton 
their manor of Alston; ibid. no. 206. 
Sir Richard held half the manor in 1422 
by the rent of 35.3; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Chet. Soc.), i, 146. In 1433 his suc- 
cessor Sir Richard granted John Elswick, 
rector of Ribchester, a parcel of his waste 
in the vill of Alston ; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 220. 

8 This moiety is supposed to be that 
settled upon Fromund de Norhampton 
and Hawise his wife in 1321 ; Final Conc. 
ii, 42. 

In 1363 Edmund Mauneell released 
his right in a moiety of the manor of 
Alston to Sir William de Windsor ; Hist. 
MSS. Com. Rep. x, App. iv, 226. 

The Samlesbury lordship was recognized 
in 1499 and 1519, when it was found 
that Alexander and William Hoghton 
had held a moiety of the manor of Alston 
of Thomas Earl of Derby and John 
(Thomas) Southworth by a rent of 7$d. ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, no. 66; 
v,no. 66. Inthe later inquisitions (1559 
onward) this moiety of the manor was 
stated to be held of the sovereign as Duke 
of Lancaster in socage ; ibid. xi, no. 2, &c. 

Bridget Brown, widow, held certain 
land in Alston of the queen (the owner, 
Thomas Hoghton, being a fugitive), and 


A2. 


of land in Alston to Adam de Hoghton.® 
this time onwards the Hoghtons of Hoghton were 
the immediate lords of a moiety of the manor,’ 
the mesne lordship of Samlesbury being frequently 
ignored®; while the other moiety descended, like 
Lathom, to the Stanleys, Earls of Derby.® There are 
at Walton-le-Dale Court Rolls of Alston from 1672 to 
The Hoghton manor was in 1772 sold to 
William Shaw the younger,!? and is now said to be 
held by Mr. William Cross of Red Scar. 

In the 13th and 14th centuries one or more 
families are found bearing the local name.!! 


From 


The 


also had a boat in the Ribble at Alston, 
and gave to her nephew George Clarkson ; 
but at her death in 1578 or 1579 one 
George Cawvell (Cowell) took possession, 
claiming by grant of Thomas Hoghton ; 
Duchy of Lanc, Plead. Eliz. cx, C1; 
exxi, C12. 

The younger Thomas Hoghton in Aug. 
1581 granted to Elizabeth widow of 
Alexander Hoghton, among other things, 
the capital messuage called Alston Hal] 
for her life ; Add. MS, 32106, no, 878, 

9 The tenure of this moiety of the 
manor as recorded after the death of 
Thomas de Lathom (1370) is singular, 
but throws light on the second para- 
graph of the last note. It was stated 
that he had held it of Thomas la Warr 
by knight’s service and a rent of 4s, and 
that William de Windsor held it of him 
by the same service ; Duchy of Lane, Inq. 
p-m. ii, no. 7. 

The moiety of Alston is named in the 
inquisition after the death of Thomas, 
second earl, in 1521. In right of 
Samlesbury the Earls of Derby had also a 
share in the superior lordship of the other 
moiety of the manor of Alston. 

The rental compiled in 1522 (in the 
possession of the Earl of Lathom) shows 
that the free tenants paid 11s, 119d. 
rent; there are named Roger Elston 
(formerly Richard Ellel), Christopher 
Norcross, Ellis Ellel, John Alston and 
Henry Hoghton (2s.); the Abbot of 
Sawley paid 3s. 4d. for leading the water 
from the Ribble to his mill near Sunder- 
land Grange. The tenants at will (twelve 
tenements) paid £12 6s. 4d. The manor, 
demesne lands and water-mills had been 
demised to John Cowell at a rent of 
£7 45.5 4 close in the demesne, called 
Roberhagh, was demised to Robert Ellel 
at 8s. rent. There were some small 
rents also from improvements of the 
waste. No courts had been held, nor 
had any heriots or gressums been paid 
during that year. The free rent of 12d. 

due to the king for the manor had been 
duly paid to the bailiff of Blackburnshire. 

After the forfeiture of James, the 
seventh earl, some of his messuages and 
lands in Alston were sold by the Parlia- 
ment in 1652; Royalist Comp. Papers 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 238. 

The manor of Alston is named in a 
recovery of the Earl of Derby’s estates a8 
late as 1776; Pal. of Lanc, Plea R. 623, 
m. Ia. 

10 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 387, 
m. 114. The deforciants were Sir Henry 
Hoghton and Frances his wife. 

About 1830 the Alston Hall estate 
was owned by the Riddells of Cheesburn ; 
T. C. Smith, CA:pping, 161. 

11 Robert lord of Alston granted an acre 
in Alston to Robert son of William de 
Whittingham at a rent of 4d.; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 223. Mabot daughter of 


LINO gH], : Tad VHS) adits > NOLLAC AVMUOOG] HLNOG : TadVHD) adqI1g +: NOLLAC 


RET 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


Hothersalls had a share of Alston also, and this seems 
to have been acquired by the Hoghtons.!2 Later 
some of the neighbouring landowners had estates in 
this part of the township,! but few other records of 
Alston occur.!* Thomas Cutler died in 1604 holding 
a messuage, &c., of the Earl of Derby and Sir Richard 
During the Common- 
wealth period two-thirds of the estate of Benjamin 
Eccles at Colland Banks was sequestered for his 
recusancy,'® and Thomas Grimshaw suffered for the 
1 Thomas Gregson and several others 
registered estates as ‘ Papists” in 1717.18 

The family of Norcross of Ribchester and Alston 


Hoghton by a rent of 65,15 


same cause.!? 


Robert de Alston, a widow, released to 
her brother Robert ‘land with which she 
had been freely married’ to William son 
of Walter de Penwortham ; Dods. MSS. 
Ixx, fol. 155. 

Roger son of Richard de Alston ex- 
changed his part of Croneberihall in Eccles- 
ton for land in Alston with Adam de 
Hoghton ; to this Roger Gemet, Benedict 
his son, Vivian Gernet and Thomas 
de Beetham were witnesses; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 208. About 1247 Roger de 
Alston granted land to Walter son of 
Richard son of Uctred at a rent of 12d.; 
ibid. no. 348. The date is fixed by one 
of the witnesses, Matthew de Redmayn, 
being described as ‘then sheriff.’ By 
another charter John de Alston gave his 
three daughters (Joan, Maud and Kathe- 
rine) all his land in Alston, a rent of 12d. 
being due to Walter de Alston; ibid. 
No. 202. 

Roger de Alston and Richard his son 
occur as witnesses ; ibid. no. 197. Richard 
de Alston was lord in 1257; Lanes. Ing. 
pom, i, 204. 

In 1292 Grimbald de Alston was the 
principal owner. William son of William 
de Alston claimed the sixteenth part of 
certain land and wood in Alston against 
Grimbald, who had entry through Roger 
de Alston, the grantee of Richard de 
Alston ; Assize R. 408, m. 68. William 
son of Robert atte Yate also claimed the 
sixteenth part of the same land; ibid. 
m. 70d. The jury rejected these claims, 
as also a further one by William son of 
William ; ibid. m. 8d. 

Anabel widow of William de Porta 
(atte Yate) released to Richard de Alston 
her dower right in land which Richard and 
Amery his wife had recovered by suit at 
Lancaster ; William son of William the 
Clerk of Alston was a witness ; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 201 ; Assize R. 408, m. 31d. 
Adam de Alston obtained land from Adam 
son of Gerard de Hothersall in Hehefield, 
Whitecross, Brerecroft and Whitecarr ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 224. Robert son of 
Swain de Hothersall gave Amery his 
daughter and her issue all his land in 
Alstonfield and 2 acres in Alstonholme ; 
ibid. no. 198. Then the above-named 
William son of Robert de Porta gave 
Richard son of Adam de Alston and 
Amery his wife all his land in ‘ Lymwel- 
ridding’ in the vill of Alston ; Grimbald 
de Alston was a witness; ibid. no. 204. 
Then Amery widow of Richard granted to 
Richard her son all her land in ‘ Lamewel- 
ridding’ in 1321; ibid. no. 207. Richard 
son of Hitchcock de Alston in 1325 sold 
his land in Alstonholme to Sir Richard de 
Hoghton ; ibid. no. 199. 

Alice widow of Grimbald de Alston 
claimed dower in the manor of Alston in 
1308 against Henry de Rimington and 


Amery his wife; De Banco R. 170, 
m, 200d, 

Swain de Hothersall gave Robert his 
son the half oxgang of land in Alston which 
Waltheof had held ; a rent of 4d. was to 
be paid; Add. MS. 32106, no. 197. 
Robert son of Swain afterwards granted 
Sir Adam de Hoghton all his land in the 
Hokefield and in the Brerecroft, receiving 
20s. in return ; ibid. no. 215. 

Adam son of Gerard de Hothersall gave 
Robert son of Stephen de Hothersall and 
Roger son of Roger of the same 3 acres in 
Whitecarr, they releasing to him all their 
right in 14 oxgangs of land in Alston ; 
ibid. no, 205. William son of Adam de 
Hothersall granted half an oxgang of land 
in Alston (formerly held by Richard son 
of Adam de Hoghton) to Adam son of 
Adam and Amery de Hoghton ; ibid. 
no. 211. William le Boteler, ‘then 
sheriff,’ was a witness, so that the date was 
about 1260. 

In 1373 William son of Henry de 
Dutton purchased a messuage and land in 
Alston from Richard son of John de 
Hothersall and Emma his wife; Final 
Cone. ii, 187 ; Add. MS. 32107, no. 203. 

13 The Shireburnes of Stonyhurst had 
land in Alston, but the tenure is not 
recorded, 

Edward Radcliffe of Dilworth in 1617 
held land in Alston of Sir Richard Hogh- 
ton ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 52. 

M In 1382 William Albyn of Alston 
and Joan his wife held a third part of two 
messuages and certain land in Alston; 
Final Cone. iii, 14. 

15 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and 
Ches.), i, 107. Thomas Cutler, son and 
heir of Thomas, was twenty-six years of 
age. 
it Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 270-4. Benjamin Eccles 
grandson of Thomas had in 1587 a lease 
from the Earl of Derby. Samuel King 
claimed the land in 1654, after the death 
of Eccles, alleging that his father had 
purchased from the earl. The seques- 
tered two-thirds had been let in 1652 to 
Thomas Gregson. 

W Ibid. iii, 133-5. Thomas Grim- 
shaw’s right was derived from his wife 
Jane, who as widow of one Thomas 
Duddell had a capital messuage in Alston 
and lands in Thornley. Jane having died 
the property was in 1651 claimed by Roger 
Sudell, in right of his wife Grace, daughter 
of William Duddell, heir of Thomas. 

William Sanderson, another recusant, 
desired in 1654 to be allowed to contract 
for his estate; Cal. Com. for Comp. v, 


3194. 

18 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. Non- 
jurors, 102, 137, 140, 150. The other 
names were: Anne Hothersall, widow, 


63 


was formerly of some note.!9 
hursts registered a pedigree in 1665, being described 
as ‘of Alston.’ 20 

HOTHERSALL in 1212 was held by Swain son of 
Robert, to whom it had been granted by King John 
first when Count of Mortain and afterwards on coming 
to the throne in 1199.7! 
of land, and a thegnage rent of 5s. was rendered.?? 
Swain, living in 1226, was followed by a son 
Thomas de Hothersall, who died in 1256 or 1257 
holding the 2 oxgangs of land in Hothersall and an 
oxgang and a half in Alston; Robert his son and 
heir was of full age.”> The descent cannot be clearly 


RIBCHESTER 


A branch of the Dew- 


It was assessed as 2 oxgangs 


Robert Tomlinson, John Duckworth 
(Duckett) and Anne his wife and William 
Walmesley. 

19 T, C. Smith, Ribchester, 249. James 
Norcross ‘of Dilworth’ in 1631 paid £10 
on refusing knighthood ; Misc. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 218. 

20 Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 97. 

21 Chart. R. (Rec. Com.), 27. 

22 Lancs, Ing. and Extents, i, 50. Swain’s 
name occurs again in 1226 ; ibid. i, 139 3 
and the payment of the 5s. rent is re- 
corded among the Earl of Lancaster’s 
teceipts in 1297 ; ibid. i, 289. A charter 
of Swain son of Robert is cited below 
(note 41). 

Swain had several sons, His grant to 
Robert, one of them, has been cited 
above ; also a grant by Robert in Alston. 
William Moton granted land in Rib- 
chester to Richard son of Swain de 
Hothersall; Add. MS. 32106, no. 284. 
Alan son of Roger son of Swain de 
Hothersall granted all his land to Adam 
de Hoghton ; ibid. no. 24, fol. 244. 

There were other families taking a 
surname from the place, but their con- 
nexion with Swain cannot be traced. For 
instance, Adam son of Gerard, Robert 
son of Stephen, Roger and Hugh occur 
between 1250 and 12603 Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents, i, 183, &c. Robert son of 
Stephen de Hothersall confirmed part of 
his land to Henry son of Geoffrey de 
Ribchester; Add. MS. 32106, no. 23, 
fol. 244. Adam son of Gerard de Hother- 
sall gave his cousin Robert son of Stephen 
parcels of land in Scalecroft and other 
places in the field of Hothersall ; ibid. 
no. 1. The same Adam granted his 
sister Godith’s son William 5 acres in 
the vill of Hothersall ; ibid. no. 14. 

Hugh son of William de Hothersall 
gave his daughter Agnes various lands, 
Roughley, Frendesforth, Oldfieldhalgh, 
Brerefurlong, Crocland and Great Hold 
being named. Hugh had a brother and 
a son each named Roger; ibid. no. 4. 
Roger son of Roger exchanged with 
William son of Hugh certain lands, the 
placenames including Oldfield, Rese- 
ditch, Bradleybone; ibid. no. 55. To 
this deed Robert son of Stephen, Alan 
his son, Thomas, Adam and Robert his 
son, all ‘de Hothersall,’ were witnesses. 
Other charters of Roger de Hothersall son 
of Roger are in the same collection, 
no. 20, 41, 51, 52. ‘Thomas son of 
Swain’ is named in several of them. 

23 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 204. 
Thomas is no doubt the Thomas son 
of Swain of the preceding note. Again, 
Thomas de Hothersall and Richard his 
brother attested a Dilworth grant (Add. 
MS. 32106, no. 313), and Richard’s 
parentage has been shown. Robert the 
son and heir of Thomas paid §s. as relief 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


traced, but Thomas de Hothersall held the manor 
in 13242 and his son Robert in 1346 by the 5s. 
rent.2> In 1445-6 the 2 oxgangs of land were held 
by the heir of Adam Hothersall by the same rent.” 
Robert Hothersall died in 1558 holding the manor, 
ie. the capital messuage of Hothersall with other 
messuages, lands, &c., of the queen as of her duchy 
of Lancaster by free thegnage and a rent of 55.77 
John his son and heir was fifty-four years of age in 
1577. John Hothersall was in 1576 reported to the 
Privy Council by the Bishop of Chester as one of 
those ‘of longest obstinacy against religion,’ whose 
resistance had encouraged many others to refrain from 


cessor seems to have been Richard Hothersall, who 
was a frecholder in 1600,%° and died in 1610, leaving 
a son John, aged twenty-five.3! John was in 1632 
succeeded by his brother Thomas,*? who recorded a 
pedigree in 1665, being then about eighty years of 
age.®8 John, his eldest son, had been killed at the 
siege of Greenhalgh Castle in 1645, and George, 
another son, lost his life at Liverpool in 1644, both 
fighting for the royal cause.*4 

John’s eldest son Thomas succeeded to Hother- 
sall.35 He had several children. The eldest son, 
John, took part in the Jacobite rising of 1715, and 
was captured at Preston ; escaping, he managed to 


“embracing the queen’s majesty’s proceedings.’ °* He 
made a settlement of his estate in 1579.7 


on succeeding ; Originalia R. 41 Hen. III, 
m. 2. 

Adam de Hothersall and Richard his 
brother gave half a mark for a writ in 
1258-9; ibid. m. 6. They seem to have 
been sons of Thomas. 

Robert chief lord of Hothersall about 
1280 granted Adam de Gouldebrough a 
plat on the eastern side of Bradley, the 
bounds beginning at Bolkin (or Bolin) 
Brook and descending Ayothalgh, and 
thence by lands of Sir Adam de Hoghton 
and Richard de Bradley to the starting- 
point ; ibid. no. 47, fol. 248. 

Robert son of Thomas de Hothersall, 
Richard de Byron and Margery his wife, 
Robert son of Stephen and William son 
of Roger de Hothersall allowed Sir Adam 
de Hoghton to make a millon the Ribble ; 
ibid. no. 36. Margery was probably one 
of the sisters Margery and Isabel, daughters 
of Robert son of Stephen, who made a 
grant in 1288 to Robert Ward of Hother- 
sall and Mabel his wife ; ibid. no. 38. 

In 1292 the various disputes which had 
arisen between Robert de Hothersall and 
Adam son of Adam de Hoghton were 
referred to the judgement of six men of 
the district ; ibid. no. go. 

In the same year Simon son of Agnes 
de Ribchester and grandson of Henry son 
of Hawise de Ribchester claimed various 
messuages and lands against Thomas son 
of Robert de Hothersall, against Robert and 
William other sons, and against Adam 
and John, other sons of Robert, but the 
jury decided against him ; Assize R. 408, 
m. 35. Edusa daughter of Thomas de 
Hothersall and widow of Adam de Dutton 
formally acknowledged that she had re- 
leased to Adam son of Thomas de Hother- 
sall her right to certain land in the place ; 
ibid. m. 20.  Edusa seems afterwards 
(1308) to have denied her charter; De 
Banco R. 173, m. 418d. 

*4 Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 39. Thomas’s 
parentage is shown by a claim made in 
1308-9 by Robert le Ward of Hothersall 
respecting the eighth part of certain lands ; 
the defendants were Master Richard de 
Hoghton and Thomas son of Robert de 
Hothersall, whose widow Ellen was joined 
in the defence; Assize R. 428, m. 1. 
The father may be the Robert son of 
Robert of 1292. 

Richard son of Adam de Hoghton gave 
Thomas son of Robert de Hothersall, in 
free marriage with his daughter Margery, 
lands in Eastwood, Uckemonsriddings, &c., 
in 13113 Add. MS. 32127, no. 349. 
In 1339 Sir Richard de Hoghton, Thomas 
son of Robert de Hothersail and Robert 
le Ward claimed a tenement against John 
son of Hugh de Stapleton ; Assize R. 427, 
m, 3d. 


His suc- 


25 Sura. of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 58. In 
the preceding year Adam son of Sir 
Richard de Hoghton, as feoffee, granted 
to Robert de Hothersall and Maud his 
wife various lands and services and the 
reversion of those held as dower by Mar- 
gery widow of Thomas de Hothersall ; 
Add. MS. 32107, no. 3494 That 
Robert was the son of Thomas appears 
from a suit in 1348; Assize R. 1444, 
m. 8. He had a brother Richard living 
in 134g (Add. MS. 32106, no. 293), and 
to Richard son of Thomas de Hothersall 
had in 1331 been granted by Agnes 
widow of Richard de Turnley 2 acres in 
the vill of Hothersall ; ibid. 32107, no. 
382. Another brother was Roger, to 
whom in 1340 Robert de Hothersall 
granted land in a place called the Leigh ; 
ibid. no. 378, 

% Duchy of Lane, 
bdle. 2, no. 20. 

In 1362 Adam de Threlfall, Silicia his 
wife, Adam son of Robert de Hothersall, 
Joan his wife and various others had a 
dispute with Sir Adam de Hoghton re- 
specting tenements in Hothersall ; Add. 
MS. 32107, no. 3523 32106, no. 39 
(fol. 246). 

In 1394 Adam de Hothersall made a 
feoffment of all his lands, &c., in Alston ; 
Add. MS. 32107, no. 356. Adam in 
1406 allowed Sir Richard de Hoghton to 
alienate land for the endowment of the 
new chantry in Ribchester Church ; Add. 
MS. 32106, no. 20. In 1414 Adam 
son of Robert Hothersall granted Aspel- 
carr in Ribchester to his son Richard ; 
Kuerden MSS. iv, R 14. Adam was still 
living in 1427, when he gave land called 
the Intakes in Alston and Hothersall to 
Ughtred Hothersall and Joan his wife, 
daughter of John Catterall; Add. MS. 
32107, no. 365. Atthe same time Adam 
and Ughtred made a feoffment of lands in 
Alston, Hothersall and Ribchester ; ibid. 
No. 373. 

Ughtred was probably a grandson of 
Adam. He was living in 1458 (Add. 
MS. 32106, no. 295) and had a son and 
heir Robert, named several times in the 
reign of Edward IV; Add. MS. 32107, 
no. 361, 376. Bernard was another son 
(ibid. no, 383), who occurs in 1447 ; Pal. 
of Lanc. Plea R. 10, m. 42. Katherine 
wife of Ughtred Hothersall gave a receipt 
to Ellen widow of Richard Catterall in 
1468 ; Add. MS. 32107, no. 386. Ugh- 
tred in 1470 released to William Cottam 
of Alston various lands in Hothersall in 
Alston which had belonged to Thomas 
Hothersall ; ibid. no. 366. 

In 1479 Richard Towneley complained 
that Ughtred, Robert and Gilbert Hother- 
sall had broken into his close at Hother- 


64 


Knights’ Fees, 


elude recapture, and lived secretly with his sister 
Anne, wife of William Leckonby.*® 


This sister and 


sall and cut down trees to the value 
of 4os.; Pal. of Lanc. Writs Proton. 
19 Edw. IV. Robert Hothersall seems 
to have been the head of the family in 
1487; Add. MS. 32106, no. 310. In 
1493 John Towneley complained of 
trespass by Robert Hothersall, Richard 
Hothersall the elder and Richard the 
younger ; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 77, m.2. 

At this point the succession is un- 
certain, but in 1533 John son of Robert, 
son and heir of Richard Hothersall, was 
contracted to marry Anne daughter of 
John Talbot of Salesbury ; Shireburne 
Abstract Bk. at Leagram. 

27 Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. xii, no, 21. 
The inquisition was not made until 1577. 
No land in Alston is recorded, but he had 
held 14 acres in Ribchester of Robert 
Lynalx. 

Robert Hothersall was involved in 
tithe disputes in 1536-41 ; Ducatus Lanc. 
(Rec. Com.), i, 155, 160. 

*8 Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. iii, 
410. 

George Hothersall, a son of John, was 
educated for the priesthood at Rheims 
and Valladolid (1585-93); he returned 
to England on the mission, but was 
arrested and exiled, becoming a monk at 
Douay in 1615. It is believed that he 
returned to England and died in Lancashire 
in 16333 ibid. 

* Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 41, 
m. 182. 

39 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
iy 292s 

31 Lancs, and Ches, Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 166. ‘ Shuffling 
John Hothersall’ is mentioned by the 
Puritan Nicholas Assheton in 1618; 
Journal (Chet. Soc.), 99. 

32 Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 
505. Thomas Hothersall is described as 
thirty years of age and more. 

33 Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 153. 

54 Gillow, op. cit. lii, 408. 

35 A settlement of the manor of 
Hothersall and lands there and in Alston 
was made in 1673, Thomas Hothereall 
being the plaintiff in the fine and William 
Hothersall, with his son and heir Thomas, 
the deforciants ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 190, m. 70. William would be the 
uncle of the former Thomas. William 
Hothersall, Grace his wife and Thomas 
Hothersall were among the recusants of 
Alston in 1667; T. C. Smith, Ribchester, 
62. Thomas was outlawed for the same 
in 1679-80; ibid. 63. 

% Smith, op. cit. 227. As the father, 
Thomas Hothersall, was living the estates 
were not forfeited, but were left to the 
daughters. The fatherdiedin 1720. His 
will is in the Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


another, Margery wife of Edward Winstanley, after- 
wards divided the estates, the manor of Hothersall fall- 
ing to the former and descending to her son Richard 
On his becoming bankrupt in 1763 
the manor was offered for sale,’ but seems to have 
been retained in the family till the end of the cen- 
tury.*8 The Hothersall Hall estate was purchased in 
1852 by Jonathan Openshaw, and has since been 
It is now the property of Mr. 
The Hall was rebuilt in 
1856 in a plain modern Gothic style on the site of 
the old house *** in a low situation close to the right 
No part of the former house 
remains, with the exception of a carved stone built 


Leckonby. 


much augmented. 
Frederick Openshaw.?9 


bank of the Ribble. 


iii, 204, from 2nd-3rd Roll of Geo. I at 
Preston. By it he left Hothersall Hall to 
Alexander Osbaldeston, as trustee for the 
testator’s daughters. See also ibid. iii, 
380, from Roll 5 of Geo, III. 

37 Pedigree in Piccope MSS. ii, 233; 
Gillow, op. cit. iv, 284. The descent is 
thus given : William Leckonby of Eccles- 
ton in the Fylde m. Anne Hothersall 
-s. Richard m. Mary daughter and heir 
of William Hawthornthwaite of Stony- 
hurst and heir also of the Liveseys of 
Sutton -s. William —da. Mary m. (1799) 
T. H. Hele-Phipps of Wiltshire. 

38 In 1801 Thomas Ingilby was plaintiff 
and William Rigby deforciant in a fine 
respecting the manor of Hothersall and 
tenements there; Pal. of Lanc. Lent 
Assizes 41 Geo. III. 

Robert Parker was residing at the 
hall in 1825 (Lancs. Dir.) and — Martin 
was owner about 1836; Baines, Lancs. 
(ed. 1), iii, 387. 

89 The estate, ‘after passing through 
several hands, became the property of the 
late Jonathan Openshaw esq. of Bury, to 
whose nephew, Frederick Openshaw, esq. 
J-P., it now [1890] belongs’; T. C. 
Smith, op. cit. 227. Particulars are 
given of a family picture of the Leckon- 
bys. The same writer gives the legend 
of the laying of the Hothersall Hall 
devil; ibid. 73. For an account of the 
Openshaw family see T. C. Smith, 
Longridge, 139. 

38a The old house is described as having 
been in a ‘dilapidated state’ when pulled 
down; T. C. Smith, Longridge, 139. 

3% The stone is illustrated ibid. 132. 

40 The Hoghton family’s estate has 
been referred to in preceding notes. 
Adam son and heir of Adam de Hoghton 
warranted to Agnes, his father’s widow, 
a messuage and land in Hothersall claimed 
by John de Church and Alice his wife. 
Alice was the sister and heir of William 
and John de Hothersall, from whom 
Adam de Hoghton the elder had had the 
land; Assize R. 408, m. 50. 

The estate was described as a moiety 
of the manor in 13773 Final Conc. iii, 3. 
Usually, however, no ‘manor’ is named 
in the inquisitions, and the messuages, 
lands, &c., are stated to be held of the 
king as duke by services unknown ; 

Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 127 5 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, no. 66. In 
1590 the estate is again called a manor, 
but the service was unknown ; ibid. xv, 
No. 39. 
41 Many of the Hoghton charters have 
already been cited from Add. MS. 32106, 
fol. 241 on 3 32107, no. 290, &c. 

Swain son of Robert granted Octe- 
pranus son of Ughtred an eighth part of 
the vill of Hothersall, to be held in free 


7 


family.‘° 


thegnage by a rent of 74d. ; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 19, fol. 243. This was pro- 
bably the eighth part of the vill which 
John son of Roger de Hothersall after- 
wards gave to Sir Adam de Hoghton; 
ibid. no. 22. Sir Adam granted certain 
easements in the eighth part of the vill ; 
ibid. no. 34. 

Richard de Amethalgh and Christiana 
his wife gave their daughter Avice the 
lands they held of St. Saviour’s Hospital. 
The bounds began at a broken bank by 
the Ribble, upon Hepewell, went north 
by Merecliff to Stiropeclough, and so 
down again to the Ribble; ibid. no. 5, 
50. Avice married John de Wickles- 
worth, and this land was granted to Adam 
de Hoghton in or before 1275 ; ibid. no. 
6, 48, 53. Alice daughter of Avice de 
Hothersall in 1274 gave Maud, her 
mother’s sister, her right in lands formerly 
belonging to her uncle Henry; ibid. 
no. 13. 

Richard son of Hugh de Hothersall 
granted Adam de Hoghton the homage 
and service of Roger his brother and 
Adam del Hurst and Agnes his wife, 
Roger son of Hugh releasing all his right 
in his mother Alice’s dower; ibid. no. 
10, 3. 

The estate of Robert the Ward was 
also acquired by the Hoghtons. Margery 
and Isabel daughters of Robert son of 
Stephen de Hothersall gave an acre of 
land to Robert the Ward of Hothersall 
and Mabel his wife in 1288 ; ibid. no. 38. 
In 1292 Robert the Ward claimed common 
of pasture against Robert son of Thomas 
(de Hothersall) and Adam de Hoghton, 
but was non-suited ; Assize R. 408, m. 
gd. It seems probable, from a suit 
already cited, that he had an eighth part 
of the manor. Robert the Ward and 
Mabel his wife acquired other lands down 
to 1322; Add. MS. 32106, no. 7, 26, 42. 
In 1344~5 Sir Richard de Hoghton had 
a dispute with Alina widow of Robert 
the Ward, who claimed the fourth part of 
a moiety of messuages and land in Hother- 
sall. She held a fourth part of the town 
(or perhaps a fourth of the moiety) in 
common with Sir Richard de Hoghton 
and Adam de Hoghton, of whom the 
former was lord of a third part and the 
latter had a moiety of the town; Assize 
R. 1435, m. 374., 36. It was found 
that Richard, Adam and Alina had 
approved the tenements put in view, and 
that Richard alone had disseised her. 

In 1448 John son of Robert de 
Freckleton claimed the eighth part of the 
manor of Hothersall against Adam son 
of William de Turnley, Margery his wife 
and others, including Robert son of 
Thomas de Hothersall, Sir Adam de 
Hoghton and Mabel widow of Henry de 


65 


RIBCHESTER 


into the wall of one of the outbuildings on which 
are the arms of Hothersall, together with the initials 
T-H: and the date 1695.3 

A moiety of the manor was held by the Hoghton 
It seems to have been a composite estate, 
formed by purchasing various portions.4! The tenure 
is not stated in the inquisitions, and the ss. thegnage 
rent was always paid by the Hothersalls. 
was purchased by John Dewhurst from Sir Richard 
Hoghton and Katherine his wife,4? and in 1621 
William Dewhurst was found to have held messuages 
and lands in Hothersall of the king in socage.* 

An ancient estate in this part of the township was 
, that of the Bradleys of Thornley, descending to the 


In 1610 it 


Turnley. Adam de Hoghton said he was 
lord of the manor, which was held of 
him by knight’s service. Adam de Turn- 
ley stated that Robert the Ward had had 
the tenement settled on himself and his 
heirs by Alina his wife, with remainders 
to Henry de Turnley, Adam de Turnley 
and Sir Adam de Hoghton. The 
claimant admitted this, but said that 
Henry de Turnley had released his right 
to Alina while she was a widow, but the 
verdict was against him ; Assize R. 14.44, 
m. 8. Adam de Turnley then granted to 
Sir Adam de Hoghton all his lands, tene- 
ments, rents, &c., in the vill of Hother- 
sall; Add. MS. 32106, no. 8. 

Sir Adam de Hoghton in 1375 made a 
feoffment of his tenement called the 
Blackgreve in Hothersall in the vill of 
Alston ; ibid. no. 11. 

42 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 75, 
no.10, John Dewhurst had, in the time 
of Elizabeth, purchased the lands in Rib- 
chester and Hothersall previously held by 
Crompton and Greenhalgh; see the 
account of Ribchester. 

43 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc, Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 284. 

William Dewhurst and Anne his wife 
made a settlement of the manor of 
Hothersall in 1649 ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F. bdle. 146, m. 153. In a later fine 
the deforciants were William Dewhurst, 
Anne his wife, Henry Marsden, Janet 
his wife and William Dewhurst, the 
plaintiff being Lancelot Bolton; ibid. 
bdle. 179, m. 142. 

44 Adam de Hurst in 1316 released to 
Adam de Bradley his right in certain land 
adjoining Sir Richard de Hoghton’s ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 43 (fol. 247). 
Richard de Amethalgh gave Thomas de 
Bradley two small plats in a field called 
¢Cromanhalgh’ in 13183 ibid. no. 59. 
In 1319-20 Adam de Bradley granted to 
John his son and heir all the land in 
Hothersall he had had from Richard son 
of Adam del Hurst; Parlington D. He 
also gave his son Thomas land which he 
had had from his brother Richard ; Add, 
MS. 32106, no. 49. Thomas son of 
Adam de Bradley gave lands to his 
brothers Robert and John about the same 
time; ibid. no. 37, §4. To his brothers 
Simon and William he gave land in 
©Cronershalgh’ ; Kuerden fol. MS. 55. 
John son of Thomas de Bradley of Chip- 
pingdale in 1409 received 10 marks from 
Nicholas de York, Abbot of Whalley, in 
part payment for ‘divers transgressions’ ; 
ibid. 

Thomas Hesketh of Rufford in 1523 
held 8 acres in Alston and Hothersall by 
services unknown ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. 
pm. v, no. 16. In 1556 Thomas 
Bradley purchased lands in Aighton and 


9 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Osbaldestons.® Some smaller estates are known,” 
and the family of Naden is distinguished by the Rev. 
Thomas Naden, a benefactor of St. John’s College, 
Cambridge.” William Rogerson of Hothersall regis- 
tered a small estate in 1717 as a ‘ Papist.’ © 
The chapel of ST. LAIVWRENCE at 
CHURCH Longridge is of unknown foundation, 
but is named in the rental of the Earl 
of Derby’s estates in 1522. A few particulars of 
its ‘ornaments’ at the time of the Reformation 
have been preserved,” but it does not appear to have 
had any endowment. It probably ceased to be used 
for a time,*! but was not destroyed or desecrated, 
though even in 1650 there was ‘neither minister 
nor maintenance.’*? One, Timothy Smith, was 
appointed in 1657,°° but ejected in 1662. Various 
small endowments were afterwards given to it,** and 
it was rebuilt in 1716. Bishop Gastrell at that time 
found that there was an income of £4 135. 4d. for 
the minister, received by the vicar of Ribchester, 
who held service there once a fortnight.** Grants 
from Queen Anne’s Bounty were obtained in 1730 
and later.” The Hoghton family claimed to present,®® 
but the advowson was purchased in 1829 by the 
Hulme Trustees.® 
The church stands on the south side of the town 


of Longridge. The old chapel was rebuilt in 1716 
and again in 1822, the building of the latter year 
being rectangular in plan with galleries and two 
tiers of windows at each side. A west tower con- 
taining two bells was added in 1841. A restora- 
tion, which was begun in 1899 and was completed 
in 1906, practically took the form of a further re- 
building, only the tower and the main walls being 
left standing. A chancel and vestry were added, the 
galleries done away with,” and the interior of the 
building was entirely remodelled. The churchyard, 
which slopes away from the building on the south 
side, was enlarged in 1878. It contains some frag- 
ments of the 18th-century church. There is a clock, 
given in 1892, with dials on the north and west 
sides of the tower. The register of births begins 
in 1760, that of burials in 1789 and of marriages 
in 1838. 

A district chapelry was formed for it in 1861.% 
The present income is £400. A chapel of ease, 
St. Paul’s, was built in 1890. The following have 
been curates and vicars ® :— 

1701 ‘Thomas Felgate 
1730 Richard Dixon 
1743 John Sharpe 


Hothersall from Sir Thomas Hesketh 
and Alice his wife ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F. bdle. 16, m. 12. 

Thomas Bradley of Bradley in Thornley 
in 1564 held a messuage, &c., in Hother- 
sall of John Hothersall by a rent of 12d.; 
Duchy of Lanc, Ing. p.m. xi, no. 37; 
xvii, no. 28, 

45 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc, Lancs, 
and Ches.), i, 179. 

46 John Seed the elder in 1596 pur- 
chased messuages, &c., in Hothersall from 
Robert Dobson and Isabel his wife ; Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 59, m. 229. 
Dying in 1629 John Seed was found to 
have held his estate in Hothersall of the 
king ; John his son and heir was fifty 
years of age; Towneley MS. C8, 13 
(Chet. Lib.), 1073. 

The Kuerdens of Ribchester had lands 
in Hothersall, Adam de Hoghton having 
granted a parcel in Ravenhacclough to 
Richard de Kuerden at a rent of 64.3; 
Add. MS. 32109, fol. 17, no. 57. This 
or adjoining land was in 1336 given to 
Nicholas son of Thomas de Hothersall ; 
Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), K 18. 
William son of John de Walton, perhaps 
as trustee, secured a messuage and land 
from Adam son of Roger de Kuerden and 
Agnes his wife in 1352; Final Conc. ii, 
132. The same Adam son of Roger 
made an exchange of lands with Sir Adam 
de Hoghton in 1383-4 ; Add. MS. 32109, 
fol. 57, no. 29. 

Adam de Threlfall has been named 
above. In 1425 Adam Hothersall re- 
leased to ‘his brother’ John Threlfall of 
Goosnargh the elder all right in a mes- 
suage in the hamlet of Hothersall in the 
vill of Alston ; Add. MS. 32108, no. 880. 
Edmund Threlfall of Ashes in Threlfall 
in 1617 held land of John Hothersall by 
a rent of 12d.; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 92. 

Richard Towneley of Towneley held 
land in Hothersall in 1408-543 Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, §9. William 
Cottam of Dilworth in 1475 granted land 
received from Ughtred Hothersall to 
Richard Towneley ; Towneley MS. C8, 
13 (Chet. Lib.), C 108. 


1780 Robert Parkinson * 


47 Smith, op. cit. 250; A. F. Torry, 
Founders and Benefactors, 68. Thomas 
son of Edmund Naden of Hothersall was 
admitted to St. John’s Coll., Camb., in 
1669; M.A. 1676. He died in 1714 
and bequeathed his lands in Alston and 
Hothersall to found an exhibition in the 
college for students in divinity. The 
lands, known as the College farms, were 
sold in 1870 and the money invested in 
consols ; the income, about £240 a year, 
is given to three ‘ Naden students.’ 

48 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Non-jurors, 105. 

49 There is entered ‘4d. of new rent of 
a parcel of land from the lord’s waste near 
the chapel of Longerygge, containing 
4 rood of land, enclosed by Richard Fair- 
clough.’ 

50 Raines, Chantries (Chet. Soc.), 262, 
277% 
7% Robert Cottam, priest, and John 
Tomlinson, church reeve, are named at 
Longridge in 1554; yet in Raines’ note 
Robert Cottam is called a ‘deacon only’ 
in 1556. ‘He was grave and chaste, 
could play on the musiques, and was no 
tippler nor diceman’ ; ibid. 262. His 
name is not given in the visitation lists. 
It was one of the suspicious points in the 
story of John Shireburne, rector of Brindle, 
that Robert Cottam, once curate of Long- 
ridge, had paid him a visit during an 
illness ; see the account of Bury Church. 

The chapel is named, without any 
account of its use, in 1610; Hist. MSS. 
Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 9. 

52 Commonw. Ch. Surv. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), 169. 

58 Plund. Mins. Accts. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 202. He was nominated 
by the inhabitants, and a stipend was 
provided out of the tithes of Ribchester ; 
ibid. 223. He had formerly been stationed 
at Rainford. 

34 The income would cease at the 
Restoration, so that the traditional ‘ ejec- 
tion’ in 1662 was little more than 
nominal. Timothy Smith continued to 
preach in Longridge Chapel occasionally 
till his death in 1679; T. C. Smith, 


Longridge, 64. 
66 


From entries in the Ribchester church- 
warden’s accounts it appears that ‘the 
king’s minister’ and others occasionally 
preached at Longridge from 1679 onwards ; 
Smith, Ribchesrer, 108-9. 

65 In a dispute as to the liability for 
repairs in 1702 it was stated that for 
sixty years past it had had ‘prayers, 
sermons and both sacraments in it.’ 
Three benefactors had given £5 a year 
to a ‘preaching minister,’ and for that 
Mr. Hargrave (curate of Ribchester) 
preached there every fortnight in the 
afternoon and had ‘a very great congre- 
gation’ ; Chester Dioc. Reg. 

56 Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 474. 
A rent-charge of 13s. 4d. was given in 
1657 for a preaching minister ; £30 was 
given in 1673 and £50 in 1701 and 
later. 

57 Smith, Longridge, 60. The later 
grants were in 1743-5 and 1756. 

58 They probably gave money to meet 
the grants from the Bounty. Sir Henry 
Hoghton presented Richard Dixon in 
1730. 

59 Smith, op. cit. 59. Since the 
trustees acquired the patronage the vicars 
have been Hulmeian Exhibitionera of 
Brasenose College, Oxford. 

° The two tiers of windows were re- 
tained, though the windows themselves 
were modernized. 

A description of the church in 1870 
is given in A. Hewitson’s Our Country 
Churches, 93-9. 

6a From 1730 baptisms ‘at Longridge 
Chapel’ are recorded in the Ribchester 
registers ; in 1702 there was a burial at 
Longridge ; Smith, Ribchester, 198, 202. 

6b London Gaz. 8 Feb. 

61 The list is taken from papers at the 
Diocesan Registry, Chester, with additions 
from Smith’s Longridge, 61-73, where 
notices of the incumbents are given. 

The curates have been styled vicars 
since 1866 ; Lond, Gaz. 10 July. 

62 His nephew, Canon Parkinson of 
Manchester, wrote of him : ‘His income 
from his living rose during the time of 
his incumbency from about {40 a year 
to £140, where it stopped. The popula- 


BLACKBURN HUNDRED 


1829 George Parkin 
1831 
1843 
1847 
Coll., Oxf) 
1877 
(Brasenose Coll., Oxf.) , 
1894 


Coll., Oxf) 


tion in the meantime —of the worst kind 
as far as ministerial labour is concerned, 
being universally poor, and consisting one 
half of Roman Catholics and almost all 
poor hand-loom weavers—advanced from 
about 400 to 2,000. During his in- 
cumbency he enlarged his small chapel, 
without any expense to the place, so as 
to hold 700 worshippers, and left behind 
him what he did not find—a parsonage- 
house. Nor was there erected (and this 
is a singular exception in that district) 
during his incumbency a single Dissenting 
place of worship of any kind in his 


Frederick Maude, M.A. (Brasenose Coll., Oxf.) 
Edward Pigot, M.A." (Brasenose Coll., Oxf.) 
William Charles Bache, M.A.“ (Brasenose 
Fitzherbert Astley Cave-Browne-Cave, M.A.® 


Thomas Martin Harrison, M.A.® (Brasenose 


RIBCHESTER 


For the Presbyterians Timothy Smith’s house was 
licensed in 1672, but no permanent congregation 
seems to have resulted. About 1717 there was a 
Quakers’ meeting-place near Longridge Chapel. 

The Roman Catholic church of SS. Mary and 
Michael, Alston Lane, serves a mission which can be 
traced back to about 1700." 
1761, and the old church was built in 1765. 


It was refounded in 


This 


was replaced by the present one in 1857.” 


chapelry’ ; Old Church Clock, 189. There 
are monuments in the chapel to him and 
his two successors, 

68 Rector of Whittington 1857, 

§4 Rector of Alresford 1877. 

6} Vicar of Horton 1867, of Ellel 
1869, and of Padiham 1874. 

66 Vicar of Briercliffe 1887-94. 

87 Cal. S. P. Dom. 1672, pp. 198, 200. 

68 Gastrell, Noritia, loc. cit. 

69 A, Hewitson, op. cit. 88-92. There 
were many convicted recusants in the 
township in the time of Charles II; 
Misc, (Cath, Rec. Soc.), v, 161-3. 


Sir Walter Vavasour, S. J., served there 
at the beginning of the 18th century ; Gil- 
low, Haydock P. 63. At that time there 
was also a domestic chapel at Hothersall. 
Sir Walter registered his estate as a ‘ Papist’ 
in 1717, being described as ‘of Alston’ ; 
Estcourt and Payne, op. cit. 316. He 
was ‘a reputed priest’; Smith, Rid- 
chester, 63. A baptism by him in 1705 
is recorded in the parish church register ; 
ibid. 197. He was buried at Stidd, 1740 5 
ibid. 203. 

70 Smith, Longridge, 773 @ list of 
priests in charge is given, 


THE HUNDRED OF AMOUNDERNESS 


CONTAINING THE PARISHES OF 


PRESTON BISPHAM 
KIRKHAM ST. MICHAEL-ON-WYRE 
LYTHAM GARSTANG 


POULTON-LE-FYLDE 


The whole of the above parishes are contained within the hundred or 


wapentake of Amounderness,* which includes in addition the townships of 
Alston with Hothersall in Rib- 


chester, Forton and Cleveley in 
Cockerham, and Fulwood, Myer- 
scough, Bleasdale, Preesall and 
Stalmine in Lancaster.? A very 
large part of the area is the level 
district on the western side known 


AMOUNDERNESS 
HUNDRED. 


WG 


ls 


OE TLONSDALE 


% AY eG as The Fylde, once ‘the Wheat- 
é ° Be field of Amounderness’?; the 
aneny.. eastern part is more hilly and 

2 (ONS. GARSTANG," * si5sj | Fairsnape Fell in Bleasdale attains 

= 7S QS Vos treet a height of 1,674 ft. above the 
a ee sea. The Ribble forms the 
>I: a ug southern boundary; the next 


ae . oe ee important stream is the Wyre, 
Sp EKIRKHAM Res ON which is joined by the Brock, 
AK; watering the centre of the hun- 
dred, and flowing west and then 
north to enter the sea by the 
Wyre estuary. Leland writing 
about 1535 says that the hundred had formerly been full of wood, the moors 
being ‘replenished with high fir trees,’ but he found the seaward portion 
‘sore destitute of wood.’ * 


P 
ai 


. “pple _f 
ARP SC EYLAN 


‘The hundred was defined probably soon after the Conquest. The name has many spellings : 
Agemundrenesse, Dom. Bk. ; Almunderness, 1177 ; Agmundernes, 1212 ; Augmonderness, 1226 ; 
Aumundernesse, 1242 ; Amunderness, 1244 ; Aumonderness, Aumunderneys, 1297 ; Andreness, 1535. 

A pleading in 1300 turned upon the spelling of the word. The plaintiff claimed an acre in Preston in 
“Aundernesse’ ; the defendants replied that Preston was within a certain liberty called Aumundernesse and 
not Aundernesse ; De Banco R. 134, m. 69. 

Camden gives Anderness as the local pronunciation in his time. Leland spells it Aundernesse. 

Agamund was a monk of Croyland, and Hagemund occurs locally as a personal name ; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, passim. 

? For convenience the accounts of Fulwood, Myerscough and Bleasdale have been added to Preston, 
and those of Preesall and Stalmine to Kirkham. 

Fulwood, Myerscough and Bleasdale were the principal parts of the forest of Amounderness ; see Ducatus 
Lanc. (Rec. Com.), ili, 331. 

3 Thornber, Blackpool, 125. Camden remarks: ‘This part yieldeth plenty of oats, but [is] not so apt 
to bear barley. However, it is full of fresh pastures, especially to the sea side, where it is partly champain 
ground’ ; Britannia (ed. Gibson), 753. Very littlecorn is now raised. The district has no definite boundary, 
‘The Fylde’ being a popular term, but a line drawn from Freckleton to Cockerham shows roughly the 
eastern limit. * Itin. v, 98. 


68 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


More than a century before the Conquest part of Amounderness 
was given by Athelstan to St. Peter’s Church, York,° but it does not seem to 
have been retained. The district was then more extensive than at present.® 
In 1066 it was held by Earl Tostig, the younger brother of King Harold, 
slain at Stamford Bridge while taking part in the King of Norway’s invasion. 
Preston was the head of the whole district, which was in 1086 surveyed as 
part of Yorkshire.” It is not called a hundred or wapentake in Domesday 
Book, the name Amounderness being descriptive, like Lonsdale or Furness. 

Since the Conquest the lordship has descended in the same way as the 
honour of Lancaster, except for a few years at the end of the 12th and 
beginning of the 13th century. John while Count of Mortain, between 
11g0 and 1193, gave to Theobald Walter the whole of Amounderness, with 
the vill of Preston, the forest, all demesne lands, services of knights and 
free tenants, &c., with all pleas of wapentake and forest, excepting only the 
pleas pertaining to the Crown. For this Theobald was to render the service 
of three knights’ fees. The grant was confirmed or renewed by Richard I 
in 1194," and, though forfeited on John’s accession in 1199, was restored in 

1202, perhaps for life only.° Very soon afterwards Amounderness was again 
in the possession of the Crown.” 


Suit to the three weeks’ wapentake court was a usual condition of tenure 
of lands.” The profits of the pleas were estimated at 20s. in 1297.% The 
Court Rolls of 1324-5, which have been printed,” show that the courts were 
usually held at Preston, but sometimes at Ashton, Garstang Church, Poulton 
and ‘ Yolrungegreve.’ There are later rolls at the Record Office.“ 

The bailiwick of the hundred was granted to the ancestor of the 
Singleton family,” and descended regularly to Banastre and Balderston *” and 


* The charters (dated 930) are printed in Dugdale, Mon. vi, 1176; Birch, Cart. Sax. ii, 405. 
See also V.C.H. Lancs. i, 271 ; Lancs. and Ches. Antig. Soc. xviii, 110-11. Bispham or Biscopham in the Fylde 
has been thought a token of the gift, which was ‘ of no small extent.’ 

* The bounds in the charters referred to are thus given : From the sea by the Cocker up to its source, 
thence to the source (?) called Duleshope, and thence by the Hodder and Ribble to the sea. Duleshope may 
be Wyresdale. The boundaries also in 1066 were similar, it appearing from Domesday Book that 
Amounderness then included all Ribchester, Chippingdale and Aighton (afterwards in Blackburnshire) and 
part of Cockerham (afterwards in Lonsdale). " V.C.H. Lanes. i, 2884. 

* Cotton MSS. Titus B. xi, fol. 252. The witnesses included Stephen Ridell, ‘my Chancellor,’ and 
William de Wendeuall. The reference is due to Mr. J. H. Round. 

® Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 434. 

* Ibid. 211-12. In 1199 King John granted to the burgesses of Preston the whole toll of the 
wapentake ; Ca/. Rot. Chart. (Rec. Com.), 26. ; 

° Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 115, 120, 192. Theobald Walter died in 1205, and in the Pipe Rolls 
of 1205-6 and later the sheriff accounted for £29 tos. 4d. of the farm of Amounderness, {4 of perquisites 
of the same wapentake and other profits of Theobald’s estates ; Farrer, op. cit. 206, 217, &c. 

" Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 211, 213. * Thid. 290. 

"8 In Lancs. Ct. R. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 114-23. 

™ Duchy of Lanc. Ct. R. bdle. 79, no. 1032. 

® Little Singleton, which gave a surname to the family, was held by the serjeanty of the wapentake ; 
Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, §2, 160. The date of the grant is unknown ; see Farrer, op. cit. 34. 

William son of Swain, ‘then seneschal of Amounderness,’ occurs in an early Lytham charter, now at 
Durham ; 1 a, 2 ae, 4 ae, Ebor. no. 37. 

16 See the accounts of Broughton in Preston and Balderston. 

The serjeanty of Amounderness, formerly William Banastre’s, was in 1324~—5 in the hands of William de 
Tatham and William Lawrence on account of the minority of the heir ; Memo. R. (L.T.R.), 88, m. 6d. Agnes 
widow of Sir Thomas Banastre had a third part as dower in 1392; B.M. Add. Chart. 20511, 20522. 

7 Richard Balderston died in 1456 holding Little Singleton by the office of providing bailiffs for 
Amounderness and Blackburnshire ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 63. There was a dispute as to the 
matter in 1462 ; ibid. ii, 71. See B.M. Add. Chart. 20511. 


69 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


to the heirs of the last-named."® On a division in 1564 it was assigned to the 
Earl of Derby.!2 The duties of the office as held by William Banastre were 
thus described in 1323: ‘ Making executions of mandates of the king’s courts 
by writs and summonses and by summons of the king’s exchequer by precept 
of the sheriff ; also of judgements of the county court of Lancaster and the 
wapentake court of Amounderness ; making summonses, attachments and 
distraints by precept of the sheriff or keepers of the king’s lands, and 
executions of the sheriff’s tourns.’ ” 

Complaints were made in 1334 as to the administration of Henry de 
Bickerstath, who held the office by grant from John Banastre and Nicholas 
his brother (grantees of Adam Banastre), paying them {20 a year. Henry 
was alleged to employ too many bailiffs in his circuit of the hundred, thus 
laying a needless burden on the tenants. It was stated that Alan de Singleton 
had performed his duties in person at his own charges. His son William 
did the same, taking nothing from the men of the wapentake except by 
their courtesy. His son Alan found it necessary to employ a bailiff, for 
many assarts had been made and men had multiplied. This system had 
continued, the number of officials gradually increasing. The acting bailifts 
recouped the annual rent they paid to the Singletons by charges on the men 
of the wapentake for puture, &c.”" 

Several outlying members of the barony of Penwortham are found in 
this hundred. . There are a few references to the hundred in the records” ; 
perhaps the most noteworthy is that, on the requisition of ship-money in 
1640, it ‘would neither assess nor pay.’ ” 

The three weeks’ wapentake court, which survived till recently, had 
jurisdiction in personal actions where the debt or damages did not amount to 
40s. The chief officer was a steward, appointed by the Crown in right of 
the duchy.” 

About 1580 inquiry was made as to the fisheries of the county, par- 
ticularly as to the destruction of salmon and their fry in the Ribble and 
Wyre. Sir Richard Shireburne and the other commissioners reported that 
they had ‘reformed’ unlawful engines and nets, and had viewed all the 
weirs, calls and gorses standing on the rivers named. ‘They objected to two, 
viz. one called Bessowe call on the Ribble and another recently erected on 
the Wyre by William Kirkby of Upper Rawcliffe.” 

Amounderness gave name to a deanery in the archdeaconry of Richmond 
in the diocese of York. Adam Dean of Amounderness occurs in the Pipe 


18 Thomas Radcliffe of Winmarleigh died in 1521 holding a fourth part of Little Singleton by the 
serjeanty of being bailiff of the king’s wapentake of Amounderness and Blackburnshire ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. v, no. 3. Thomas Earl of Derby at the same time held a moiety by the same service; ibid. v, 
no. 68. Alexander Osbaldeston was the other tenant, but no service was recorded in his case. 

Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 216, m. 10; Edward Earl of Derby was to be bailiff of Amounderness. 
Hence his grandson Ferdinando held the manor of Little Singleton in 1594 by that service ; Add. MS. 32104, 
fol. 426 (Blackburnshire also is named). The office was held by James Earl of Derby in 1715; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 276, m. 52. ” Lancs. Ing. and Extents, li, 160. 

"| Coram Rege R. 297, Rex, m. 21, 27. 

™ For example, the appointment of keepers of the peace in 1323 and 1345; Cal. Pat. 1321-4, 
Pp. 382; 1343-5, P. 510. 

* Cal. S. P. Dom. 1640, p. 230. 

* Hardwick, Preston, 499. The steward in 1857 was the Duke of Hamilton, and his deputy was 
Edmund Robert Harris, the Preston benefactor. 

* Duchy of Lanc. Special Com. 308. 


7o 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Roll of 1177-8 as paying a mark for some breach of the forest laws”; also 
in 1181-27 and later.* He was Dean of Kirkham in 1194.” The deanery 
was smaller than it afterwards became, there being also a Dean of Lancaster, 
but it had attained its full jurisdiction before 1291, when it included the 
parishes of Kirkham, Preston, Ribchester, Chipping, Garstang, Cockerham, 
Lancaster, St. Michael’s, Poulton (with Bispham) and Lytham.” The 
names of several of the deans have been preserved.” 


** Farrer, op. cit. 38. 

7 Tbid. 47; he desired to secure the wardship of his nefos and the marriage of the mother. 

* Tbid. 52; he married his daughter, who was of the king’s donation, to the son of Norman de 
Redmayne. 

*® Cur. Reg. R. 2, m. 17d, °° Pope Nich. Tax. (Rec. Com.), 307. 

! John de Conisburgh was dean in 1292; Assize R. 408, m. rord. 

John de Ascam was dean in 1334, when he was accused of extortion, demanding fees of 20s. for 
every {20 contained in a testament and 2od. for every 20s.; Coram Rege R. 297, Rex m. 22d. 

William Ballard was dean in 1346; Kuerden MSS. iv, K 18. He died of the plague in 1349, 
being succeeded by 

Adam de Kirkham ; Eng? Hist. Rev. v, 526. 

Thomas Catterick, chaplain, was dean in 1388; Pal. of Lanc. Docquet R. 1 (12 John of Gaunt). 

Richard Cleveland occurs in 1504 ; Add. MS. 32107, no. 219, 233. 

Richard Waring was dean in 1517 ; Hornby Chapel D. 

Nicholas Lawrenson was dean in 1561 ; Duchy of Lanc. Spec. Com. no. 36. 

Richard Parker, vicar of Chipping, was appointed dean in 1592 and again in 1598; Dansey, Horae 
Dec. Rur. ii, 374, 376. 


qi 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


PRESTON 


PRESTON ELSTON HAIGHTON 
RIBBLETON FISHWICK BARTON 
GRIMSARGH and BROCKHOLES BROUGHTON LEA, ASHTON, INGOL and COTTAM 


The parish of Preston lies on the north bank of 
the Ribble, and has an area of 16,116 acres, in- 
cluding 2074 acres of tidal water. The population 
in 1901 was 115,483, mostly within the borough 
of Preston. The surface is undulating, with a general 
rise towards the north and east. 

The history of the parish is practically that of the 
town which has given its name to the whole. The 
old portion of the town occupies the centre of a 


The street had a continuation down to the riverside, 
but its main line turned to the north-west, and after 
passing out of the town divided, part forming the 
main road north and part going west to Kirkham. 
On the south side of the main street stood the parish 
church, while on the opposite side, further west, 
just at the turning was the moot hall, with the market 
place behind it. These streets and buildings, though 
improved and renewed on a grander scale, have 

remained predominant features 


of the town. 


LO’, 


owing Z 
ZA Light Ash 4/7 PRESTON. 


The traces of early history 
are but scanty.? From the 
Roman station at Walton-le- 
Dale on the south bank of the 
Ribble, the north road, cross- 


A ® Brock 
YERSCOU 
La 


ing the river by a ford, passed 


US 
ey) 


\\Y 


" woe 
Dope SALE 
ey Fark A LI 
52 Head K pkhamZ Li 
%e Pos regal Yj 


\ 
\\ 


\ 


through Preston,’ and as this 
place had good communication 
westward by water and stood 
in the centre of two level and 
fruitful districtsn—The Fylde to 
the north-west and Leyland 
to the south—it had probably 
some importance from an early 
time, and may well have been 
part of ‘the land by Ribble’ 
granted to St. Wilfrid for the 
endowment of his monastery 
at Ripon about 670.4 On the 
other hand it was obviously 
exposed to the incursions of 
the Norse pirates. 

Preston was at that time 
Be within the kingdom of North- 

Lye tH; umbria and diocese of York, 

un EZ and at the Conquest was 
os Z fiscally still part of the county 


ty 


o> 


of York. It was in 1066 the 


table-land between two brooks which flow south-west 
into the Ribble,! this navigable river completing the 
boundary on the south side. Along each side of the 
Ribble are level tracts of low-lying land, but just at 
the town the surface rises sharply from the river to 
the table-land named. To the west of the town was 
the marsh, while a moor extended itself along the 
northern boundary. The main street ran from east 
to west, being the continuation of the road from 
the south across Ribble Bridge, into which at the 
entrance of the town came a road from Ribchester. 


' The northern brook, the position of 
which is marked by Moorbrook Street, 
fell inte the Ribble at the division between 
Preston and Ashton. The southern one, 
named Swill Brook, formed the boundary 
between Preston and Fishwick. 

? For the ancient remains see Fishwick, 
Preston, 3-7, and the sections of the 
present work, 


Conquest erection. 


in all. 


® The bridge at Walton, emphatically 
‘Ribble Bridge,’ is supposed to be of post- 


+ See the account of the church. 

5 V.C.H. Lanes. 
manors within the 
parish were assessed as 18 plough-lands 


head of a fee or lordship com- 
prising the whole district of Amounderness, held by 
Earl Tostig. Afterwards it was granted to Roger 
of Poitou,® who probably created a borough there, 
on which the privileges of a guild merchant were 
conferred in 1179, the town being then in the 
king’s hands. There is other evidence of its relative 
importance, and it had a market and fair.6 As a 
borough Preston sent two burgesses to some of the 
early Parliaments—from 1295 to 1331—but the 
burdensome duty fell into abeyance, not being 
resumed till 1529 and 1545.7 Even in 1601 the 


6 See the account of the borough. The 
assizes appear to have been held there in 
1226 and 1229; Cal. Pat. 1225-32, 
PP- 71, 284. 

7 Pink and Beaven, Lancs. Parl. Repre. 
135-176, referring to W. Dobson, Preston 
Parl. Repre. (1868), and articles in the 
Preston Guardian; L. and P. Hen. VIII, 


iv (3), p. 2692. 


i, 2884. The 
limits of the 


72 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


election of a member was left to the choice of Sir 
Robert Cecil.® 

The position of the town in the centre of the 
county and on a great road from south to north 
has occasioned its being the scene of many stormy 
events. On 4 November 1315 Adam Banastre and 
his confederates led their force to Preston, and, having 
overcome Sir Adam de Huddleston and others sent 
to check them, captured the place and made levies 
on the townsmen. Later in the same day, however, 
they were overthrown by Edmund de Nevill, the 
sheriff, who led the main force of the county.? Some 
seven years later the parish was laid waste by the 
Scots, who probably burnt the town.’? A minor 
disturbance took place in 1338, when John, Nicholas 
and William Deuyas, with a number of armed com- 
rades, having crossed the Ribble, made sundry assaults 
at Ribchester and then went on to Preston. Here 
they lay hid in the fields near the Grey Friars’ house, 
and when Thomas Starkie and others came near 
those in ambush set upon them, shooting arrows and 
driving them into the Friars’ church. The rioters 
afterwards went to Kidsnape in Goosnargh.” 

In 1332 a total of £9 45. 7}d. was raised in the 
parish by a subsidy, the hundred paying £53 185. 2}d. 
The amounts for the various townships? are much 
the same as those fixed for the ‘fifteenth’; while 
the county lay of 1624, considered a fair tax at the 
time, required the parish tocontribute £15 175. 43d. 
towards {£100 for Amounderness.4 This shows a 
reduction in the relative value of Preston in the 
300 years’ interval. 

About 1340 the borough had not only the parish 
church, but an old leper hospital with its chapel and 
a house and church of Grey Friars®; the chapel at 
Broughton probably existed, and one or two minor 
oratories. In the centre of the parish was the forest 
district of Fulwood, in which the burgesses had 
secured certain rights. The parish suffered from the 
plague in 1349-50; the Archdeacon of Richmond 
in a claim for probate dues alleged that 3,000 men 
and women had succumbed to it, and the jury, in 
allowing him £10, seem to have estimated the number 
of wills proved as about fifty in the period defined, 
viz. from 8 September 1349 to 11 January following.” 
Some trouble with the labourers appears to have 
followed the plague.” 

The Guild meetings are known to have been held 


8 Cecil MSS. (Hist. MSS. Com.), xi, Preston, £4 


IIs. 


PRESTON 


early in the 14th century, for Kuerden has preserved 
certain regulations of a mayor’s court held in June 
1328, in which reference was made to an order 
decreed ‘in the time of our last Guild Merchant.’ 
It was agreed that the mayor, bailiffs and burgesses 
might ‘set a guild merchant at every twenty years,” 
if necessary, the fees to ‘go whole to the mayor at 
the renewing of the guild and refreshing of our 
town,’ the object being the preservation of the guild, 
and therefore of the royal charter, by a regular 
purging of the roll and admission of new burgesses.!® 
The earliest roll extant is that of 1397, and in spite 
of the order quoted the Guilds were held at irregular 
intervals; from 1542, however, they have been 
celebrated every twenty years without a break, the 
latest being that of 1902.” From 1562 the time of 
holding the festival has been the Monday after 
29 August, the Decollation of St. John Baptist, 
patron of the guild. The roll of 1397 gives first 
the In Burgesses—‘ those who are in the forenamed 
guild and whose fathers were in’ it; then the 
Foreign Burgesses—knights and gentry of the county 
in many cases; and then ‘the names of those whose 
fathers were not in the forenamed guild and there- 
fore made fine.” The entries afford information 
as to the trades practised in the town, for there are 
named chaloner, coaler, draper, fleshewer, glover, 
mason, mercer, miller, saddler, souter, spicer, tailor, 
webster and wright. At the back of the roll are 
names of women members, being widows or daughters 
of members.” 

The class of foreign burgesses was at first very 
small, but in the 17th century and later ‘wholesale 
admissions of the neighbouring gentry and others 
seeking connexion with Preston as a matter of honour 
or social advantage . . . and the promotion of many 
Out Burgesses of long standing to the class of In 
Burgesses with its larger privileges,” made the number 
of non-resident burgesses larger than that of the 
townsmen enrolled, and ‘it became necessary to check 
the process of appropriation of these franchises by 
non-residents and strangers.’ An inferior class 
named Stallingers first appeared in the roll of 1562 ; 
they were permitted to live and trade in the town, 
but not admitted to be burgesses. The new borough 
created seventy years ago destroyed the political im- 
portance of the guild, but it remains in full vigour 
as a popular festival. 


Ribbleton, made before ; for the king gives the free- 


dom to the burgesses which are in the 


22d.; 


443. 
8 Coram Rege R. 254, m. 52. Adam 
de Bury and William the Marshal were 
among the townsmen whose goods were 
taken by the insurgents. 

10 Preston was taken by the Scots in 
13223 see V.C.H. Lancs. ii, 199. The 
extent of 1346, quoted later, mentions a 
house which had been burnt by them. 

1) Assize R. 430, m. 22. Thomas 
Starkie and others in 1343 terrified the 
bailiffs in order to prevent the execution 
of writs and caused disturbances ; ibid. 
m, 21d. 

12 Preston, 535. 4d.3  Ribbleton, 
12s. 13d.; Grimsargh and Brockholes, 
11s. tod.3 Elston, 14s. 8d.; Fishwick, 
8s. ; Broughton, 26s. 8d. ; Haighton, 115.; 
Barton, 245.; Lea and Ashton, each 
11s. 6d.3 Exch. Lay Subs. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), 54-72. 

18 Gregson, Fragments (ed. Harland), 19. 

4 Ibid, 23. The townships paid thus: 


Kg 


Li 2s. 22d. ; Grimsargh and Brockholes, 
17s. 1¢d.; Elston, £1 8s. 6d. ; Fishwick, 
17s. 1}d.; Broughton, £2 5s. 73d. 3 
Haighton, £1 3s. 11dd.; Barton, 
£1 18s. g4d.; Lea, 15s. 24d.; Ashton, 
&c., 17s. 8d. In addition Myerscough 
paid £3 1s. 12d. 

16 Leland (Jvin. iv, 22) states that the 
Friars’ house was built on ‘the soil of a 
gentleman named Preston,’ and that 
several of his family were buried there, as 
also some of the Shireburnes and Daltons. 

16 Engl, Hist, Rev. v, §26-7. 

VW Tbid. xxi, 534, citing Anct. Indict- 
ments, Lance. 54. 

318 Kuerden MSS. iv, P 23 ; printed by 
Abram, Memorials of the Preston Guilds, 8. 

19 It was ordered that ‘all manner of 
burgess the which is made burgess by 
court roll and out of the Guild Merchant, 
shall never be mayor nor bailiff nor ser- 
jeant ; but only the burgess the which the 
name be in the Guild Merchant last 


73 


Guild and to none other.’ 

20 Guilds are known to have been held 
in 1397, 1415, t459 and 1500; this is 
believed 4o be a complete list for the 
period covered. The rolls of the three 
former and those of the guilds from 1542 
to 1682 have been printed by the Record 
Society of Lancashire and Cheshire(vol. ix). 
The originals are preserved at Preston. 
The roll of 1500 has been lost, but there 
are notes of it in Kuerden MSS. iv, P 36. 

21 The 1397 list is headed by Sir 
Richard de Hoghton. 

22 The fines were of various amounts, 
from 2s, up to 405. 

28 In 1562 it was ordered that widows 
should ‘have and enjoy such liberties and 
freedoms during their widowhood as their 
husbands in lifetime had and enjoyed by 
reason of their burgess-ship.’ 

24-W. A. Abram in introduction to 
Guild R. 


| fe) 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


The officers ot the Guild were the mayor, who 
was also mayor of the borough, stewards and alder- 
men. The following is a list of mayors: 1328, 
Aubred son of Robert ; 1397, William de Erghum 
(Arkholme) ; 1415, Henry Johnson ; 1459, Robert 
Hoghton ; 1500, William Marshall ; 1542, Thomas 
Tipping; 1562, Thomas Wall; 1582, George 
Walton; 1602, Henry Catterall; 1622, William 
Preston; 1642, Edmund Werden; 1662, James 
Hodgkinson; 1682, Roger Sudell; 1702, Josias 
Gregson ; 1722, Edmund Assheton; 1742, Henry 
Farington ; 1762, Robert Parker; 1782, Richard 
Atherton; 1802 and 1822, Nicholas Grimshaw ; 
1842, Samuel Horrocks; 1862, Robert Townley 
Parker ; 1882, Edmund Birley ; 1902, the Earl of 
Derby.” The meetings sometimes lasted a fortnight. 

To return from this digression, we find that in the 
time of Henry Duke of Lancaster (1351-61) the 
courts of the duchy were held at Preston,” and once 
at least the parish church served as a court-house.” 
Usually they seem to have been held at Lancaster, 
but in time of pestilence were transferred to Preston.” 
An inquiry as to the obstructions to the passage of 
vessels up the Ribble was ordered in 1359.% A 
matter of this kind may have contributed to the 
decline evident in the importance of the town in the 
1sthcentury. ‘The burgesses were fewer in number 
in 1459 than in 1415. The old freemen, sons of 
fathers who had been in the guild, had dwindled 
down... to about ninety persons,’ though the 
foreign burgesses had slightly increased to forty-five. 
The new in burgesses admitted in 1459 numbered 
ninety-three, the roll being thus doubled.*° 

In 1536, during the excitement of the Pilgrimage 
of Grace, the Earl of Derby made Preston his head 
quarters, but on 30 October was able to publish the 
king’s proclamation and desire the gentlemen to 
go home.’ The Earl of Sussex was there in 1537 
on a similar work for the pacification of the north ; 
he thought there was ‘not a scarcer country both for 
horse meat and man’s meat in England.’ As to his 
mission, he expected to leave the people as ‘ obedient, 
faithful, and dreadful subjects’ as any in England. 
Leland visited the place about that time, and writes 
thus: ‘Half a mile beyond Darwen I passed over 
the great stone bridge of Ribble, having a v. great 


arches. From Ribble Bridge to Preston half a mile. 
Preston hath but one parish church. The market 
place of the town is fair. Ribble goeth round about 
a great piece of the ground about town, yet it 
toucheth nct the town itself by space of almost half a 
mile... . A mile without Preston I rode over 
Savock, a big brook, the which, rising in the hills 
a ili. or iv. miles off on the right hand, not very far 
off goeth into Ribble.’ * 

The town and district were hostile to the Reforma- 
tion. Even at present, in spite of former penal laws 
and the vast changes effected by modern industries 
with their new populations, Preston remains a 
stronghold of Roman Catholicism. Various inci- 
dents recorded in the accounts of the church and 
the separate townships give evidence of the state of 
affairs in the time of Elizabeth, and a few more may 
be added to illustrate a matter of such importance. 
Thus the Guild of 1582 was marked by a complaint 
from Lawrence Wall, one of the principal burgesses, 
that George Walton, the Guild mayor, was promoting 
the celebration for his own gain, while he himself 
opposed it as ‘tending to mere superstition, as may 
appear by the view of the ancient records of the 
said town concerning the keeping of the old guild 
merchant there,** tending to this effect that the guild 
should begin with procession and a mass of the Holy 
Ghost—now not tolerable—and divers other super- 
stitious rites and ceremonies now abrogated.’ Wall 
had urged the mayor—but in vain—to execute the 
statute against unlawful games and plays, such as the 
keeping of common bowling alleys, unlawful playing 
at cards and dice. The mayor and his wife had been 
ordered by the ecclesia:tical commission to receive the 
holy communion but had not done so.* 

Next year it was the Bishop of Chester who 
denounced it and two other places as having a people 
‘most obstinate and contemptuous’ of the Eliza- 
bethan laws on religion ; he desired the government 
‘to deal severely and roundly with them.’ * 

In the autumn of 1600 a priest named Robert 
Middleton, a Yorkshireman educated at the English 
College at Rome, was arrested near Preston by Sir 
Richard Hoghton, and after being examined by him 
and Thomas Hesketh *® was delivered to the mayor 
of Preston, who sent him to Lancaster Castle. On 


25 Details of the celebrations down to 
1882 may be seen in the work already 
cited, Abram’s Memorials. It contains, 
for example, the minute account of the 
Guild of 1682 given by Dr. Kuerden. 
The Guild sermons on this occasion, 
preached by Richard Wroe and Thomas 
Gipps, were afterwards printed. 

26 Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), ii, 130, &c. 

a Assize R. 450, m. 8. There was 
probably no other public building in the 
town large enough for a court-house. 

33 Final Conc. iii, 1403 this was in 
1466. Lancaster retained a monopoly of 
the assizes and quarter sessions until a 
century ago, but in the 17th century, if 
no earlier, the Chancery Court of the 
duchy was held at Preston, which became 
a lawyers’ town. 

29 Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 346. 

80 Preston Guild R. xxi. 

81 L. and P. Hen, VIII, xi, 922, 947, 
1212 (3). 

82 Thid. xii, 695. 


83 [tin, v, 97. Camden’s notice of 


Preston some fifty years later -is but 
brief: ‘A great and (for those countries) 
a fair town, and well inhabited’; Britannia 
(ed. 1695), 752. Taylor, the Water Poet, 
Drayton, in Polyolbion, and ‘Drunken 
Barnaby’ have verses about it in the first 
part of the 17th century. 

34 The ‘articles and points’ agreed upon 
in 1500 and 1542 show that the guild was 
proclaimed on three preceding market 
days, and all burgesses were expected to 
attend on the first day, going in proces- 
sion from the Maudlands through the 
town and hearing mass of the Holy Ghost 
in company with the mayor and alder- 
men. Afterwards the enrolling began, 
when new burgesses could be admitted to 
the franchise ; Abram, Memorials. 

83 Duchy of Lanc. Plead. Eliz. cxxvii, 
W 11. From these it appears further 
that the mayor, either before or after 
Wall’s interference, empanelled a jury 
who sanctioned a right of way over 
certain of the complainant’s land in the 
Newfield. 

About the same time Wall alleged that 


74 


William Hodgkinson, lately bailiff, had, 
“of a covetous humour,’ unjustly levied 
certain dues ; ibid. W 10. 

86 Foley, Rec. S. J., Vy 392, quoting 
S. P. Dom. Eliz. clxiii, 84. 

37 Ibid. viii, 1367, quoting S. P. Dom. 
Eliz. cclxxv, 83. ‘The priest . . 
had no letters nor any other thing of 
importance found upon him saving only a 
popish service book.’ In reply to his 
examiners, ‘being demanded whether he 
have said mass, christened children, 
married any person, or reconciled any to 
the Church of Rome he said he had done 
so and all other things concerning a priest, 
and saith that such as he hath reconciled 
he doth instruct them to be Catholic. 
Being required to declare whether he 
used in his reconciling or otherwise any 
persuasion that if the pope should invade 
the realm of England for alteration of 
religion with force, whether those that 
are reconciled to the Catholic Roman 
Church should take part with the queen's 
majesty against the forces of the pope 
coming for such a cause, to that he saith 


(Sumoip syomg “NS °§ m0Ly) 
BzZI NI Logasoug HLNOG : NOLSTAg 


CMOS TTL 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


the way, near Myerscough, ‘they were overtaken by 
four horsemen and a man on foot, who demanded 
whether the prisoner was a priest and attempted to 
rescue him. A desperate affray ensued, in which the 
assailants were worsted and Greenlow, one of the 
horsemen, was taken prisoner. The party then 
returned to Preston, and Greenlow was examined.’ 
It turned out that he was a seminary priest, a York- 
shireman named Thurstan Hunt. In the end both 
the priests were condemned as traitors for their 
priesthood only, and were executed at Lancaster in 
the March following.*8 

At the Bishop of Chester’s visitation in 1605 
sixty-eight recusants were presented in Preston town, 
and nineteen others in the parish, some being de- 
scribed as arch-recusants. Argument was dealt with 
after the manner of the time: ‘William Urmston, 
gentleman, a great seducing Papist, seduceth the 
people very much, and sometimes a crafty subtle 
lawyer. The churchwardens desire some course may 
be taken with him that they te not troubled with 
his subtle arguments.’ One William Ridley was 
‘supposed to have many masses said in his house 
since the death of the queen, whereunto many 
have resorted,” 89 

Somewhat later, in 1629 and subsequent years, 
the following recusants compounded by annual fines 
for the sequestration of two-thirds of their estates : 
In Preston—Henry Ashton, £3 65. 8d. ; Alexander 
Rigby, £2; James Walton, £6; Grace Wilkinson, 
£3- In Broughton—Hugh Crook, William Single- 
ton and George Wilkinson, {2 each. In Ribbleton 
—John Farington, £6 135. 42. In Grimsargh— 
William Hoghton, £10. The following compounded 
for arrears only, having been induced to conform : 
Henry Sudell of Preston and Henry Grayson of 
Fulwood.*? Richard Hurst, a yeoman of the district, 
probably of Broughton, was to be arrested for 
recusancy by order of the Bishop of Chester. 
The violence of the officers provoked a fight, 
and one of them afterwards died. Hurst was 
charged with murder, and it is stated that the judge 
at the trial, Sir Henry Yelverton, ‘informed the 
jury that the prisoner was a recusant and had resisted 
the bishop’s authority ; and told them that he must 
be found guilty of murder, as an example.’ The 
jury returned this verdict, but Hurst on his way to 
execution was offered his life if he would take the 


he doth not answer, for he doubteth of it. pounders 


should be 


PRESTON 


oath of allegiance. As it contained anti-Catholic 
clauses he refused, and was accordingly executed 
29 August 1628.41 

James I was entertained by the mayor and cor- 
poration during his progress from the north to London 
in 1617. Arriving at the cross on 15 August he was 
received by the mayor and corporation and presented 
with a bowl; after the recorder’s speech the king 
went to a banquet in the Guildhall? A great 
pestilence is recorded in 1630-1. The guild order 
book of the time states that 1,100 persons and 
upwards died within the town and parish of Preston 
from the plague, which began about 10 November 
1630 and lasted a whole year.'® 

On the outbreak of the Civil War the people of 
the district in general espoused the king’s side.‘4 
One of the powder magazines for the county had 
been established at Preston in 1639.4° Before the 
actual outbreak of war Lord Strange in June 1642 
summoned a muster of the armed force of the county 
on the moor to the north of the town,** and Preston 
itself was garrisoned by Royalists soon afterwards.*” 
Early in the following year Sir John Seaton led the 
Parliament’s troops to attack it. They found it to 
be defended by a brick wall, but made the assault 
with great courage on g February 1642-3, and after 
two hours’ fighting captured the town. The mayor, 
Adam Mort, died of his wounds; he had threatened 
to burn the place, beginning with his own dwelling, 
rather than suffer it to fall into the power of the 
Parliament.48 Mr. Anderton of Clayton, the com- 
mandant of the garrison, was taken prisoner with 
several other local men of importance, and some 
were killed. Various guns and war stores were 
captured ‘and divers were pillaged to a purpose.’ # 
Rosworm, the famous engineer, afterwards re-fortified 
the position. 

Five weeks later, 20 March, Lord Derby having 
learnt that the place was weak because troops had 
been drawn away to resist him at Lancaster, hurried 
to Preston and recaptured it for the king. The 
mayor, Edmund Werden, was in charge of the town, 
and refused to surrender it; but assaults were made 
at three points by Captains Chisnall, Radcliffe and 
Rawstorne, and after an hour’s struggle the place was 
taken. ‘There was no general plunder, but Lord 
Derby ‘gave command that the houses of those who 
had betrayed the town before should be responsible 


added Thomas 47 Civil War Tracts (Chet. Soc.), 


And being demanded whether he taketh 
the queen’s majesty to be lawful Queen 
of England, he saith “In temporal 
matters,” and that he hath done and will 
pray that God would make her majesty a 
Catholic. And being likewise demanded 
whether her majesty ought to be Queen 
of England, the pope’s excommunication 
notwithstanding, to that he saith he will 
not answer, nor any more questions.’ 

88 Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath, iti, 
4813 v, 133 Cal. S. P. Dom. 1598-1601, 
p- 485; Foley, op. cit. viii, 962. Mid- 
dleton was admitted to the Society of 
Jesus just before his execution. 

The cause of the beatification of both 
priests, also of Richard Hurst, hereafter 
mentioned, and George Haydock of Cot- 
tam, was allowed to be introduced at Rome 
in 1886 ; Pollen, Acts of Martyrs, 379-82. 

89 Presentments, Chester Dioc. Reg. 

40 Trans. Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xxiv, 
175, &c. To the first class of com- 


Richardson of Myerscough, £14 10s. 66. 


41 Gillow, op. cit. ili, 487-9, from a 
contemporary account, reprinted 1737. 

42 Assheton’s Journ. (Chet. Soc.), 36-7. 

43 Abram, Memorials of the Guilds, 42 ; 
Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 45 3 
Civil War in Ches. (Rec. Soc, Lancs, and 
Ches.), 6. 

44-The Protestation of 1641, which 
affords a list of the inhabitants of the parish, 
is remarkable as showing that a large 
number refused to assent. The names 
are printed in Fishwick, op. cit. 425-31. 

45 Cal. S. P. Dom. 1638-9, p. 387. 
The small stock there in 1642 was seized 
by the Royalists; Hist. MSS. Com, Rep. 
vy Hoppe 37, 5% 

46 Lord Strange, Lord Molyneux and 
many of the gentry were present, the 
whole assemblage being estimated to 
number 5,000, A large number of them 
were in favour of the Parliament ; ibid.; 
Civil War Tracts (Chet. Soc.), 14, 23. 


75 


48 War in Lancs. (Chet. Soc.), 23. The 
troops had crossed by Ribble Bridge, and 
the main body attacked from the east 
side ; but a small force went round to the 
house of correction and entered by Friar- 
gate Bars. This writer states that the 
town was captured on the morning of 
8 Feb., but the more detailed account in 
Civil War Tracts (p. 74) says it was the 
following day. 

John Tyldesley of Deane also has given 
a description of the event ; he adds: ‘So 
soon as matters were settled we sang 
praises to God in the streets,’ and ‘the 
sun brake forth and shined brightly and 
hot, in the time of the exercise, as if it 
had been midsummer’ ; ibid. 73. 

For the importance of the capture see 
Broxap, Civil War in Lancs. 62-5. 

49 Civil War Tracts, 75. For evidence 
of plundering by the Parliament’s soldiers 
see Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 2849. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


to his majesty for their masters’ treason, whose goods 
his lordship ordered to be seized and equally divided 
among the soldiers.’ °° 

Prince Rupert was in the town on 23 June 
1644,°! and returned to it about a fortnight later, 
having been defeated at Marston Moor. He then 
retreated south to Chester, and from that time the 
Parliament had command of Preston.*? The meet- 
ings of the Sequestration Committee were usually 
held there, and there was a Presbyterian classis with 
meetings of the Provincial assembly.*® The post 
stages arranged at that time show that starting from 
London on Saturday morning a dispatch should 
reach Manchester on Wednesday night and Preston 
the next day at noon.*4 

After a few years’ rest the town had renewed 
experience of war, for in August 1648 the army of 
Scotch Covenanters under the Duke of Hamilton in 
their march southward were joined near Preston by 
English Cavaliers under Sir Marmaduke Langdale. 
Religious differences prevented the two bodies acting 
in harmony, and when Cromwell, hastening unex- 
pectedly from Yorkshire, attacked them on 17 August 
they were overcome. The field of battle was to the 
east of the town, from Ribbleton Moor to the river. 
The duke’s forces were partly to the north of the 
Ribble and partly to the south. Langdale’s horse 
covered their left flank and thus met the first onset 
of Cromwell’s army. It was imagined that this was 
no more than Colonel Assheton and the Lancashire 
bands, and so the duke seems to have continued 
sending his infantry over the river southwards. ‘The 
weakened force, after a hot fight of some four hours, 
was driven into Preston itself, where fighting was 
witnessed, and then scattered to north and to south ; 
many were slain, numerous prisoners were taken, and 
the ammunition also.°° The duke was hotly pursued 
the next day and finally routed near Winwick. Just 
three years later,on 14 August 1651, Prince Charles, 
‘the King of Scots,’ passed through Preston on his 
way south, riding through the streets on horseback so 
that he might be seen by the people. Lord Derby, 
having there assembled what force he could from 
the district, followed him to the overthrow at 
Worcester.*® 

The people seem to have welcomed the Restoration, 
and the public proclamation of Charles II, on 
11 May 1660, was made with the usual signs of 


80 Civil War Tracts, 85-6; Stanley P. broken.’ 


He wrote more fully three days 


popular approval.5? William Cole, the vicar, preached 
a sermon on 24 May, the public thanksgiving day, 
and it was printed with a dedication to Sir George 
Booth, the leading Presbyterian Royalist.°* By a 
singular decision of the House of Commons in 1661 
“all the inhabitants’ of the borough were declared 
entitled to vote for the members of Parliament ; and 
though it does not seem to have been acted upon till 
1768 this democratic suffrage was the law till 
1832.59 The hearth tax return of 1663 % shows 
that there were 727 hearths taxable in the town ; 
Alexander Rigby had the largest dwelling, with 
fifteen hearths.£! Ribbleton had twenty hearths 
taxed ; the hall seems to have had six, but was 
divided into three tenements. Fishwick had twenty- 
five, four being the largest number to one house. 
Grimsargh with Brockholes had thirty-six, the 
principal houses being those of the two squires, each 
with five hearths. Elston had twenty-eight ; three 
of the houses had four hearths taxed. Barton had 
102, all in small houses except the hall, which had 
twenty-two hearths, being the largest house in the 
parish. Broughton had eighty-two, of which twelve 
belonged to the Tower. Lea, Ashton and Cottam 
had forty-nine, thirty-two and twenty-seven re- 
spectively ; all the houses were small, except Lea 

Hall, with thirteen hearths.6? Fulwood had fifty- 

one; the largest house had seven hearths. A 

number of tradesmen’s tokens were issued about 

1666.8 

From several descriptions of the town about the 

end of the 17th century it seems to have been 

prosperous. Kuerden has left two descriptions of its 

state in 1680-90. Crossing the Ribble by the 

bridge at Walton he entered the town at the Bars. 

The Pattens’ mansion stood on the right, ‘a 

sumptuous house.” Proceeding along Church Street 

he passed the church and school on the left and 

‘many stately houses’ on the right, on which side 

also stood the town hall and shambles. Opposite 

these last a footpath led down to the Penwortham 

ferry boat. Going past the cross, leaving Fishergate 

on the left, with its ‘many good houses... 

lately erected,’ he went through Cheapside and along 

Friargate, where were yet more ‘good houses.’ 

Passing through the Bars he came to the Moorgate 

and the common, noticing Alderman Wall’s ‘fair 
house’ on the left. He then followed the causey 


The town seems to have maintained 


(Chet. Soc.), iii, p. Lxxxiv. 

51 Cal. S. P. Dom. 1644, p. 265. He 
is said to have seized the mayor, William 
Cottam, and the bailiffs and imprisoned 
them at Skipton. They were afterwards 
compensated by the corporation. 

52 Ibid. 440, 447. 

58 Heywood, Diaries, i, 78. 

54 The stages were: London to St. 
Albans, Newport Pagnell, Northampton, 
Leicester, Nottingham, Derby, Manches- 
ter, Preston; Ca/. S. P. Dom. 1644-5, 


170, 

& Chel War Tracts, 257-68 ; Carlyle, 
Cromwell's Letters, \xiii-iv. The victor 
wrote that same evening : ‘ We advanced 
with the whole army, and the enemy 
being drawn out on a moor betwixt us 
and the town the armies on both sides 
engaged ; and after a very sharp dispute, 
continuing for three or four hours, it 
pleased God to enable us to give them a 
defeat. . . . By this means the enemy is 


later, describing how the Royalists were 
forced back into Preston, ‘into which 
four troops of my own regiment first 
entered; and being well seconded by 
Colonel Harrison’s regiment, charged the 
enemy in the town and cleared the streets.’ 
The Duke of Hamilton and his staff 
swam the Ribble and so regained the 
main body of their foot. 

56 Civil War Tracts, 288, 301; War 
in Lancs. (Chet. Soc.), 70, 73-4. 

57 Preston Guardian Sketches, no. 344. 
The Royalist party was weak in the cor- 
poration, which was ‘purged’ in 1661 by 
the expulsion of Edmund Werden and 
seven others for disloyalty; while 
William Banastre (formerly expelled) 
was restored; Cal. S. P. Dom. 1670, 
p- 663. Even then there were complaints 
that the loyal party was too weak ; ibid. 
1661-2, p. 93, &c. 

58 Preston Guardian, 11 Mar. 1876. 
There is a copy in the Bodleian Library. 


76 


the same loyal disposition, for when 
James II visited Chester in 1687 the cor- 
poration of Preston sent a deputation 
with an address; Cartwrights Diary 
(Camd. Soc.), 74. 

89 Hardwick, Preston, 329, &c. In 
practice ‘the right was confined to all the 
male inhabitants above twenty-one years 
of age who had resided six months in the 
town and were untainted with pauperism 
or crime.’ Religious tests excluded 
Roman Catholics. 

80 Fishwick, op. cit. 432-6. 

61 The next houses in size were those 
of Jane Langton with twelve hearths, 
William Hodskinson and Joan Banastre 
eleven each, William Walmesley and 
William Banastre ten each. There were 
three of nine, three of eight, four of seven, 
thirteen of six and the rest smaller. 

62 Edmund Wearden at Ashton had 
six hearths ; Cottam Hall had only four. 

68 Lancs. and Ches, Antig. Soc. ¥, 87-4 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


over the moor to Fulwood and Cadley Moor ; so he 
came to Broughton ower and church and after- 
wards to St. Lawrence’s Chapel and Barton Hall, and 
passed on to Goosnargh.™ Celia Fiennes was pleased 
with it : ‘ Preston (she says) stands on a hill and is a 
very good market town. Saturday is their marker, 
which day I was there and saw it was provided with 
all sorts of things: leather, cora, coals, butter, 
cheese, and fruit and garden things. There is a very 
spacious market place and pretty church and several 
good houses... . The generality of the build- 
ings, especially in two or three of the great streets, 
were very handsome, better than in most country 
towns, and the streets spacious and well pitched.’ ® 
In 1709 it was thought ‘a very pretty town with 
abundance of gentry in it; commonly called Proud 
Preston.’ As a port it had declined.” 

The religious conditions it is difficult to determine. 
The corporation was Tory and the vicars of the 
parish Whig. There were numerous Dissenters, but 
the relative importance of the Roman Catholics had 
no doubt declined during the century, and was still 
further weakened by the disasters of 1715.% 

The invasion of the Scottish Jacobites in that year 
penetrated as far south as Preston, and drew many 
adherents from the neighbourhood, but ‘all Papists.’® 
The army was placed under the command of a 
lawyer, Thomas Forster of Etherston, member of 
Parliament for Northumberland, and it arrived at 
Preston on g-10 November some 1,700 strong.” 
James III was proclaimed king in the market place. 


PRESTON 


On Saturday the 12th orders were given that the 
whole force was to advance to Manchester, but news 
being brought, greatly to their surprise, that General 
Wills was advancing from Wigan to attack them, they 
resolved to await him. Forster appears to have been 
badly advised ; he refused to defend Ribble Bridge 
and the fords, so that the royal troops crossed the 
river without opposition and at once made a vigorous 
attack on the town.” Some trenches and barricades 
had been formed, and the defenders repelled all the 
attacks with success, the king’s troops suffering 
severely. Darkness put a stop to the fighting on 
Saturday, but next day Wills received a considerable 
accession of strength from General Carpenter, who 
came up from the east, and was thus able to surround 
the town. The Jacobites found that they must 
either cut their way through the king’s forces or 
surrender, having but slight provision for a sustained 
defence. ‘The following day accordingly they laid 
down their arms in the market place,” and the king’s 
troops took possession of the town ; it is said that 
they plundered many of the houses. The prisoners 
were confined in the church for a month, and fed 
upon bread and water at the cost of the towns- 
people.” Some were executed ; in December four 
officers were shot‘; the next month some local 
volunteers were hanged at Gallows Hill, close to 
the present Moor Park: Richard Shuttleworth of 
Preston, Roger Muncaster of Garstang, Thomas 
Cowpe of Walton-le-Dale, William Butler and 
William Arkwright ; and in the following February 


4 Local Glean. Lancs. and Ches. i, 217. 
A more elaborate description by the same 
observer is quoted in Hardwick, Preston, 
giving the names of many of the streets 
and passages, the ferry and fords, and 
particulars of various buildings, including 
the ‘ample, ancient and yet well beau- 
tified town or guild hall or toll booth,’ in 
which was the council chamber. 

The description in Ogilby’s Britannia 
(1690) calls Preston ‘a large and well 
frequented town, governed by a mayor, 
eight aldermen, four under-aldermen and 
twelve common councilmen. . . . Here 
are kept the chancery courts, &c., for the 
county palatine of Lancaster.’ 

6 Through England on a Side Saddle, 
155. She, too, was specially struck with 
the Patten mansion : ‘All stone work, 
five windows in the front and high built 
according to the eastern building near 
London, The ascent to the house was 
fourteen or fifteen stone steps, large, and 
a handsome court with open iron palisades 
in the gate and on each side the whole 
breadth of the house, which discovered 
the gardens on each side of the house.’ 
Patten House was pulled down in 1835 ; 
the gateway was re-erected at Howick 
House ; Hardwick, op. cit.430-1. The 
site is marked by Lord’s Walk and Derby 
Street. 

There are said to have been four alms- 
houses, viz. in Fishergate near the top of 
Mount Street, at the north ends of Friar- 
gate and St. John Street, and at the east 
end of the town ; Hewitson, Preston Ct. 
Leet Rec. 54. 

66 Edmund Calamy’s Autobiography, 
quoted by Fishwick, op. cit. 62. See 
N. and Q. (ser. 7), vii, 428 3 viii, 55, 214. 

87 In a fishery dispute in 1691-2 a 
witness deposed that he had known vessels 
and boats, some of 40 tons burthen, sail 
ap the Ribble as far as Preston Marsh, 


and sometimes even as far as Holme. 
Some of these vessels went to Bristol 
laden with lead; others took millstones 
to Ireland, and did ‘often lie or ride’ at 
a place called Old Millstones in Ashton ; 
Fishwick, op. cit. 87. 

68 In 1687, during a moment of liberty, 
Bishop Leyburne confirmed 1,153 at 
Preston and Tulketh and 1,099 at Ferny- 
halgh ; Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. 
i, 248. 

The vicar of Preston wrote thus to the 
Bishop of Chester in 1715: ‘I beg leave 
to acquaint your lordship that there are 
three townships and part of another in 
this parish, which lie three, four and five 
miles from the church, and have no other 
convenient place of public worship ; that 
by this unhappy situation they have still 
been exposed to temptations and popery, 
which is too prevalent in these parts of 
your lordship’s diocese, and are thereby 
an easier prey to the priests of that com- 
munion, we having no less than six of 
these men in the one parish. From my 
first coming to this place I have wished 
for some hopeful remedy against this 
growing evil’; Notitia Cestr. (Chet. 
Soc.), ii, 470. This vicar secured three 
new churches—Grimsargh, Barton and 
Preston St. George’s, This last is a 
significant dedication. 

In 1717 there were reported to the 
Bishop of Chester to be only 643 ‘ Papists’ 
in the parish, no doubt very much below 
the true number. Fifty years later the 
numbers returned to him were: In Preston, 
1,043, with a resident priest ; in Broughton 
chapelry, 313, with two priests ; in Grims- 
argh, 117; in Barton, 131 ; Trans. Hist. 
Soc. (new ser.), xviii, 218. 

In 1754-5 a religious census was taken, 
and the Preston return gives the families 
thus : In the town of Preston—Protestants 
762, Papists 145, Dissenters 21 ; in Lea, 


ad 


Ashton, &c.—Protestants 47, Papists 30 ; 
Ribbleton, Grimsargh, Elston and Fish- 
wick—58, 57; Broughton—41, 473 
Barton—52, 19 ; Haighton—7, 18. No 
Dissenters are recorded outside the town ; 
Visitation Returns, 

69 Robert Patten, chaplain to Mr. 
Forster, was an eye-witness of the whole 
affair ; he turned king’s evidence and 
wrote a history of the rebellion, which 
passed through several editions. It appears 
to be the principal source of other accounts, 
e.g. that in Hardwick's Preston, 219-33. 
There are many allusions in the Stuart P. 


7 Two troops of dragoons quartered in 
the town retired before them. 

71 Two plans of the operations give the 
earliest maps of the town. One of them, 
‘drawn on the spot by P. M., esq.,’ is 
given in Hewitson, Preston, 23 ; the other 
in Fishwick’s work, 64. They show the 
positions of the barricades across the chief 
streets and the disposition of the king’s 
forces. Several houses in the outskirts 
are represented as in flames. 

72 Patten gives the losses thus : On the 
king’s side—killed, five officers and over 
200 privates ; wounded, sixteen officers, 
privates not recorded. On the Jacobite 
side—killed seventeen, wounded twenty- 
five ; prisoners, seven lords and 1,490 
gentlemen, officers and privates, and two 
clergymen. There is a note of the 
prisoners in Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xi, 
App. iv, 170. 

78 On the behaviour of the vicar of 
Preston, the inhabitants and the neigh- 
bouring gentry, see reports in Payne, 
Engl. Cath. Rec. 85-8, 97-9. A list of 
residents in the district who were attainted 
is printed in Fishwick, op. cit. 66. 

74 Major Nairne, Captains Lockhart, 
Shaftoe and Erskine. See Hardwick, 
op. cit. 235-6. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Richard Chorley of Chorley and six others** were 
executed in the same way. 

Defoe in 1727 found Preston a fine and gay town, 
but inferior in population to Liverpool and Man- 
chester. It was ‘full of attorneys, proctors and 
notaries’ employed in the special palatine courts. 
There was ‘a great deal of good company,’ but not 
so much ‘as was before the late bloody action with 
the Northern rebels; not that the battle hurt many 
of the immediate inhabitants, but the consequences 
of it so severely affected many families thereabout that 
they still retain the remembrance of it.’?7° The 
earliest ‘prospect’ of the town is dated 1728 ; it was 
drawn from the south side by S. and N. Buck.77 A 
printing press was at work as early as 1740.77 A 
verbal description of Preston in 1745 reads thus: 
‘This town is situated on a clean, delightful eminence, 
having handsome streets and variety of company, 
which the agreeableness of the place induces to board 
here, it being one of the prettiest retirements in 
England, and may for its beauty and largeness compare 
with most cities, and for the politeness of the 
inhabitants none can excel... . Here is a hand- 
some church and a town hall where the corporation 
meet for business and the gentlemen and ladies for 
balls and assemblies. Here is likewise a spacious 
market place in the midst of which stands a fine 
obelisk ; the streets are neatly paved, and the houses 
well built of brick and slates. This town being a 
great thoroughfare there are many good inns for the 
reception of travellers. . . . This town has a pretty 
good trade for linen yarn, cloth, cotton, &c.’ 7 

It was in the winter of 1745 that the Prince 
Charles Edward led his army south through Preston 
in his attempt to win the crown of England. He 
arrived there on 27 November ®; the bells were 
rung, and a few joined them, including Francis 


Towneley, nephew of the squire of Towneley. ‘The 
army left next day for Manchester. On its hasty 
retreat north the force regained Preston on 12 Decem- 
ber and left for Lancaster the next morning, being 
closely followed by Oglethorpe’s dragoons and the 
Duke of Cumberland himself. 

Pococke in 1750 thought the town subsisted 
‘chiefly by its being a great thoroughfare and by 
many families of middling fortune living in it’ ; 
hence, he says, ‘it is remarkable for old maids, be- 
cause these families will not ally with tradesmen and 
have not sufficient fortunes for gentlemen.’ ®! 

From that time the history of the parish has been 
peaceful, with the exception of election battles— 
notably that of 1768 ®*—and industrial disturbances. 
These latter conflicts appear to have been less 
dangerous here than in other parts of the county, 
but there was a threatening demonstration against 
power-looms in 1826.8 In 1797-8 the Royal 
Preston Volunteers were raised for the defence of 
the county, and a rifle corps also was formed. The 
modern volunteer movement received due support in 
the district, two corps being formed in 1859,°° and 
Preston is now, under the Territorial system, the head 
quarters of a squadron of the Duke of Lancaster’s 
Own Yeomanry, a battery of the znd West Lanca- 
shire Brigade Royal Field Artillery, and three com- 
panies of the 4th Battalion Loyal North Lancashire 
Regiment. 

Communications were improved by the turnpiking 
of the north road in 1751 8 and the erection of 
Penwortham Bridge in 1755.87 The old Ribble 
Bridge was rebuilt in 1781,°8 and in the following 
year a new town-hall was erected.89 Stage coaches 
began running to Wigan and Warrington about 1771, 
and to Liverpool in 1774.99 The cotton manufac- 
ture was introduced in 1777,°! and from that time 


75 James Drummond, William Black, 
Donald Macdonald, John Howard, Berry 
Kennedy and John Rowbottom, 

7© Tour Through Great Britain (ed. 
1738), iii, 183. 

T A large reproduction of it forms the 
frontispiece to Fishwick’s Preston. In the 
same work (p. 417) is an old view of the 
market place, showing a large timbered 
house on the south side, with a smaller 
one adjoining it to the east. An obelisk 
or market cross stood in the square. 

The large house had the initials jI, 
and date 1629 carved over a doorway ; 
the builder was John Jenkinson, who by 
his will directed its completion, leaving 
it to his widow Anne and his daughters 
Grace and Elizabeth. Adam Mort, the 
mayor, killed in 1643, once occupied it. 
It was sold to the corporation in 1822. 
The smaller house had the inscription 
I, A. 1618, for James Archer. They 
were demolished in 1855, when a pamphlet 
was printed giving a full history of them ; 
Hardwick, op. cit. 432. 

78 Local Glean. Lancs. and Ches. iy 37,43 3 
Hewitson, op. cit. 341. William Cadman, 
a local bookseller, is mentioned some 
eighty years earlier ; Pal. Nore Bk. i, 13. 

79 Ray, Hist. of the Rebellion. 

80 Hardwick, op. cit. 241-52. It was 
noticed that on his arrival at Preston 
Prince Charles, ‘who had hitherto 
marched on foot, mounted on horseback 
and surveyed the passes and bridges of the 
town, taking with him such as had been 
there in the year 1715.’ 


81 Travels through England (Camd. 
Soc.), i, 12. 

82 This was the election in which the 
democratic franchise of 1661 first became 
effective. In 1741 the foreign burgesses 
were considered to be disqualified as 
electors, though resident; Abram, Me- 
mortals of the Guilds, 83. In 1768 the 
Earl of Derby, in the Whig interest as 
opposed to the corporation, called atten- 
tion to the franchise, and raised a popular 
disturbance, Roman Catholic chapels 
being wrecked and other damage done. 

The Stanley family for a long time 
exercised a preponderating influence in 
the elections, but the power of the manu- 
facturers began to manifest itself before 
1800. The last election before the 
Reform Act was a most exciting one, for 
on the Hon. E. G. Stanley seeking re- 
election on being placed in the ministry 
in 1830 he was defeated by Henry Hunt 
the Radical by 3,730 to 3,392 votes. 
Hunt was defeated in 1832. 

For some of the more important con- 
tests see Hardwick, op. cit. 330-43. 
Long accounts, in which the old poll 
books were reprinted and annotated, ap- 
peared in the Preston Guardian in 1878 
and later. 

88 Hardwick, op. cit. 375. There were 
notable riots and strikes in 1831, 1836 
(a three months’ strike), 1842 (riots, five 
men mortally wounded), 1853 (eight 
months’ lock-out), and 1878 ; ibid. 415— 
22; Hewitson, Preston, 180-4. 

84 Hardwick, op. cit. 256. 


78 


There 


volunteers joined the militia in 1808 ; 
ibid. 387. Details of their regulations 
and uniforms will be found in Fishwick, 
op. cit. 418-19. 

85 Hewitson, op. cit. 374-7+ 

86 Stat. 24 Geo. II, cap. 20. Garstang 
Road was formed in 1817, replacing an 
old crooked lane. The highway known as 
Blackburn New Road was made in 1824 ; 
a wooden bridge over the Ribble was built 
for it at Lower Brockholes, replaced by a 
stone one in 1861. 

87 Hardwick, op. cit. 459. An Act of 
Parliament was obtained in 1750. This 
was the road from Preston to Liverpool, 
the river having been crossed by a ford. 
The first bridge fell down in 1756, and 
a new one was built after a fresh Act had 
been obtained. 

88 Ibid. 458. 

89 A view is given in Fishwick, Preston, 
71. The older building fell down in 
1780; Hewitson, op. cit. 357. 

90 Ibid. 198. In Sept. 1823 seventy- 
two coaches ran in and out of Preston 
every Wednesday ; Hardwick, op. cit. 
389. A list of those running in 1825 is 
given in Baines’ Lancs. Dir. ii, 519-20. 
The coaches ceased in 1842. : 

91 In that year a cotton-mill was built 
in Moor Lane by Collinson and Watson. 
The practical founder of the industry, 
however, was John Horrocks. He was 
born at Edgeworth in 1768 of Quaker 
parents, and he built a mill in 1791 at 
the east end of Church Street (see Fish- 
wick, op. cit. 72); this was followed by 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


the place has grown in importance and population. 363 acres of woods and plantations. 
A plan made in 1774 % shows that the streets had 


remained almost unchanged for a century.% 


thus given 96 ;— 
The 


houses extended eastward nearly as far as the present 


Deepdale Road and west along Fishergate to the site 
Northward the houses did 
not go beyond Lord Street, except that they extended 
a little further along Tithebarn Street and to the 
There were also a 
few blocks of dwellings to the south of Church Street. 
The plan of 1824! shows a great increase in all 
directions, more especially on the south side, and 
also to the north-west of Fishergate as far as the 
Lancaster Canal, which had been constructed in 
The first railways were opened in 1838 


of the railway station. 


end of Friargate and Back Lane. 


1798. 
and 1840,% 


Of the old townships Preston, Fishwick and 
Ashton have become urban in character and Fulwood 
is a residential suburb; the others still remain for 
The following figures 


the most part agricultural. 


Ribbleton . 
Grimsargh 
Brockholes 
Elston 
Fishwick 
Broughton . 
Haighton . 
Barton } 
Newsham 
Lea 
Ashton 
Ingol 
Cottam 


Fulwood 
Myerscough 


show the way in which the agricultural land of the 


parish is at present utilized. 


another at Spital Moss in 1796 and a 
third near Lark Hill in 1797. His 
business rapidly increased and in 1802 he 
was elected a member of Parliament for 
the borough. He died in London in 
1804, and was buried at Penwortham. 

Other mills quickly followed those of 
Horrocks. See Hardwick, op. cit. 366, 
660. 

® Hewitson, op. cit. go. A larger 
plan founded on this and the tithe map 
is inserted in the same writer’s Preston 
Ct. Leet Rec. The field-names given 
show Cuckstool Pit Meadow near the 
present infirmary, Causeway Meadow 
west of it, and Platford Dales still further 
west. Cockpit Field was opposite the 
north end of Friargate, near St. Peter's. 
Avenham gave name to a number of 
fields on the south of the town. Grim- 
shaw Street passes through the old Water 
Willows, to the south of which was 
Great Albin Hey. Winckley Square has 
replaced a Town End Field, but there 
were other fields of the name on the east 
side of the town. Hepgreave was to the 
north of the railway station in Fisher- 
gate. Woodholme seems to have been 
in the marsh, at the extreme south-west. 
The common fields were chiefly on the 
north and west sides of the town. 

Colley’s Garden, to the north of Lord 
Street, was afterwards known as the 
Orchard. Open-air meetings were held 
there. 

98 The following references to the 
mediaeval streets and districts of the 
town may be useful : — 

Cecily widow of Adam de Grimshaw 
and Henry son of Henry de Rishton and 
Margaret his wife in 1394-5 granted on 
lease to John de Knoll, tailor, and Maud 
his wife a burgage, together with lands in 
the Moor Field by the Friars’ house, and 
a plat in St. John’s Weind ; the lessees 
were to build a timber house ; Towneley 
MS. OO, no. 1054. 

In 1363 William son of John de 
Walton granted a burgage in Kirkgate to 
Grimbald the Tailor; ibid. no. 1103. 
Roger de Rirewath had in 1366 a toft in the 
road to the rectory of Preston ; Kuerden 
MSS. iii, P7. This road may have 


In the whole there are 
but 446 acres of arable land, the great bulk, viz. 
12,103 acres, being in permanent grass. 


There are 


been the Parsonweind occurring in the 
same set of deeds, which show that in 
1388-9 Ellen del Moor had a burgage 
in Preston and a barn in Parsonweind, 
and that in 1408 William Winter the 
younger had a barn in Parsonweind next 
the kiln; ibid. James son of John 
Moor gave James Walton the elder and 
Ellen his wife (mother of the grantor) a 
burgage in the Kirkstile in 1441-23 
ibid. A claim by Emma widow of 
Henry del Kirkstile shows that one 
Henry del Moor had land in Preston as 
early as 1311~123; De Banco R. 190, 
m. 195. Kirkstile is a frequently recur- 
ting surname 3 e.g. Assize R. 405, m. 4. 

Lambert Stodagh in 1428-9 granted 
to John Moor of Preston a grange in 
Frereweind, &c., formerly the property 
of Sir Christopher Preston; Kuerden 
MSS. ii, fol. 227. 

Alice widow of Ralph Kekilpenny 
granted to Robert son of Hugh le Sposage 
land on Avenham in the town fields of 
Preston next to land of St. Wilfrid ; OO, 
no. 1162. Henry son of William Simson 
in 1349 released to Roger Watson a 
roodland in the field called Avenham 
between land of B. Wilfrid on either 
side ; ibid. no. 1157. 

The Grethill, where the town’s wind- 
mill formerly stood, is named in a 
Hoghton deed of 15273; Kuerden MSS. 
iv, .P 1d, 

Adam son of Adam de Wich in 1335 
granted to Robert son of Walter de 
Preston and Maud his wife lands including 
1% acres on Avenham and 4% acre at 
Hepgreve; OO, no. 1117. Adam son 
of Philip de Preston gave land on Ingle- 
ridding, next land of the church, to 
Roger son of Hugh le Sposage ; ibid. 
no. 1143. 

Thomas son and heir of John Lussell 
had in 1§27 closes called Rawmoors in 
Preston ; ibid. no. 111. John Lussell 
and Katherine his wife occur a century 
earlier (Final Conc. iii, 95), while Thomas 
Lussell, clerk, and Maud his wife, daughter 
of Thomas de Howick, had land in the 
vill and fields of Preston in 1371 3 OO, 
no. 1132. 

Lands in Woodholme are mentioned 


719 


PRESTON 
The details are 


To the above may be added : 


Arable Grass Woods 
ac, ac, ac. 
« 23 555 = 
1473 2,367$ 251 
57 529 10 

5 2,2024 84 
toe 942 4h 
- 24 2,753 65 
. 211 2,754 24 
+ 35 1,833 5 
» 509 1,977¢ 31 


In consequence of changes in the boundaries in 
1894, when the township of Preston was extended 
to coincide with the municipal borough, Fishwick 


frequently. Robert son of Roger son of 
Adam de Preston gave a burgage, &c., 
and land in Woodholme and Platfordale 
to Richard de Ribbleton and Helen his 
wife; Harl. MS. 2042, fol. 171. 
William son of Hugh de Preston gave 
land in Woodholme to John the Marshal 
in 1320-33; Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 2264. 
William de Wigan gave land in the same 
place to Roger de Preston in 1337; 


_Towneley MS. C8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 


Watt. 

Adam de Deepdale and Maud his wife 
sold land in 1354 3 Final Conc. ii, 145. 

%4 This plan, in the atlas accompanying 
Baines’ Directory of 1825, is reproduced 
by Fishwick, op. cit. 

% In 1802 a tramroad was constructed 
connecting the terminus of this canal 
with that of the Leeds and Liverpool 
branch to ‘Summit,’ west of Brindle. 
The Ribble was crossed by a slight bridge. 
The tram wagons ceased running in 
18593; Hardwick, op. cit. 386, 480; 
Hewitson, Preston, 198. The bridge is 
now used for foot passengers. 

86 Hewitson, op. cit. 199-207. The 
railway from Preston to Wigan was 
opened 31 Oct. 1838; this gave access 
to Liverpool, Manchester and the south. 
Three railways were opened in 1840— 
from Preston to Longridge (1 May), to 
Lancaster (25 June), and to Fleetwood 
(15 July). The line from Bolton to 
Chorley was opened in 1841, but owing 
to difficulties in construction the con- 
tinuation to Euxton was not ready till 
1843, when Preston obtained another 
route to Manchester. 

In 1846 the Fleetwood line opened 
branches to Lytham and to Blackpool, 
and the Longridge line was continued by 
atunnel to Maudlands. The new line 
to Blackburn was opened, also a short 
branch line to the quay by the Ribble. 
In 1849 the line to Ormskirk and 
Liverpool was opened, from which a 
branch to Southport was made in 1855. 
The West Lancashire Company’s direct 
route to Southport was opened in Sept. 
1832, 

96a Statistics 


(1905). 


from Bd. of Agric. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


ceased to be a township, and the areas of Ribbleton, 
Grimsargh and Brockholes, and Lea, Ashton, Ingol 
and Cottam were reduced. 

Something has been said of Preston as a port. Dr. 
Kuerden about 1682 found that a vessel of reason- 
able burden might be brought up the river to Preston 
by a knowing and well-skilled pilot.°%7 The Ribble, 
however, could only be used by small vessels. A 
company was formed in 1806 to improve the naviga- 
tion,98 and in 1838 was merged in the Ribble Navi- 
gation Company, in which Preston Corporation took 
shares.°9 The bed of the river was deepened at 
Preston, the channel seawards was dredged and sea 
walls were built. A dock was made at Lytham in 
1841, and in 1843, owing to the increase of trade, 
the corporation made a new quay near the border of 
Ashton. In 1853 additional powers were obtained 
for the reclamation of tide-washed land. 

Though there was a considerable coasting trade,!© 
the navigation of the river continued unsatisfactory. 
The corporation purchased the company’s under- 
taking in 1883,!°! and began a comprehensive system 
of improvement, the river course having since been 
straightened below the town, anda large dock formed 
in Ashton was opened in 1892. A small change in 
the township bountaries followed the alteration of the 
stream. The channel is kept open by dredging 
and by a system of retaining walls to prevent silting. 
The customs port extends from Preston to Hundred 
End on the south side of the Ribble and as far as the 
mouth on the north, and thence up to Blackpool.! 

The parish has not produced many men of distinc- 
tion. In view of its present industrial position the 
first place may be given to Sir Richard Arkwright, 
the inventor, who was born in the town of Preston in 
1732. After following the trade of barber and wig- 
maker for thirty years or more, living part of the 
time at Bolton, he turned his attention to cotton- 
spinning machinery. He and his assistant are said to 
have set up a trial machine in a large house at Stony- 
gate, Preston, but his first mill (1771) was built at 
Nottingham and his second near Wirksworth in 
Derbyshire. He purchased the manor of Crom- 
ford, was made a knight in 1786 and acted as High 
Sheriff of Derbyshire in 1786-7. He died in 
17.8 

The most distinguished of the natives of the place 
in the world of letters was the late Francis Thompson, 
a lyrical poet of great genius and splendour of diction. 
He was the son of a doctor, and born in 1859. He 
was educated for the priesthood at Ushaw, but re- 
nounced that calling, desiring to devote himself to 


87 Quoted by Hewitson, Preston, 214, 
from which work the details in the text 


brought by water to Preston. 


literature. He fell into destitution, but his talents 
were recognized and the later years of his life were 
fruitful. He died in November 1907; in 1910 a 
memorial tablet was placed on the house where he 
was born. 

Lawrence Claxton or Clarkson, born at Preston in 
1615, became a prominent sectary of the Common- 
wealth times—Presbyterian, Baptist, ‘Seeker,’ and 
Mouggletonian in turn. He published various tracts 
and died in 1667.1% 

Edward Baynard, M.D., is thought to have been 
born at Preston in 1641. In 1719 he published a 
poem entitled Hea/th. His daughter Anne was noted 
for her learning and piety.1% 

Josiah Chorley, son of Henry Chorley of Preston, 
became the Presbyterian minister at Norwich, 1691, 
till his death, about 1719. He published a metrical 
index to the Bible.!0° 

Richard Shepherd, born at Kendal, settled at 
Preston, where he practised as a physician. He died 
in 1761, having bequeathed his library to the town, 
together with a sum fora librarian’s salary and the 
purchase of fresh books. The library, which was to 
be strictly for works of reference, is now deposited in 
the Harris Free Library. The erection of this 
building was due to the trustees of Edmund Robert 
Harris of Ashton, who was born at Preston in 1804 
and died in 1877, he having given them power to 
establish an institution of public utility in Preston to 
perpetuate the memory of his father and family. 
His father was the Rev. Robert Harris, incumbent of 
St. George’s, Preston, from 1797 to 1862. In the 
Harris Library is preserved also the art collection 
bequeathed to the town by another native of it, 
Richard Newsham, 1798-1883. 

Sir Edward Stanley of Bickerstaffe, who succeeded 
to the earldom of Derby in 1736, is stated to have 
been born at Preston in 1689 ; he served as mayor 
of the town in 1731. His descendant, the late 
earl, took the title of Lord Stanley of Preston on 
being raised to the peerage in 1886, and was guild 
mayor in 1902. 

Arthur Devis, born at Preston about 1711, became 
a portrait painter, exhibiting at the Free Society of 
Artists, 1762—80. He died in 1787.10 

William Turner, son of a Nonconformist minister, 
was born at Preston in 1714, and himself became a 
minister at Wakefield. He contributed to Priestley’s 
Theolgical Repository. He died in 1794.1 

Edward Crane, born at Preston in 1721, was 
educated at Kendal. He became a Nonconformist 
minister at Norwich, but died young, in 1749.1! 


There of 1622 and 16423; Preston Guild R. 


have for the most part been taken. Sce 
atso Hariwick, op. cit. 391-400. 

% Priv. Act, 46 Geo. III, cap. 121. 
In 1821 the river was used by coasters 
from Liverpool, Kirkcudbright, Dublin, 
&c., as well as for coal flats and other small 
craft. There was a good fishery ; Whittle, 
Preston, 26,27. A list of trading vessels, 
the l-rgest being of 130 tons, is given 
ibid. 34.5. 

% The first steamboat on the Ribble 
appeared about 1829; the second, built 
at Preston, in 1834. 

100 «Not very long ago steamers sailed 
regularly between Liverpool and Preston, 
carrying grain principally... Formerly 
considerable quantities of iron were 


was also a large china-clay traffic up the 
river. The outward cargoes of the 
vessels consisted mainly of coal from the 
Wigan district’; Hewitson, op. cit. 
(1883), 224. 

1 Loc. Act, 46 & 47 Vict. cap. 
115, &c. 

102 In 1826 Preston was a creek of 
the port of Lancaster; in 1839 it was 
joined with Fleetwood, and became 
independent in 1843. 

103 Dict, Nat. Biog. In Lancashire he 
built a mill near Chorley, but it was 
destroyed by the populace in 1779 in 
spite of the protection of police and 
military. 

101 Ibid. A Lawrence Clarkson, son 
of Henry, appears among the burgesses 


80 


(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 88, 97- 

105 Dict. Nat. Biog. 

106 Thid. ; Preston Guild R. 127. 

107 Hewitson, op. cit. 294-6. 

103 The trustees gave £100,000 in all, 
of which £70,000 was for the building 
and the rest for books and endowment. 
The corporation gave the site. The 
trustees also gave £40,000 to found the 
Harris Institute, a successor of the Insti- 
tution for the Diffusion of Knowledge, 
founded in 1849. A third large gift 
resulted in the Harris Orphanage in 
Fulwood. 

109 Dict. Nat. Biog. 

10 Tbid. ; Nightingale, Lancs, Nonconf. 
i, 10-12. 

U1 Dict, Nat. Biog. 


Roe NC Cas 


Preston Cuurcn c. 1829 
(From a drawing by IW’. Westall, A4.R.A., engraved by Edward Finden) 


Presron Cuurcu c. 1796 
(From a drawing by I’. Orme) 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


William Gregory Sharrock, born at Preston in 
1742, became a Benedictine monk. He was conse- 
crated in 1781 as coadjutor to Bishop Walmesley, 
with the title of Bishop of Telmessus, and in 1797 
succeeded him as vicar apostolic of the western 
district, acting till his death in 1809." 

Thomas Jackson, who took the surname of Calvert 
in 1819, was born at Preston in 1775. He became 
Fellow of St. John’s College, Cambridge, Norrisian 
Professor in the university, and Warden of Man- 
chester. He died in 1840," 

Charles Hardwick was born at Preston in 1817, 
being son of an innkeeper there. He acquired dis- 
tinction as an antiquary, and his history of his native 
town, issued in 1857, has been frequently quoted in 
the present account. He died in 1889." 

Robert Cornthwaite, born in 1818, became (Roman 
Catholic) Bishop of Beverley in 1861, and on the 
division of the diocese in 1878 was appointed to 
the Leeds portion. He died in 1890. 

William Dobson, born at Preston in 1820, and 
educated at the local grammar school, was editor of 
the Preston Chronicle, and wrote on local antiquities. 
He died in 1884." 

Robert Gradwell, son of a Preston alderman, was 
born in the town in 1825, and after education at 
Ushaw became assistant priest at St. Augustine’s, 
Preston, and from 1860 till his death in 1906 was 
stationed at Claughton-on-Brock. He was a domestic 
prelate to Leo XIII. He was of antiquarian tastes, 
and published a life of St. Patrick and various essays." 

John Samuel Raven, landscape painter, was son of 
the Rev. Thomas Raven, minister of Holy Trinity 
Church in Preston, and was born in the town in 
1829. He was drowned at Harlech, while bathing, 
in 1877.N7 

Some other worthies are noticed in the accounts of 
the various townships. 

The church"® of ST. JOHN THE 

CHURCH DIVINE stands in the middle of the 
town, on the south side of Church 

Street, and is a handsome building in the style of the 
14th century, erected in 1853-5. The former 
church which stood on the same site was a low 16th- 
century structure, consisting of chancel, clearstoried 


PRESTON 


gone many changes and alterations. In 1644-5 the 
decay of the building was such that a levy of £30, 
which had been previously ordered, but a great part 
of which had not been paid, was increased by an 
additional £20. Pews were erected in the 17th 
century, and a rough plan of the seating c. 1650, 
showing the pulpit in the middle of the nave on the 
south side, has been preserved."® In 1671 the 
interior had ‘ become foule and uncomely,’ and efforts 
were made to ‘adorn and beautify’ it, but the 
churchwardens were desired to get the work done 
“as well and as cheap as they could.’ In 1680 
four pinnacles were ordered to be set upon the steeple 
and ‘the weathercock to be placed handsomely in the 
middle,’ and some time before 1682 a clock and 
chimes were placed in the tower. Towards the end 
of the 17th century Dr. Kuerden describes the build- 
ing as ‘spacious, well-built, or rather re-edifyed,’ ” 
but during the 18th century the church was allowed 
to fall into decay to such an extent’ that on 
7 February 1770 the entire roof fell in, and in con- 
sequence the north and south walls had to be taken 
down and the nave rebuilt.” In 1811 the tower, 
which had for some time been in an unsafe condition, 
was pulled down to the level of the church roof, and 
was left in that state till 1814, when it was rebuilt. 
The chancel was rebuilt by Sir Henry Philip Hoghton 
in 1817.% An account of the building written in 
1821 ™ describes the body or nave as containing three 
aisles, with the royal arms where the rood formerly 
stood. ‘Two chapels exist, the Lea chapel and 
Wall’s chapel. . . . The mayor has a grand throne 
erected on the right corner from the altar. . . . The 
galleries are supported by eight Gothic arches, the 
pillars of an octagon shape. The front gallery facing 
the altar contains a well-tuned organ. . . . The spiral 
pulpit and reading desk is finely constructed of solid 
oak and supported by four pillars.’ A view of the 
church about 18451 shows the walls of chancel, 
nave and aisles to have been embattled, with lean-to 
roofs to the aisles, those of the chancel and nave being 
hidden behind the parapets. ‘The clearstory windows 
were square-headed and of three lights, but those in 
the aisles had segmental heads, and the chancel was lit 
with tall pointed windows of three lights, the mullions 


nave of four bays, with north and south aisles, and 
west tower, but before its demolition it had under- 


13 Trans. Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xiii, 
131. He wrote some tracts. 

118 He published sermons; Dict, Nat. 
Biog. ; Wardens of Manch. (Chet. Soc.), 
178-83. 

14 Dict, Nat. Biog. 

15 Thid. 

U6 Liverpool Cath. Annual, 1907. 

WW Dict, Nat. Biog. 

118 See T. C. Smith, Rec. of the Parish 
Church of Preston in Amounderness, 1892. 
The mediaeval invocation was St. Wilfrid. 
The rector of St. Wilfrid’s, Preston, was 
defendant in 1342; De Banco R. 332, 
m. 149. The church was regularly called 
St. Wilfrid’s, as may be seen by sub- 
sequent notes, but in the 16th century and 
later the name is found as Winifred. 

The change to St. John the Divine is 
said to have been made at the end of the 
16th century. 

There was in early times a St. John 
the Baptist’s Weind or street (wicus), 
leading perhaps to lands held by the 
Knights Hospitallers ; Cockersand Chartul. 


ri 


(Chet. Soc.), i, 222,219 ; Kuerden MSS, 
ili, P7 (1340). ‘St. John’s Weind’ is 
said to have been the old name of 
Tithebarn Street. 

119 It is reproduced in Smith, op. cit. 
247, and in Fishwick’s Hist. of Preston, 
114. <A large space at the south-east 
corner of the nave is marked ‘The antient 
burying place of the Lords of Hoghton 
and Lea.’ This was usually known as the 
Lea chapel. At the time of the demoli- 
tion of the old church in 1853 notes were 
made of several carvings on the backs of 
the pews. They are given in Fishwick, 
op. cit. 115, and bear various dates (1626, 
1630, 1694) and initials. Many of the 
oak panels were elaborately carved. Coats 
of arms emblazoned on the windows 
of the church about 1580 are recorded 
in Trans. Hist. Soc. (new ser.), vi, 271 3 
xiv, 204. These have been imitated in 
the windows of the present church. 

120 Quoted by Fishwick, op. cit. 
116. 

121 In 


Nov. 1769 the church was 


81 


crossing in the heads. 
an embattled parapet with clustered angle pinnacles. 


The tower was lofty and had 


2 
5 126 


reported to be in imminent danger and 
the churchwardens were ordered to con- 
tract for its taking down and rebuilding. 
The nave roof fell in, however, before 
anything was done. 

122 At a meeting held g Feb. 1770 
‘the roof and all the pillars on the north 
side of the church were reported to have 
fallen down and the rubbish was ordered 
to be cleared away and a proper person 
obtained to inspect the present state 
of the church.’ The rebuilding was 
more or less on the old lines ; the esti- 
mate of cost was £1,006. 

128 Hardwick, Hist. of Preston, 462, 
where it is further stated that the quire 
was renovated in 1823. 

124 Peter Whittle, Hist. of Preston, 55, 
quoted by Fishwick, op. cit. 117. 

185 Drawn by William Physick. Re- 
produced in Fishwick, op. cit. 116. 

126 Glynne’s description, undated, but 
probably written about this time, is as 
follows : ‘A large church originally of plain 
Perpendicular work, much modernized 


It 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Showing fresh symptoms of decay in the middle of 
the 1gth century, the whole of the building, with the 
exception of the lower part of the tower, was pulled 
down in 1853,!27 and a new church erected on the 
old foundations. 

The present building,!8 which was finished in 
1855, consists of chancel with south chapel, clearstoried 
nave with north and south aisles and west tower and 
spire, with north and south entrances in the angles 
between the tower and aisles. The building is a good 
example of modern Gothic and is built of Longridge 
stone. The church was reseated in 1867 9 and a 
new reredos was erected in 1871. In 1885 an 
organ chamber was built in the north side of the 
chancel and vestries were added on the south side of 
the chapel. There are galleries over the north and 
south aisles and at the west end. 

All the mural tablets and brasses which were in 
the old church in 1853 have been preserved, but with 
the exception of the Bushell brass at the west end of 
the north aisle they are of little interest and of no 
antiquity.48° This brass, to the memory of Seth 
Bushell, a woollen draper who died in 1623, was 
discovered when the old building was pulled down, 
and is in two pieces, one bearing a quaintly drawn 
figure and the other the inscription. Both plates fell 
into private hands and were not restored to the 
church till 1900, when they were fixed in their 
present position.!3!_ The Hoghton memorials in the 
quire comprise mural monuments to Sir Henry 
Hoghton (d. 1768) and his first and third wives, 
Mary Boughton (d. February 1719-20) and Susannah 
Butterworth (d. 1772), and to Ann Boughton, his 
sister-in-law (d. 1715),!82 who are all there interred, 
and there are tablets to the memory of Sir Henry 
Bold Hoghton (d. 1862), who is buried at Anglesea, 
near Gosport, and Sir Henry de Hoghton (d. 1876), 
who is buried in the Bold chapel at Farnworth. 

There is a ring of eight bells cast by T. Mears in 
1814.133 The commissioners of Edward VI reported 
that there were four bells,!*4 besides one lent by 
Sir Richard Hoghton, kt. In 1711 an order was 


and partially rebuilt. It has a lofty west 
tower with crocketed pinnacles, nave, 
aisles and chancel. The tower and 


op. cit. 121-3. 


Smith, op. cit. 258-66, and in Fishwick, 


181 The figure was in the possession of 


given to collect in the parish for a new set of eight bells, 
which were afterwards cast by Rudhall. The fourth 
bell of an older peal had been recast in 1696, the 
seventh was recast in 1737. 

The plate !°5 consists of a fagon and small paten of 
1705, both inscribed ‘The gift of the Right Hon. 
John, Lord Gower, Baron of Stitnam, 1705’; a 
flagon and two large patens of 1708, all inscribed 
‘The gift of Madame Margery Rawstorne, widdow, 
of Preston, to the Church of Preston, 1708’; a flagon 
of 1719, purchased by order of the vestry, inscribed 
‘Preston Lanc*1719’ and round the bottom ‘St. John 
the Evangelist, Parish of Preston’; a flagon of 1725 pur- 
chased by subscription, inscribed at the bottom ‘ Thos, 
Astley, Robert Walsham, churchwardens, 1725’; and 
four chalices, two of 1729 and two of 1785, all 
without inscriptions. There is also a wine-strainer 
inscribed ‘The Parish Church of Preston, 1819.’ 

The early registers have been lost or destroyed. 
Except for two pages dated 1603 the existing registers 
begin in October 1611, and from that date to the end 
of 1631 have been printed.18° In 1821 the following 
books were chained to the pillars of the tower arch- 
way : The Homilies, Bible, Foxe’s Martyrs and Synopsis 
Papismi 7 

The churchyard was enlarged in 1804. The 
oldest dated stone, of 1619, having become indeci- 
pherable has been replaced by an exact copy of the 
original. The old churchyard cross is named in a 
will dated 155 1.138 

It is possible that a church at 

ADVOWSON Preston was one of those holy places 
deserted by the British clergy on the 

approach of the destroying English of Northumbria 
and about 670 granted with lands by the Ribble and 
elsewhere to St. Wilfrid.189 Though its existence may 
be implied in the reference to churches in Amounder- 
ness in Domesday Book," the first express record of it 
is that in the grant of Roger of Poitou to the abbey 
of Sées in 1094, by which he gave it the church of 
Preston with the tithe of his demesne and fishery, 
also 2 oxgangs of land and all the tithes of the 


Jas. Middlehurst, Jno, Harrison, church- 
wardens, 1814.’ (8) ‘Blessed are the 
dead that die in the Lord. Resurgant.’ 

184 In 1602 Thomas Woodruff was 


chancel are modern in imitation of Per- 
pendicular work. The nave and aisles are 
embattled, the nave divided from each 
aisle by four lofty pointed arches rising 
from octagonal columns, the capitals of 
which are much encroached on by the 
side galleries. The clerestory windows 
are square-headed of three lights. Those 
of the aisles have chiefly depressed arches 
and tracery of three lights. The chancel 
is tolerably large but rebuilt in poor style. 
The interior, though spacious, is as usual 
encumbered with galleries, and there are 
some poor modern Gothic fittings. The 
organ pretty good’ ; Churches of Lancs. 38. 
Hardwick (Hist. of Preston, 462) says: 
‘The pretensions of the old church to 
architectural beauty or even character 
were so ambiguous that it was some- 
times quoted in derision as an excellent 
specimen of “ joiners’ Gothic.” ” 

127 Plans and elevations of the old 
church as it existed in 1853 are given in 
Smith, op. cit. 248-9. 

128 Designed by Edward Hugh Shellard. 

129 There was a rearrangement of seats 
in the quire in 1885. 

180 The inscriptions are given in full in 


Mr. T. Harrison Myres and the inscrip- 
tion in that of Mr. F. J. Holland, both of 
Preston. These gentlemen restored them 
to the church. The brass is illustrated in 
Thornely, Brasses of Lancs. and Ches. 272, 
in Smith, op. cit. 258, and Fishwick, 
op. cit, 120. 

182 There is a small tablet inscribed, 
‘Sir Henry de Hoghton, bart., in his will 
expressed his desire that no person should 
be interred under any of the four stones 
which cover the remains of Dame Mary, 
his first lady, Miss Ann Boughton, her 
sister, himself, and Dame Susannah, his 
last lady.” 

133 The inscriptions (in addition to the 
weight and name of maker) are as follows: 
(1) ‘Venite exultemus Domino.’ (2) ‘4 
June 1814, foundation laid by Sir H. P. 
Hoghton, bart., lay rector and patron.’ 
(3) ‘June 4, 54 George III, the king’s 
birthday: Vivat Rex.’ (4) ‘June 4, 
1814, account received of the Treaty of 
Peace.” (5) ‘The Rev. James Penny, 
vicar; the Rev. Wm. Towne, curate, 
1814.’ (6) ‘ Rich. Newsham, esq., mayor, 
1814.’ (7) ‘Jno. Green, Jno. Fallow- 
field, Jno. Grimbaldeston, Hen. Heaton, 


82 


admitted burgess on condition of ringing 
the day bell and curfew for the summer 
season during his life ; Preston Guild R. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 64. The 
ringing of these bells was maintained till 
recent times. 

185 The list of church ornaments con- 
sidered necessary in 1659 is printed by 
Smith, op. cit. 253. It includes two 
silver bowls with covers. In 1660 there 
were five pewter flagons ‘to be used at 
the time of the Sacrament.’ 

186 In Smith's Preston Church, 83- 
224. In this work are also contained 
extracts from the records of the ‘Four 
and Twenty Gentlemen’ afterwards (1770) 
known as the Select Vestry who governed 
the parish. Lists of churchwardens are 
also given. 

187 T, C. Smith, op. cit. 265. 

138 George Crook desired to be buried 
‘in the south side of the churchyard, nigh 
unto the cross’ ; cited by Fishwick, Preston, 
124. 

ibs Hist. Ch. of York (Rolls Ser.), 4, 
25. 
‘io VCH, Lancs, i, 2884. 


¥, 


|jperdni aE) ott 


Presron Parish CHurRcH FROM THE SOUTH-EAST 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


whole parish." Together with Roger’s other posses- 
sions the advowson reverted to the Crown in 1102.” 
It was included in the grant of the hundred to 
Theobald Walter about 1191,"* but claimed by the 
Abbot of Sées. By a compromise made in 1196 the 
advowson was resigned to Theobald, but the rector 
was to pay 10 marks yearly to the Prior of Lancaster." 
After King John’s accession the advowson reverted to 
the Crown,"* and as part of the honour of Lancaster 
descended to the earls and dukes. 

Thomas Earl of Lancaster in 1316 had leave to 
appropriate the rectory,"® but his purpose, whatever 
it may have been, does not seem to have been carried 
further”; and it was not till July 1400 that an 
appropriation was made by Henry IV in favour of 
the new collegiate church of St. Mary at Leicester, 
known as the college of Newark ; a vicarage was to 
be endowed and a sum of money distributed annually 
to the poor.* After the confiscation of such colleges 
in 1546-8 the rectory remained in the Crown 
until 1607, when it was sold to Sir Richard Hoghton, 
the advowson of the vicarage being included.’ His 
family, retaining the rectory, sold the advowson of 
the vicarage in 1828 to Hulme’s Trustees,’ the 
present patrons. 


PRESTON 


mated at 50 marks,’ and in 1297 at double that 
sum,'* this agreeing with the Valor of 1292.1 
Within thirty years, however, owing to the havoc 
wrought by the Scottish invasions, the taxation was 
reduced to 35 marks.’ The ninth of sheaves, &c., 
assessed in 1341, shows a recovery."° In 1527 the 
rectory was thought to be worth {£42 a year and 
the vicarage {20,'" and this estimate is almost the 
same as that of the Valr of 1535'; it appears, 
however, that the vicar had to pay the ancient 
ro marks rent to the Abbess of Syon, who had taken 
the place of the Abbot of Sées."° After the sale of 
the rectory in 1607, a rent of £45 35. 8d. had to be 
paid to the Crown by the lay rector, but in 1650 
the value of the tithes was estimated as {309.'° 

The vicarage about 1620 had an annual value of 
£66." In 1650, on account of the ‘distracted, 
troublesome times,’ it was not worth so much, but the 
vicar, one of the leading Puritan divines, had {£50 
from the Committee of Plundered Ministers and 
another £50 from the duchy revenues, as one of the 
four itinerant preachers.? The vicar in 1705 
certified that he had £53, but the true value was 
nearly double, though part was precarious.’ The 
income has greatly increased in modern times and is 


About 1222-6 the value of the rectory was esti- 


141 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 290. 

142 This is an inference from the later 
history, but the matter is not clear, for 
Roger’s grant, including Preston, was 
confirmed by John when Count of Mor- 
tain, i.e. before 1193 3 ibid. 298. 

M8 Thid. 434-5. To justify Theobald 
Walter’s claim Preston must have been in- 
cluded among the ‘ advowsons of churches’ 
aot recorded by name. 

M4 Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 6. The monks, described as 
tenants, retained the church of Poulton, 
but surrendered Preston. Each clerk 
presented to the church was to promise 
to pay the 10 marks annuity. 

145 From the list of rectors it will be 
seen that John presented in 1201 and 
1202, 

M46 Cal, Pat. 1313-17, p. 512. He 
may have intended to bestow it on 
Whalley Abbey. In a later petition from 
the abbey to the Archbishop of York the 
abbot and monks state that they have 
obtained the church, so far as a layman 
could give it, from Henry Earl of Lan- 
caster, and pray for its appropriation to 
their house, undertaking to pay a vicar 
£20 a year; Whitaker, Whalley (ed. 
Nicholls), i, 168~g. The abbot’s initial 
is printed as C, 

M7 In 1354 it was found that it would 
not be to the king’s injury that the 
advowson of the church of Preston—in- 
cluding, it would seem, the whole rectory 
worth £100—should be appropriated to 
St. Mary’s Collegiate Church at Leicester ; 
Ing. p.m. 28 Edw. III (2nd nos.), no. 2. 
The scheme was not carried through, as 
the Dukes of Lancaster continued to 
present to the church. 

M48 Cal. Pat. 1399-1401, p. 341. The 
New College (or Newark) was founded in 
13553 Cal. Papal Letters, iii, 585. 

The appropriation was in 1401 con- 
firmed by Boniface IX; ibid. v, 4113 vi, 
110. 

In 1520 the Dean and Chapter of the 
New College of our Blessed Lady of 
Leicester demised to Richard Hesketh for 
twenty-five years the parsonage of Preston 
with its demesne and glebe land and the 


chapel of Broughton at a rent of £40 and 
37s. Thomas Hesketh, brother and heir 
of Richard, afterwards demised it to Sir 
Alexander Osbaldeston at a rent of 
£52 35. 8d. for the use of Thomas’s son 
Robert; Towneley MS. DD, no. 231. 
Robert Hesketh in 1531 procured a fresh 
lease from the college for a term of forty 
years at the old rent of £40 and 375.3 
ibid. no. 384. Various disputes arising 
out of these and other grants are related 
in Smith, op. cit. 14-19. 

149 Certain possessions of Newark 
College at Preston seem to have been 
granted with other church property to 
Richard Venables and others in 1549; 
Pat. 3 Edw. VI, pt. ix. The rectory with 
the advowson was probably leased for 
short terms, judging from the changes of 
patrons. In 1569-70 Christopher Ander- 
ton of Lostock transferred to John Bold 
of North Meols the advowson of Preston ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 225, m. 73 227, 
m. 5d. Thurstan Anderton in 1592 
granted the same to Henry Bold, who in 
1596 transferred it to Richard Hoghton ; 
De Hoghton D. 

180 Pat. 5 Jas. I, pt. xiii. The rectory 
of Preston and the advowson of the 
vicarage were included in the Hoghton 
properties in 16163; Pal. of Lanc. Plea 
Re 317) My 7s 

The De Hoghton D. show that 
Thomas Hoghton had in 1587 procured 
a lease of the rectory from the Crown. 

151 Smith, op. cit. 6. It appears from 
a fine of 1772 that the rectory and 
advowson of Preston were in that year 
sold or mortgaged to William Shaw, jun., 
by Sir Henry Hoghton; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 387, m. 114. 

182 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), i, 120. 18 Ibid. 298. 

154 Pop» Nich. Tax. (Rec. Com.), 307 ; 
£66 135. 4d. ‘ 

155 Ibid. 327 5 £23 6s. 8d. The pension 
payable to the Abbot of Sées is not 
mentioned. 

158 Ing, Nonarum (Rec. Com.), 37. 
The inquiry was made at Preston. The 
borough, which was excepted, was worth 
7 marks and the rest of the parish 28 


83 


now returned as £802 ne 


t, 164 


marks and 20d. The several townships 
paid as follows: Ashton, £1 16s. 8d. ; 
Lea, £2 6s. 8d. ; Broughton, £3 135. 44.5 
Barton, £3 6s. 8d. ; Haighton, £1 8s. 44.; 
Grimsargh, £1 10s.; Brockholes, 
£1 1s. 8d.; Elston, £1 8s. 4d. 3 Ribble- 
ton, £1 1s. 8d.; Fishwick the same ; in 
all, £18 155. 

The reasons given why the 100 marks 
was not reached were that the excepted 
revenues were considerable (tithe of hay 
£10, other small tithes 15 marks, obla- 
tions, &c., § marks, glebe 25s.), and that by 
the destruction wrought by the Scots and 
other insupportable charges daily increas- 
ing there were waste lands in the parish 
causing a loss of 28 marks to the tax; in 
all, £43 5s. 

157 Duchy of Lanc. Rentals, bdle. 5, 
no. 15. 

155 Valor Eccl. (Rec. Com.), iv, 169 ; 
the rent received by Newark College was 
LAL 17s. 

159 Ibid. v, 2623; the net value was 
£15 4s. The manse and garden were 
valued at 2s, the vicarial tithes at 
47 1s. 4d., and the oblations and Easter 
roll at £14 16s. 8d. 

160 Commonw. Ch. Surv. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), 144-5. In 1670 a 
rent of £45 was paid to the Crown for 
the rectory by Sir Richard Hoghton and 
Edward Rigby ; Pat. 22 Chas. II. 

161 Commonw. Ch. Surv. 146. 

162 Ibid. The endowment of the vicarage 
included cottage and barn, with 14 acres of 
glebe, small tithes of the whole parish, 
and the corn tithes also in Ribbleton, but 
in some cases a prescriptive rent limited 
the amounts payable. 

A terrier of the glebe lands of the vicar- 
age made in 1663 and a table of Easter 
dues of about the same time are printed 
in Smith, op. cit. 12. 

168 Gastrell, Woritia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 461. The vicar paid £4 to the curate 
of Broughton. 

164 Manch. Dioc. Dir. The old vicarage 
was in the street so called, off Tithebarn 
Street, to the north of the church, The 
present house, at Eastcliff, was built in 
1846, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


The following is a list of the incumbents :— 


Instituted 
oc. 1N§3-60% 
1190: 
c 1196. . 


William '®  . 
Robert '*. 


Name 


Adomar de o Roche” . . . . 


Recrors 


Patron 


Cause of Vacancy 


. . . . . 


2; Feb. 1200-1. Randle dela Tour? . . . . . The King . 
28 July 1202. Mr. Peter Russinol’® . lee eg 55 : 
oc. 1219-40 . Amery des Roches”? . . . . . 3 ‘ 
3 July 1243. . William de Haverhill’” . . . . % ‘ 
25 Aug. 1252 . Arnulf’. . a i, Gir + F 
22 May 1256 . Henryde Wingham’? . . . . i 2 
20 June 1262 . Walterde Merton” . . . | . $i - 


oc, 1286-94. 
OG. 1306 2 4! 4 
Ck 1312 «se 

PQQ e- os 4e 
24 Sept. 1348 . 


165 William the priest of Preston was 
first witness to an important charter; 
Farrer, op, eit. 323); 925% 

168 Jl id. 361. He is called only Robert 
de Preston, but is one of a number of 
witnesses, all apparently clergymen. In 
another ecclesiastical deed of 1193 he 
appears as Master Robert de Preston ; 
Lane. Ch. (Chet. Soc.), i, 111. 

467 After making the settlement with 
the Abbot of Sces recorded in the text, 
Theobald Walter presented Adomar de la 
Roche ; ibid. ii, §19. 

169 Cal. Rot. Chart. (Rec. Com.), 101. 

The dates in the first column are 
often those of presentation, the institu- 
tions not being known. 

169 Rot. Lit. Pat. (Rec. Com.), 14. He 
was precentor of York in 1213 ; Le Neve, 
Fast, iii, 154. The statement that Peter 
was dead in 1222 shows that the Master 
Peter de Russinol who occurs later must 
be a different person. 

' He was nephew of the Bishop of 
Winchester and is said to have been pre- 
sented by Henry III; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents, i, 120 (where he iscalled Henry). 
Americus, rector of Preston, had letters 
of protection in 1219 and 12223 Cal. 
Par, 1216-25, pp. 199, 336. He occurs 
again in 1228, when Herbert the cierk 
and other guardians of the church had 
letters of protection; ibid. 1225-32, 
p- 189. He was still rector in 1240, 
when he claimed Chipping as a chapel of 
Preston; Abbrev, Plac. (Rec. Com.}, 
110, 111. 

171 Haverhill was one of the king's 
clerks in 1223, a8 appears by the Patent 
Rolls, the calendars containing many 
teterences to him. He became the king's 
treasurer and died in 1252. He was a 
canon of St. Paul's; Le Neve, Fast, ii, 
¢oo. According to T. C. Smith (op. cit. 
9, 26) he was presented to Preston 
3 July 1243, referring to Pat. 27 Hen. III, 
m. 3. The entry does not appear in the 
printed calendar, where instead it is re- 
corded that on 22 July 1243 Guy de 
Russilun ‘Rousillon) was presented to 
Preston; Cal. Pat, 1232-47, p. 38>. 
Guy was the king’s clerk and kinsman 
(Ca.. Ppa! Letters, i, 201) and there are 
a number of references to him in the 
Patent Rolls. 

There is probably some error, for in 
1246 the church of Preston was of the 
king's presentation. W:!liam de Haverhil!, 
the treasurer, was rector, and it was 
worth 149 marks a year; Assize R. 404, 
m. 19d. 


Aubrey de Roseriis'* .. 
Eustace de Cottesbach'® 2... 
James de Fairford'” . . . . . 
Thurstan de Holland’? . . . . 
Henry de Walton’? . 2... 


A papal dispensation to hold two addi- 
tional benefices was given to William de 
Haverhill in 1244; Cal. Papal Letters, 
ipeits 

19 Cal. Pat. 1247-58, p. 149 3 he was 
archdeacon of ‘Tours’ or Thouars. 
Matthew Paris, whose description must 
be considered that of a hostile partisan, 
says that Arnulf was a Poitevin and 
chaplain to Geoffrey de Lusignan, the 
king's brother, and played the fool to 
amuse the king and court, being a dis- 
grace ts the priesthood ; ‘we have seen 
him pelting the king, his brother Geoffrey, 
and other nobles while walking in the 
orchard of St. Albans with turf, stones 
and apples, and pressing the juice of 
grapes in their eyes, like one devoid of 
sense’; Chron, May. (Rolls Ser.’, v, 329. 
Such behaviour, though undignified, does 
not seem vicious, 

Arnulf was also a prebendary of York ; 
Cal. Pat. 1247-58, p. 414. 

V3 oid. p. g71. He was an im- 
portant public official, becoming keeper 
of the great seal 1255-9, and held 
a number of benefices and dignities, in- 
cluding the rectory of Kirkham. He 
became Bishop of London in 1259, but 
retained Preston, Kirkham and some 
other churches till his death in 1262. 
See Dict. Nor Biog.; Foss, Judges; 
Le Neve, Fuss, ii, 285, &e. 

In 1254 Henry de Wingham, sub- 
deacon, one of the king's clerks, was 
made a papal chaplain; Cal. Papal 
Letters, i, 300. There are several other 
privileges and dispensations recorded for 
him in the same volume, including per- 
mission (in 1259) to hold for five years 
all the benefices he had at the time of 
his election to the see of London; ibid. 
366. 

V4 Pat. 46 Hen. III, m. 9 (quoted by 
Smith, op. cit. 31). This, the most 
famous of the rectors of Preston, was 
also a great State officer holding many 
ecclesiastical preferments. He was Chan- 
cellor of England 1261-3 and again 
1272-4, being made Bishop of Rochester 
in 1274. He founded Merton Coll., Oxf. 
He was drowned while crossing the 
Medway in 1277. See Dict. Nat. Biog. ; 
Fess, Judges ; Le Neve, Fasti, ii, 361, &c. 

Walter de Merton, chancellor of the 
Bishop of Durham, obtained a papal dis- 
pensation in 1246; Cal. Papal Letters, 
i, 225. 

YS Protections were granted him in 
1286 and 1294; Cal. Par. 1281-92, 
P- 2493 1292-1301, p. 121. He occurs 


84 


Theobald Walter. . . 


Thomas Earl of Lance. . 
Henry Earl of Lanc.. . 


. . . . 


d. P. Russinol 


d, W. de Haverhill 
d. Arnulf 
d. Bp. Wingham 


exch. J. de Fairford 


also in pleadings of 1292, the surname in 
one case being given as De Roseys; 
Assize R, 408, m. 39d., 99, 24. 

He made a gift to Henry de Haydock 
of Ashton in return for land in Dobcroft 
given to Preston Church ; Kuerden MSS. 
iv, C25. 

16 Cal, Pat. 1301-7, p. 457 3 ‘ Preston’ 
may be an error for Prescot (q.v.), but 
Eustace was defendant in a plea regard- 
ing land in Preston in 1305 ; De Banco 
R. 153, m. 206 d 

7 The name is also given as Fair- 
stead. In Jan. 1311-12 letters dimissory 
were granted by the Archbishop of 
York to James de Fairford, rector of 
Preston in Amounderness ; note by J. P. 
Earwaker, Raines MSS, (from the York 
records). James de Fairford is named as 
the immediate predecessor of Thurstan de 
Holland, rector in 1323, in a claim for 
tithes by the Prior of Lancaster; Lane. 
Ch. ii, 448. 

178 Thurstan de Holland is stated to 
have exchanged the rectory of Hanbury 
for Preston with James de Fairford ; the 
reference given is Add. MS. 6065, fol. 267 
(Fishwick, Preston), 

As Thurstan is often named in plead- 
ings, &c., it is probable that he, unlike 
most of the other rectors, was resident. 
He when cighteen (about 1314) accepted 
the rectory of Hanbury, and obtained 
a papal dispensation in 1319 to retain 
it, his intercessor being Thomas Earl 
of Lancaster ; Cal. Papal Letters, ii, 189. 

The Abbot of Sées’ claim against 
Thurstan for the annuity of 10 marks, 
already recorded, occurs in the Plea 
Rolls from 1325 onwards; De Banco R. 
258, m.140; 292, m. 2573 300,m. 185. 

Thurstan de Holland occurs as rector 
down to the beginning of 1348 ; ibid. 350, 
m. 203 353, m. 302. 

179 For the presentations about this 
time reference is given to Torre's Re- 
gisters of the Archdeacons of Ricl:mond ; 
Fishwick’s Preston. 

Henry de Walton was of the family of 
Walton-le-Dale, and became Archdeacon 
of Richmond in 1349 by papal provi- 
sion, he then holding the church of 
Preston and canonries at Salisbury and 
York ; Cal. Papal Letters, iii, 290. 
There are many other re’erences to him 
mm the same volume, including disrensa- 
tions from residence and for further 
benefices, &c. He incurred sentence of 
excommunication in 1367, but it was 
suspended ; ibid. iii, 584. See also 
Le Neve, Fasti, iii, 138, &c. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Patron 


Henry Duke of Lanc. . 


Instituted 


9 Dec. 1359 « 
oc. 1369. . . 


13 Oct. 1374. 


Name 
Robert de Burton’? 2. . 2. 
John de Charneles! , a Hey bes 
Ralph de Erghum, : C.L. iw a a 


?1380-99 . Johnde Yarburgh'’® . . . . . 
1399 » » William de Stevington™. . . . 
Vicars 
?1400—, Richard Walton*®. 2. 
17 Jan. 1418-19 John White '® ; ets 
26 Apr. 1421 John York alias Legeard ii Bobo te 5 
6 Mar. 1451-2 ‘Thomas Tunstall'*® . . . . 5 


g Sept. 1454 . 
oc. 1482-1501 
CASIO: se 
oc. 1548-62. . 
22 Oct. 1563. 
15 Sept. 1566 . 
12 Sept. 1572 . 
15 Sept. 1580 . 


Roger Chorley 


180 An abstract of the will of Robert 
de Burton, rector of Preston, dated at 
Leicester Abbey, 16 Jan. 1360, is given 
from Gibbon’s Early Linc. Wills, 23, 
by T. C. Smith, op. cit. 35. No benefice 
or dignity except Preston is named. 

Another Robert de Burton had several 
preferments; Cal. Papal Letters, iii, 
241, &c. 

181 He was rector in 1369, when he 
complained that various persons had 
broken his close at Preston ; De Banco 
R. 435, m. 368. 

John de Charneles had canonries at 
York and Lichfield, and dispensations for 
benefices, &c. ; Cal. Papal Letters, iii, 92 
(1342), &c. He died in 13743 Le Neve, 
Fasti, i, $91. 

182 Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xxii, 389. 

Ralph de Erghum (Arkholme) was 
chancellor of John of Gaunt and became 
Bishop of Salisbury (1375) and Bath 
(1388). He had various canonries, &c.; 
Cal. Papal Letters, iv, 167, 215, &c.; Le 
Neve, Fasti, ii, 600 ; i, 139, &c. 

18 John de Yarburgh became canon of 
York in 1385 and exchanged for a canonry 
at St. Paul’s in 1395, resigning the latter 
in 1400 ; ibid. iii, 205 ; ii, 380. He, being 
in his fifty-eighth year and unable from his 
infirmities to reside at Preston, received 
a papal dispensation for non-residence 
there in 1397; Cal, Papal Letters, v, 
22. He was a clerk of the Duke of 
Lancaster’s in 1378; Cal. Pat. 1377-81, 
p- 262. In 1399 he became one of the 
prebendaries of the New College at 
Leicester ; ibid. 1399-1401, p. 13. 

An incident of his time may be re- 
corded here, One John Robinson Atkin- 
son of Balderston having killed Thomas 
Banastre at Preston in May 1395, fled to 
the church for safety. Acknowledging his 
crime before the king’s coroner he was, 
about a month later, allowed to go on 
abjuring the realm. He was pardoned in 
1397; Pal. of Lanc. Chan. Misc. 1/3, 
no. 80. 

184 He resigned in order to allow the 
dean and canons to take possession ; Cal. 
Papal Letters, vi, 110. The date is not 
given, but it must have been before 1406 
and may have been in 1400. 

185 Richard Walton was vicar of Preston 
in 1400 if a deed preserved by Kuerden is 
rightly dated ; Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 250, 
no. 25. In Harl. MS. 2042 (fol. 168) 
what seems to be the same deed bears the 
years 3 Hen. IV and 3 Hen. V. He was 


Robert Cowell’? 2. 2. 2. 2 
Thomas Bolton ¥ 

Robert ey eo 
Nicholas Bodden, Et, B. i ea se 
193 

Leonard Chorley ™ 
Nicholas Daniel, B.D. 2. 2. . 
Thomas Wall. 


Be ad (ae John Bold 


. . . . . ” . 


a burgess of Preston by hereditary right in 
1415 3 Preston Guild R, (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), 7 

In an undated deed (c. 1410) Magota 
widow of William Walton of Walton-le- 
Dale granted certain lands to her son 
Richard Walton, vicar of St. Wilfrid’s, 
Preston ; Kuerden MSS. iv, P 118, no. 26. 

186 Raines MSS. xxii, 395. 

187 Ibid. xx, 397. He occurs in local 
charters and pleadings; e.g. Add. MS. 
32107, no. 2292; Pal. of Lanc. Plea 
R. 2, m. 13 Dep. Keeper’s Rep. xxxiii, 
App. 21. 

188 Raines MSS. xxii, 379. The vicarage 
fell vacant on 18 Feb. 1451-2 by the 
death of John York alias Legeard, and on 
inquiry it was found that the Dean and 
Chapter of New College, Leicester, were 
patrons. Tunstall is named in a local 
deed ; Add. MS. 32107, no. 552, 2953. 

189" Raines MSS. xxii, 379. Cowell 
had been rector of Thurnby, Linc. dioc., 
to which Tunstall went. Robert Cowell 
was an in burgess at the guild of 14593 
Preston Guild R.12. His name occurs in 
local deeds down to 1473; e.g. Kuerden 
MSS. iii, W 8 (no. 95), K 2. 

199 Thomas Bolton, vicar, was one of 
the witnesses to the will (dated 1482) of 
Richard Taylor, who desired his body to be 
buried in St. Wilfrid’s Church ; Kuerden 
fol. MS. fol. 396, T. Thomas ‘ Berton’ 
was vicar in 1483-4 ; Kuerden MSS. iv, 
R14. He is again named as Thomas 
Bolton in 14.86 ; Add. MS, 32107, no. 363. 
The king, apparently in 1498, leased to 
Thomas Bolton for thirty years the vicarage 
of the parish church of Preston ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Misc. Bks. xxi, 56 a/d. There 
is nothing to show how the vicarage had 
come into the king’s hands. Thomas 
Bolton was still rector in 15013; Dep. 
Keeper's Rep. xl, App. 542. 

191 By inquiry made in 1527 it waa 
found that the church was appropriated 
to the college of ‘New Work,’ Leicester, 
and that the vicar was Robert Singleton, 
who had held it for eleven years ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Rentals, bdle. 5, no. 15. 

Sir Alexander Osbaldeston in 1494 ob- 
tained a grant of the next presentation 
from the College of Newark, Leicester, 
and presented Robert son of John Single- 
ton some time between 1515 and 1522. 
The grant was disputed, but on trial 
upheld ; Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), i, 
195, printed by Smith, op. cit. 15-16. A 
writ in this case was issued 8 Oct. 1516, 


85 


John Duke of Lance. . 


New Coll., Leicester. . 


Sir A. Osbaldeston . . 


Thomas Packet . . . 
William Chorley . . . 


PRESTON 


Cause of Vacancy 


d. H. de Walton 


| 


d. R. Walton 

res. J. White 

d. J. York 

exch. T. Tunstall 


d. T. Bolton 


d, N. Bradshaw 
d. R. Chorley 
res. L. Chorley 
res. N. Daniel 


the church being then vacant; Pal. of 
Lanc. Writs Proton. 8 Hen. VIII, Lent. 

Robert Singleton was vicar in 1535; 
Valor, v, 262. One of the name became 
archpriest of St. Martin’s, Dover, in 1535 3 
ibid. i, 95. He was a correspondent of 
Cromwell’s ; L. and P. Hen. VIII, x, 612, 
640. The same or another graduated at 
Oxford (M.A. 1527) and became rector of 
Potsgrove, Beds., 15493 Foster, Alumni. 

192 Nicholas Bradshaw was in 1535 one 
of the canons of the Newark College ; 
Valor Eccl. (Rec. Com.), iv, 171. The 
inventory of church goods at Preston in 
1552, signed by him, shows a fair number 
of vestments, &c., remaining. There was 
also a ‘ painted cloth which was about the 
sepulchre’ ; T. C. Smith, op. cit. 252-3. 
The name is given as James Bradshaw in 
Chet. Mise. (new ser.), i, 3. He occurs 
as vicar of Preston in the Chester visita- 
tion lists of 1548 and1562. Inthe latter 
it is said he ‘appeared and subscribed.’ 
Mortuus is marked against his name. 

198 In the visitation list of 1563 he was 
curate of Chorley and vicar of Preston. 
He was buried at Chorley 26 July 1566. 

The names of patrons and dates of 
institution from this period are taken 
from papers in the Dioc. Reg. Chester. 

194 Compounded for first-fruits 26 Oct. 
1566; Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), ii, 409. 

One of this name was B.A. at Oxford 
1§71, and afterwards (1581) a barrister ; 
Foster, Alumni. He seems to have become 
Recorder of Liverpool 1602-20 ; Picton, 
Munic. Rec. i, 112. 

195 Nicholas ap Evan Daniel was vicar 
of St. Leonard, Shoreditch, 1563-8, be- 
ing deprived—for nonconformity, Canon 
Raines supposed ; he was also a Fellow of 
Manchester and was there accused of un- 
sound doctrine; Raines, Manch. Fellows 
(Chet. Soc.), 56-7. He compounded for 
his first-fruits at Preston 19 Nov. 1572. 
At Preston he preached twice every 
Sunday and holiday. He was a married 
man. 

196 Act Bk. at Chester, 1579-1676, 
fol. 35. Compounded for first - fruits 
30 Nov. 1580. An abstract of his will, 
dated 18 Aug. 1592, is printed by T. C. 
Smith, op. cit. 45. He was in 1591 
described as ‘an old grave man of simple 
persuasion in divinity and one that in his 
youth hath used sundry callings and now 
at last settled himself in the ministry’ ; 
Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 601. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Instituted 
21 Dec. 1392 


12 Feb. 1603-4. John Paler 1% 


283 May 1621 


18 Now 
16 Dec. ) 1626 


11 Nov. 

2 al ae 
71639 

2 July 1657 

10 Feb. 1657-8. 

14 Feb. 1662-3. 

27 Nov. 1663. 

12 Dec. 1682. 

29 May 1700 . 

14 July 1727. 


In 1590 it was reported that the vicar, 
who was ‘no preacher,’ had ‘ by corrup- 
tion’ only 20 marks a year out of the 
vicarage revenues ; S. P. Dom, Eliz. xxxi, 


Tin Act Bk. at Chester, fol. 21. He 
appears to have had two presentations, 
one from the queen and another frum 
Henry Bold of North Meols; Smith, 
op. cit. 46. He compounded for first- 
fruits ¢ Feb. 1592-3. He was also rector 
of Windermere 1594-1610. 

193 Act Bk. at Chester, fol. 3735 
‘preacher of the Word of God.’ Parkin- 
son presented by virtue of a grant from 
Richard Hoghton. John Paler was buried 
at Preston 16 Apr. 1621, the entry in the 
register describing him as ‘a notable 
labourer in the Lord’s vineyard.’ An 
inventory of his goods (Smith, op. cit. 47) 
shows that he had a considerable library, 
his books being worth £14 ros. 

199 Act Bk. at Chester, fol. 72. He 
was a king's preacher. Martin paid first- 
fruits 29 May 1621. He graduated at 
Oxford (M.A. 1611) and Cambridge ; 
Foster, Alumni. He was deprived for 
simony in 1623. Some ten years later 
he made bitter complaint of his treatment, 
alleging that his wife and son had starved 
to death in the street; Ca/. S. P. Dom. 
1633-4, pp» 7, 11, 39- His character- 
sketch of his enemies, who were Puritans, 
is printed by Fishwick, op. cit. 180-2. 
Martin seems to have been regarded as of 
unsound mind. 

The institutions from this time have 
been compared with those recorded at the 
P.R.O. as printed in Lancs. and Ches. 
Antiz. Notes. 

200 The history of the vicarage from 
1623 to 1626 is obscure, the proceedings 
concerning Martin causing difficulty. The 
records of the Chester registry show that 
Alexander Bradley, B.A., was presented 
by the king, ‘by lapse,’ on 21 June 1623, 
and John Inskip on 6 July following. 
The latter sought institution, but does not 
appear to have obtained it; Act Bk. at 
Chester, fol. 736, 764, and at end of 
volume. Augustine Wildbore was pre- 
sented by Sir Richard MHoghton on 
3 Mar. 1625-6, the vacancy being due to 
the ‘deprivation of James Martin, last 
vicar’; but on 1 Dec. following he was 
presented by te king, ‘patron for this 
tum by reason of the outlawry of the 
patron or by lapse.’ The first-fruits were 
paid 20 Feb. 1626-7. Some entries re- 
lating to John Inskip, with an abstract of 
his will (1632), are printed by T. C. 
Smith, op. cit. 51. 

Wildbore was educated at Sidney-Suscex 


William Sawrey, MAB? 2 2. 


James Martin, M.A. . . 
Augustine Wildbore, D.D..”. . . Pe King 


Rt. Parkinson. . + - 
Sir Richard Hoghton. . 
Sir R. Hoghton . . - } 


Name Patron Cause of Vacancy 
ae! Bold . . « ee T. Wall 
The Queen. oo a 


res. W. Sawrey 
d. J. Paler 


Sir R. Hoghton . . .- jes A. Wildbore 


James Starkie, M.A)... + {The Kine « 


Isaac Ambrose, M.A.0? 2... 
George Thomason . . 6 6 
William Cole, BAC. . 
Thomas Stanhope, M.A? 2. . 43 
Seth Bushell, D.D.2 . . . | 

Thomas Birch” . 
Samuel Peploe, M.A . 2. - 
Samuel Peploe, D.D.2% . . . . 


. . . ” 


Coll, Camb. (M.A. 1614, D.D. 1633). 
He was appointed a king’s preacher ; 
was vicar of Garstang in 1621, of 
Preston in 1626, and of Lancaster 
1630, vacating Preston. He was a strong 
Royalist and was expelled from his bene- 
fices by Parliament in 1643. He died in 
1654. See the full account by H. Fish- 
wick in Garstang (Chet. Soc.), 149-53- 

201 Act Bk. at Chester, fol. gid, 116d. 
First-fruits paid 25 Nov. 1630. The 
king’s nomination was said to be due to 
the outlawry of the patron, lapse, or 
simony. James Starkie was in 1636 ad- 
monished by the High Commission Court, 
probably for some nonconformity ; Cal. 
S. P. Dom. 1635-6, p. 485. In 1639 he 
was promoted to the rectory of North 
Meols(q.v.). 

22 This noteworthy vicar of Preston 
was the son of Richard Ambrose, vicar 
of Ormskirk, where he was baptized 
in 1604. He was educated at Brasenose 
Coll., Oxf.; B.A. 1624, M.A. Camb. 
16323 Foster, Alumni. Incumbent of 
Castleton, Derb., 1627 ; Clapham, 1629 ; 
king's preacher in Lancashire, 1631; wasa 
zealous Presbyterian and member of the 
classis 1646, signing the * Harmonious 
Consent’ in 1648 ; became vicar of Gar- 
stang in 1654 and was ejected for non- 
conformity in 1662. He died in Jan. 
1663-4. He published various religious 
works, including Looking unto Jesus, 1658. 
See Dict. Nat. Biog.; Wood, Athenae ; 
Garstang (Chet. Soc.), 154-176. Am- 
brose was still vicar of Preston till 1657, 
when he released to Sir Richard Hoghton 
all right in the vicarage ; De Hoghton D. 
During part of the time (1655 on) 
William Brownsword was in charge of the 
parish but was not styled vicar; he was 
afterwards of Kendal. See articles by 
Rev. B. Nightingale in Preston Guardian, 
9-30 Apr. 1910. 

208 Plund. Mins. Accts. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 189. One of this name 
was educated at Oxford ; B.A. 1659 ; and 
afterwards held various benefices ; Canon 
of Lincoln 1683-1712; Foster, Alumni. 

204 Plund. Mins. Accts. ii, 216, 222. 
Educated at Corpus Christi Coll, Camb. ; 
B.A. 16403; Fishwick, Preston, 185. In 
1662 he was willing to conform to some 
extent, but was ejected from Preston or 
left it voluntarily. Next year, however, 
he accepted the vicarage of Dedham ; 
Smith, op. cit. 59. He had previously 
held Kirkby Lonsdale and Newcastle-on- 
Tyne. 

5 Stanhope was educated at St. John’s 
Coll., Camb. ; Admissions (ed. Mayor), 
i, 111; M.A. 1660. He is said to have 


86 


Sir R. Hoghton . . . 


Sin, Hophton. ~ «+ 


The King a a oe 


cess. W. Cole 
res. T. Stanhope 
res. S. Bushell 

d. T. Birch 
prom. Bp. Peploe 


acted afterwards as chaplain at Hoghton 
Tower ; Smith, op. cit. 60. His son 
George became Dean of Canterbury 
1704 to 1728. 

206 Educated at Oxford; M.A. 1654, 
D.D. 1672; Foster, Alumni, Some 
notice of this vicar has been given under 
Euxton, of which he was curate in 1650, 
Conforming at the Restoration he was 
very tolerant of Dissenters, and became 
popular at Preston and Lancaster, where 
he was vicar from 1682 till his death in 
1684. His epitaph describes him as 
devoted to the English Reformed Church, 
and faithful to the two Charleses in very 
difficult times; Smith, op. cit. 61-3, 
where his will is given ; Wood, Arhenae ; 
Dict. Nat. Biog. 

207 Act Bk. at Chester, fol. 158. 
Neither vicar nor curate is recorded in 
the visitation list of 1691, but James 
Bland, curate, was ‘conformable’ in 
1689; Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. 
iv, 230. Birch’s will is printed in Smith, 
op. cit. 68. 

He was not liked by some of the more 
influential of his parishioners, who com- 
plained that he did not reside and that 
he disparaged the Prayer Book. Bishop 
Stratford made inquiry and wrote to the 
mayor, showing that some of the charges 
were untrue and other matters would be 
reformed. In particular the vicar was 
willing to restore the daily prayers in the 
church ; Loc. Glean. Lanes, and Ches. ii 
6, 9. 

208 The Hoghton family were Noncon- 
formists, and from a letter among the 
De Hoghton D. it appears that Sir 
Charles Hoghton gave the nomination of 
Birch’s successor to the mayor of Preston 
and others. It is not clear, however, 
that they selected Peploe, who was a 
zealous Whig, afterwards warden of Man- 
chester 1718, and Bishop of Chester 1726, 
when he resigned Preston. Peploe is 
said to have owed these promotions to 
his courage in reading the prayers for 
King George at the time when the 
Jacobite army was actually in possession 
of Preston. He was also very energetic 
in prosecuting Roman Catholics. See 
further in the account of Manchester 
Church. He died in 1752. 

John Stanley was presented 13 Apr. 
1726 by the king, but there does not 
seem to be any record that he was insti- 
tuted ; he at once accepted a rectory at 
Liverpool. 

203 Son of Bishop Peploe, whom he 
succeeded also as warden of Manchester 
in 17383 see the account of the church 
there. He resigned Preston in 174309 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Instituted 

30 Apr. 1743 
30 Oct. 1782. 
6 Sept. 1809. 

1 Mar. 1817 

14 Apr. 1840 
12 July 1877... 
g Apr. 1900. 


Name 
Randal Andrews, B.A.?!° as 
Humphrey Shuttleworth, M.A." 
James Penny, M.A... 2 |, 
Roger Carus Wilson, M.A." .. 
John Owen Parr, M.A... 
James Hamer Rawdon, M.A." . 
Hercules Scott Butler, M.A." 


The rectory, having been in the patronage of the 
kings or lords of the honour of Lancaster, was filled by 
a series of royal clerks or busy officials, most of whom 
probably never resided, discharging their priestly 
duties by curates. Hence it was an advantage to the 
church, and no doubt to the parish, when the rectory 
was appropriated to the New College at Leicester and 
a responsible vicar placed in the cure. In addition 
to the chapel at Broughton there seem to have been 
two or three others in the parish,”” and for these and 
the chantries there was no doubt a competent staff of 
chaplains. A list of twelve clergy was recorded about 
1530,”* but the visitation list of 1548 names only 
the vicar, two chantry priests and three others; in 

1562 there were still the vicar, his curate, the curate 
of Broughton and another.” Nothing seems to be 
known of the first Elizabethan vicars, but from the 
character of the district the conformity with the 
religious legislation of the time was little more than 
nominal, and when a convinced Protestant was 
appointed in 1572 hewas soon ‘in great perplexity’ and 
‘many ways threatened of his life for his well doing,’ 
i.e. in particular because at Easter he had ‘taken the 


PRESTON 


Cause of Vacancy 
res. S. Peploe 
d. R. Andrews 
res. H. Shuttleworth 
d. J. Penny 
d. R. C. Wilson 
d. J. O. Parr 
res. J. H. Rawdon 


: Patron 
William Shaw. . . 
Sir H. Hoghton . . . 

. Sir H. P. Hoghton . . 
. W.W. Carus Wilson. 
- Hulme’s Trustees. . . 


. » . . . 


. ” . . 


names of all such as would not receive the blessed 
communion,’ and because he had captured a ‘ false 
priest at mass.’ !_ ‘The curate or parish priest whom 
he found in charge, a married man of openly evil 
life,” had winked at every abuse and insulted the 
vicar, causing the ‘bells to be rung for souls’ when 
the vicar was preaching and telling him to come down 
from the pulpit. The parish clerk was a ‘ popish 
boy,’ who never appeared at church except to make 
such a noise on the organ on Sunday that no one 
could understand the singing.™’ ‘The communion 
table was formed from an old altar, and ‘altar stones 
and idols’ seats’ were still in their places; even a 
‘great number of alabaster images’ which had been 
taken down in accordance with the queen’s commands 
had been carefully buried in the vicarage garden, but 
the vicar had found and destroyed them. 

This incumbent stayed but a few years and his 
successor, who was ‘no preacher,’ had tried many 
occupations before becoming a minister. His successors, 
and in particular John Paler, may have been those 
who influenced the Protestant population towards 
Puritanism, so that Vicar Martin seems to have been 


being collated to Tattenhall in Cheshire. 
He died in 1781. 

210 William Shaw presented by grant of 
Sir Henry Hoghton. The new vicar was 
educated at Magdalen Hall, Oxf.; B.A. 
17323 Foster, Alumni. He was curate 
of St. George’s, Preston. Being a Whig 
he had many enemies in the town, who 


asserted he had paid for the presentation. 7 


He died at the Bull’s Head, Manchester, 
4 Aug. 1782. His son became vicar of 
Ormskirk.” 

211 Educated at Christ Church, Oxf. ; 
M.A. 17603 Foster, dlumni. Vicar of 
Kirkham, 1771, king’s preacher 1790, 
Canon of York 1791. He resigned 
Preston in 1809, but retained Kirkham 
till his death in 1812. He published 
Lectures on the Creed of Pius IV and 
some anti-Popery tracts. See Fishwick, 
Kirkham (Chet. Soc.), 84-5. 

212 Educated at Oxf.; M.A. 1784. 
Rector of Chipping (q.v.) 1807-16. 

213 Educated at Trinity Coll., Camb. ; 
M.A. 1818. A monument to him was 
erected in the chancel by public subscrip- 
100. 

214 Educated at Brasenose Coll., Oxf. ; 
M.A, 1830; Indian chaplain 1821, 
vicar of Durnford 1834, hon. canon 
of Manchester 1853. He was also a 
county magistrate. There is a monument 
to him in the chancel. 

215 Educated at Brasenose Coll., Oxf. ; 
M.A. 1861; incumbent of Shaw 1875, 
hon. canon of Manchester 1890, rector 
of Yelverton 1900. 

216 Educated at Brasenose Coll., Oxf. ; 
M.A. 1877; vicar of St. Barnabas’, 
Holbeck, 1883, of Farnworth near Bolton 
1894. Hon. canon of Manchester 1908. 

#17 As at Fernyhalgh and Barton. 
Kuerden, about 1680, speaks of a foot 
Passage ‘through the churchyard south- 


ward by the public school and ancient 
place called Chapel of Avenham, over 
the Swillbrook,’ &c. ; Hardwick, Preston, 
210, Nothing else seems known of this 
chapel. A John ‘de Capella’ occurs 
c. 124.03 Cockersand Chartul. i, 217. A 
lease of the rectory made in 1545 (quoted 
in a petition of 1572) speaks of ‘the 
glebe and demesne lands belonging to the 
said church and rectory together with the 
chapels of Broughton, Ribbleton, Ashton 
Bank and Lea, and three burgages in 
Preston,’ &c.; but there has probably 
been some mistake in quoting; Duchy 
of Lanc. Plead. Eliz. xci, F 15. 

218 Smith, op. cit. 20, citing ‘a subsidy 
book in the Record Office.” The names 
given fix the date as between 1527 and 
1535. In the same work (p. 19) is 
given a list of seven names, dated 1525, 
from ‘the Chapter House Book, B 2/15 
(R.O.)’; this is incomplete, as it does 
not contain Thomas Bostock’s name, 

219 Visitation lists at Chester. It ap- 
pears that another priest (not named) 
was in 1548 paid by the corporation in 
accordance with a lease ending in 1560. 
This priest, whose name occurs in the 
list of 1525, was still ministering in 1561, 
though ‘somewhat addicted to the ale- 
house, and insufficient’; Raines, Chan- 
tries (Chet. Soc.), 205. He does not 
occur in 1562. 

It further appears that the old chantry 
priest and schoolmaster (not named in 
1562) continued to minister ; he was re- 
ported to be ‘an unlearned priest,’ and 
being a recusant was under surveillance 
by the authorities ; Cal. 8, P, Dom. Add. 
1547-65, Pp. 523. 

220 In the Consistory Court Records at 
Chester is a certificate sent to the vicar 
of Preston c. 1575 stating that Arthur 
Hoghton of Broughton had received ‘ the 


87 


holy communion at Easter last in the 
church of Goosnargh according to the 
laws of this our English Church.’ 

221 The vicar’s letter and his curate’s 
reply are printed in Smith, op. cit. 42-4. 

It was only with the greatest difficulty 
that the judge and jury could be forced 
to convict the priest and others. 

222 His name, William Wall, does not 
seem to occur in the lists of pre-Reforma- 
tion clergy. William Wall, clerk, was 
an in burgess at the guild of 1582, and 
Thomas son of William Wall, clerk, 
deceased, at that of 1602 3 Preston Guild 
Ri F254 

The curate in his reply admitted some 
of the serious faults alleged, but said he 
had not taken bribes from recusants to 
conceal their not coming to church, &c. 
He had had a dispute with the vicar about 
the burial of unchristened children ; it 
had never been the custom to bury them 
in the churchyard. The custom of the 
Rogation Days is mentioned : ‘ During the 
three days before Ascension Day he (the 
curate) went to the cross in the town and 
willed the people to pray to God to prosper 
the fruits of the earth as is appointed by 
the book.’ 

223 The singers would have ‘no Geneva 
psalm’ before the sermon. The clerk 
in reply admitted ‘that he being one 
that can sing and play on the organs and 
a teacher of children to sing, did never 
sing a psalm before the sermon,’ but he 
had ‘no book of psalms,’ 

From what is said in the text it is clear 
that the organ was soon afterwards taken 
down. The next was erected in 1802 in 
the west gallery ; Smith, op. cit. 257. 
The bequest of Thomas Hoghton, the 
exiled lord of Lea, in 1580, fora pair of 
organs, &c., may be mentioned here; 
Knox, Life of Card. Allen, 85. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


driven out by this party.24 In 1637 Lancashire was 
reported to Archbishop Laud as an extremely Puritan 
county ; at Preston and Manchester they called the 
surplices ‘the rags of Rome,’ and suffered no organs 
in the churches.225 At the formation of the Presby- 
terian classis in 1646 three Preston aldermen became 
members of it.?8 

There is evidence ofa somewhat higher type ofchurch- 
manship in the town after the Restoration,”” and in the 
last century, under modern conditions, a great change 
has taken place in Preston, as elsewhere, by the pro- 
vision of new churches and schools and a large staff of 
clergy, the new movement being due apparently to 
the Rev. R. C. Wilson, vicar from 1817 to 1839.78 

There were two endowed chantries in the parish 
church, those at the altars of the Rood or Crucifix of 
Jesus and St. Mary. The former is stated to have 


of his ancestors, and in 1547 John Shepherd was the 
chaplain, and celebrating accordingly. “There was no 
plate belonging to it, and the endowment, producing 
£5 15. 8d. yearly, was derived from burgages, lands, 
&c., in Preston.?2® In other places William or Richard 
Whalley is called the founder of the Crucifix chantry,# 
After the confiscation there were numerous disputes 
about the property.41 The altar of St. Mary is 
mentioned in 1349.79? Thechantry thereat was said 
to have been founded by Ellen widow of Henry 
Hoghton for a chaplain to celebrate continually for 
her soul and all Christian souls, and to keep a free 
grammar school.?83 This chantry can be traced back 
to 1430, and seems to have been due to contributions 
from various sources.224 Nicholas Banaster was the 
incumbent in 1547, and ‘by report of the inhabi- 
tants’ the ordinances of the foundation had been 


been founded by a Sir Richard Hoghton for the souls 


224 See the accounts of the vicars above. 

Evidence of Puritan feeling is given by 
the strict prohibition of trading on ‘the 
Sabbath Day,’ passed by the guild of 
1602. In 1616 the Council ordered house- 
keepers to keep their street doors shut 
during service time on Sabbath days and 
festivals, and to prevent their children 
playing in the streets or sitting in the 
street doors on the Sabbath. Ale-houses 
were regulated, being ordered to close at 
9 pm. ; Abram, Memorials of the Guilds, 
36, 37- 

In 1625-8 Henry Banister bequeathed 
£600 ‘towards the maintenance and 
settling of a minister or ministers of God’s 
Word, if (the trustees) should so think 
fit, to water the dry and barren places in 
the County of Lancaster, where there 
should be greatest want of a preaching 
ministry, to direct the people to the 
glory of God.’ With this and other 
sums land in Brockholes was purchased, 
and of the resulting rent-charge of £16 a 
moiety has since been paid to the vicar of 
Preston ; End. Char. Rep. 1905, p. 742. 
The vicar now applies it to the payment 
of a deaconess and a Church Army 
evangelist. 

225 Cal. S. P. Dom. 1637, p. 26. 

226 Baines, Lancs. (ed. Harland), i, 228. 

227 See the account of Vicar Birch. 
The full clerical staff probably consisted 
of the vicar, his curate and the curate of 
Broughton. An additional church was 
built in 1716 at Grimsargh and another 
in 1723 at Preston. 

228 T, C. Smith, op. cit. 78. 

239 Raines, Chantries (Chet. Soc.), 
202-43 Smith, op. cit. 233. It does 
not appear which of several Sir Richards 
founded this chantry ; it may have been 
the founder of one at Ribchester in 1407. 

In 1487 it was found that Alexander 
Hoghton and Elizabeth his wife had a 
chantry in Preston Church, John Trout- 
beck being chaplain, and they were bound 
to maintain the fabric and supply book, 
vestments, &c. ; Raines, loc. cit. 

If this altar were at the end of the 
south aisle, where the Lea burial-place 
was, the crucifix was probably some special 
one, and not the chancel rood. 

230 In 1495 and 1500 the mayor and 
burgesses, being patrons of the chantry 
of the Rood of Preston, demised a burgage 
in Fishergate and an acre of land for forty 
years, rents of 10s, for each to be paid to 
the priest who should say mass, according 
to the intent of Richard Whalley, founder 
of the same; Kuerden MSS. iv, P 121, 


no. 95, 96. In 1507 Thomas Whalley, 
chaplain, and another surrendered to the 
mayor and others certain lands for the 
enlarging or augmentation of the chantry 
belonging to the altar before the holy 
crucifix within the parish church of St. 
Wilfrid the Bishop in Preston, the priest 
to pray especially for the soul of William 
Whalley, priest, late founder of the same; 
ibid. no. g1, 92. 

From this it appears that Whalley’s 
foundation was intended for an additional 
priest at the Rood altar. His benefaction 
seems to have led to disputes with the 
Hoghtons. Thus in 1498 Sir Alexander 
Hoghton nominated William Galter to 
celebrate, and in 1500 and 1507 the cor- 
poration named the same priest; ibid. 
iii, H 9; and iv, P 121, no. 76, 79, 86. 

The agreement with the corporation 
was that William Galter ‘shall say mass 
afore the rood in Preston Kirk three 
days in a week, that is to say Sunday, 
Wednesday and Friday, and he be disposed, 
and to pray for the souls of Richard 
Whalley and his wifes (sic) and William 
Whalley priest his son,’ &c. ; and that ‘he 
shall keep and maintain God’s service to 
his power as St. Mary’s priest does’; 
and ‘be ready to say mass if the mayor 
require him’; ibid. iv, Pir. The 
charters are in Duchy of Lanc. Misc. 
bdle. 2, no. 15. 

Richard Hoghton as feoffee of Richard 
Whalley nominated James Tarleton to 
celebrate in the chantry; Add. MS. 
32106, no 751. 

In 1527 the chantry before the crucifix 
was held by Thomas Bostock, who had 
been appointed about eleven years before ; 
the Hoghton patronage is admitted ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Rentals, bdle. 5, no. 15. John 
Shepherd, named in the text, was the 
priest in 1535; Valor Eccl. v, 263. The 
income was then given as £4 4s. rod. clear. 

%1 An account of them is given by 
T. C. Smith, op. cit. 235. For grants of 
the chantry lands see Pat. 5 Jas. I, pt. xx, 
and 7 Jas. I, pt. xxxiv. 

%3In that year Adam de Brockholes 
gave his lands in Brockholes to William 
de Elston, charged with a rent of 6s. 84, 
to continue for a hundred years, for the 
celebration of masses at the altar of B. 
Mary in the church of Preston for the 
souls of Adam and his kindred ; Add. MS. 
32108, fol. 289. 

283 Raines, op. cit. 205-7 ; Smith, op. 
cit. 230. Ellen was the wife of Sir 
Henry Hoghton, who died in 1479 ; she 
may have augmented an older foundation. 


88 


“well kept and used.’ 


There was no plate, and the 


The altar was probably at the end of 
the north aisle, afterwards known as 
©Wall's chapel.’ 

334 In 1430 the feoffees granted to Ellen 
Young certain property charged with a 
payment of 13s. 4d. a year to God and 
B. Mary of the church of Preston for a 
priest celebrating there for the souls of 
John Young and Maud his wife ; Kuer- 
den MSS. iv, P121, Again in 1456 John 
Inglesle of Preston gave two small rent- 
charges (15. in all) to the wardens (pro- 
curatoribus) of B. Mary the Virgin of the 
church of St. Wilfrid of Preston for the 
souls of himself and Joan his consort ; 
ibid. no. 73. 

In 1470 Margaret widow of Sir Richard 
Hoghton gave burgages on the east side 
of Friargate towards paying the priest 
before St. Mary’s altar ; ibid. no, 37. 

Ralph Hoghton son of Margaret, in 
accordance with her intention, gave a 
charge of 12d. for the priest singing 
‘daily afore our Lady,’ the whole tene- 
ment to be so devoted after his wife's 
death ; ibid. no. 94. 

Another deed attributes the endow- 
ment in part to Richard Whalley, whose 
son William, a chaplain, was to hold cer- 
tain lands for life. After his death they 
were to remain to Henry Hoghton and 
other trustees and to the mayor and bur- 
gesses to maintain a chaplain to celebrate 
daily (or at least thrice a week) before 
the image of the B. V. Mary at her altar 
in Preston Parish Church; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 848. 

The mayor, in defending a suit brought 
by Roger Levens, the chantry priest, about 
1522 stated that this chantry had been 
founded by the corporation about 144° 
for ‘a priest continually to sing and pray 
for the souls of the said persons, and for 
the prosperity and welfare of the mayor 
and burgesses and other inhabitants of 
the town, within the church of Preston; 
and every priest so appointed should keep 
a free school within the said town to 
teach the scholars there’ ; Smith, op. cit 
232 (from Duchy of Lane. Plead. 
Hen. VIII, i, N.D. L6). It appears that 
Levens’ predecessor was named George 
Hale, and had died in 1518. Roger 
Levens was in 1519 admitted to the pot 
session of copyhold lands in Walton--e- 
Dale belonging to this chantry ; Kuerdea 
MSS. iv, P 120, no. $3. 

Again in 1527 the mayor and burgesses 
were returned as patrons of our Lady's 
chantry, of which Henry Coventry 7# 
chaplain, having held the post about four 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


endowment, derived from burgages and lands in 
Preston and Fishwick, was only £3 25. 3d. a year.236 
A school can be traced back to the 14th century.?36 
Its connexion with a chantry threatened its exis- 
tence,”7 but it seems to have been preserved by the 
corporation, and under their care has developed to its 
present standing. 
The principal charities 989 are 
CHARITIES _ those for education,?4° medical 241 and 
religious purposes *4 ; but there are 
in addition a considerable number of smaller benefac- 
tions for the benefit of the poor by gifts of money, 
food, clothing, apprentices’ fees, and other ways. None 
of them appear to be intended for the whole parish ; 
some are restricted to the borough of Preston, and 
‘ others to particular townships or groups.?48 
Catherine Pennington in 1871 left £1,000 for the 
benefit of poor women in the town and neighbour- 
hood of Preston, to be distributed by the wardens of 
Church of England parishes. The total income is 
£29 25. $d., and it is distributed according to the 
founder’s wish.244 Margaret Becconsall in 1872 left 
money to the New Jerusalem Church, one-seventh 


years ; Duchy of Lanc. Rentals, bdle. 5, 
no. 15. Nicholas Banaster was the 


Maria Holland in 1873-7 gave a capi- 


PRESTON 


being for poor members ot the congregation ; 
£7 95. 6d. is distributed accordingly among from five 
to nine persons. William Edmundson in 1735 left 
£50 to buy bread for the prisoners at Lancaster and 
Preston ; half the income, £6 10s. 8¢., is given to 
assist prisoners discharged from Preston Gaol, usually 
by gifts of clothing or travelling expenses. Mary 
Cross in 1889 gave £600, now producing {17 145. 
a year, for the poor of the borough ; the income is 
distributed in small money doles. The benefits of 
the Harris Orphanage in Fulwood are available for 
children whose parents reside within eight miles of 
Preston Town Hall. This includes the whole parish 
of Preston and large parts of the adjacent parishes.?4° 
For the township of Preston several apprenticing 
charities have been absorbed into the grammar school 
endowments,”4° but the combined gifts of Dorothy 
Cosney (1678) 747 and John Dawson (1698) are now 
applicable in part for apprenticing and in part for 
medical relief, nursing, &c.248 Some gifts, amounting 
to £14 145. 4¢., have been combined with the 
mayor’s dole.*49 The almshouses have been pulled 
down,”5° the bread money has ceased,” and some 


primarily for apprenticing, and then 


incumbent in 1535; Valor Eccl. v, 263. 
The revenue was 615. 

235 The chantry lands were in 1556 
granted by Mary to the Savoy Hospital, 
which she revived; Anderton D. (Mr. 
Stonor). 

236 In a disturbance at St. Mary Mag- 
dalene’s Chapel in May 1358 John the 
Clerk of Broughton, master of the schools 
of Preston, was among those incriminated; 
Assize R. 439, m. 2. 

Raines (Chantries, 206) quotes from 
the registers of the Archdeacon of Rich- 
mond the appointment of Richard Mar- 
shall in 1399 to the grammar schools at 
Preston. Marshall was enrolled as a 
burgess in 1415 5 Preston Guild R. 9. 

287 The story is given in Fishwick’s 
Preston, 204-12. 

Peter Carter, the schoolmaster who 
died in 1590, was author of Annotations 
on Seton’s Logic ; see Dict. Nat. Biog. 

338 See article on ‘Schools,’ V.C.H. 
Lancs. ii, 569, and End. Char. Rep. Pres- 
ton, 1905. 

289 An official inquiry was made in 
Oct. 1904, and the report, published in 
1905, includes a reprint of that of 1824. 
Some earlier charities are recorded by 
Bishop Gastrell, Notitia, ii, 465. 

240 The Grammar School, Blue School, 
and Harris Institute and Free Library 
are the principal of these. 

241 The Royal Infirmary has an endow- 
ment of £2,148 a year; the Industrial 
Institute for the Blind has about £300. 
Mary Cross’s gift for poor deaf and dumb 
children, founded in 1899, produces an 
income of £31. 

242 The Blue School, founded by Roger 
Sudell in 1702 in a cottage in Minspit 
Weind, off Fishergate, is now absorbed 
in the schools attached to the parish 
church. The founder desired the vicar 
‘to appoint a sober and religious person 
for a catechist, of the communion of the 
Church of England, to catechize and 
teach in the said school the poorest chil- 
dren of Preston and of the parish of 
Preston, gratis, the true fear and worship 
of God, and to teach them to read Eng- 
lish, that they might be better enabled to 
attain to holiness’ 


7 


tal fund of nearly £20,000 to found St. 
Joseph’s Orphanage for destitute female 
children and for other charitable pur- 
poses, of which £1,106 was devoted to 
an institution for the sick poor, providing 
an endowment of £38 1335. 4d. 

There are various smaller endowments 
for religious purposes. 

248 The details here given are taken 
from the report of 1905. 

244 A smaller gift of the same kind 
was made by William Cooton in 1876, 
by which £40 came to the poor of St. 
Saviour’s, Preston. The interest (28s.) 
is distributed by the vicar in small doles 
of money and provisions. 

45 End. Char. Rep. Lanc. 1902. 

246 George Rogerson in 1619 charged 
his lands in Broughton with £13 a year, 
payable £9 to the mayor of Preston for 
apprenticing and £4 to the mayor of Lan- 
caster for the prisoners there. Henry 
Banister in 1625 left sums including £200 
towards the apprenticing of poor children 
of Preston ; this is now represented by the 
moiety of a rent-charge of £16. Thomas 
Winckley in 1710 left £50 for appren- 
ticing. Henry Rishton and Eleanor his 
wife in 1738 gave £300 for the poor, of 
which half the interest was for appren- 
ticing poor children. These sums with 
various accumulations are intact ; but, as 
applications for apprentice fees ceased, no 
grants having been made since 1855, the 
gross income (about £55) is applied to 
scholarships at the grammar school. 

247 Her main gift was £100 for 
“twelve pious men or widows,’ but she 
added £6, the interest whereof was to be 
spent in entertaining the trustees at the 
‘Hind’ or elsewhere. The Hind Inn 
is mentioned by John Taylor the ‘Water 
Poet’ in 1618. 

8 His gift was £100 for the poor and 
for apprenticing in alternate years. 

The combined charity, represented by 
a rent-charge of £10 10s. on the ¢ Three 
Legs of Man’ in Preston, with accumula- 
tions of £289, is administered under a 
scheme of the Charity Commissioners 
made in 1904. The gross income is 
£18 12s. 4d., of which £8 is for 
nursing, subscriptions to dispensaries, 
supply of clothes, &c., and the residue 


89 


(should there be any balance) for outfit on 
entering a trade, or on passage money or 
outfit of emigrants. 

249 Henrietta Rigby in 1741 left £100 
to the vicar and the mayor for the benefit 
of six poor widows, housekeepers in 
Preston. The capital is held by the 
corporation ; £2 a year is distributed by 
the mayor to three poor widows, and £2 
likewise by the vicar. 

William Rishton in 1729 left £100 to 
the mayor and aldermen, the interest to 
be given to the poor at Christmas. This 
is preserved, the mayor distributing £4 
in doles of 1s. each. 

Thomas Hogkinson in 1697 be- 
queathed £0 for the poor, and in respect 
of it £2 is distributed by the mayor at 
Christmas in doles of 1s. to 2s. 6d. 

Elizabeth Parker in 1757, acting 
according to the desire of her father 
Joseph Chorley, gave a rent-charge of £4 
on land at Claughton (as the interest of 
£100), half to go to the poor of Preston. 
This £2 is now distributed by the mayor 
in gifts of 2s. 6d. each. 

A moiety of the gift of Henry and 
Eleanor Rishton, already named, has 
recently been administered by the mayor ; 
but this appears to be an irregularity. 
The amount is £4 145. 4d. 

250 Bartholomew Worthington, a bene- 
factor of the grammar school, in 1663 
directed his wife to build a small alms- 
house on the waste near Fishergate bars. 
It was built, but there was no endowment, 
and, on its falling into decay, the materials 
were sold, and the money, with an 
addition, applied to build an almshouse 
atthe east end of the town. Here there 
had been a range of almshouses, of un- 
known origin, managed by the corpora- 
tion, which in 1790 were replaced by six 
houses, Worthington’s being a seventh. 
The corporation nominated the inmates. 
There were three other almshouses occu- 
pied by poor persons put in by the mayor. 
The almshouses were sold in 1835, the 
corporation being under no known obli- 
gation to maintain them. 

251 Tt was a sum of 30s. a year paid 
out of the Blue Coat charity fund for 
bread for the poor on Sacrament days 
It ceased about 1812. 


12 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


charities have been lost. There remain, however, 
a number of others, so that over £30 a year is given 
in money doles,”3 the gifts of bread having ceased. 

The township of Barton has a poor’s stock of 
unknown origin, represented by £78 55. 8d. consols. 
The interest, 39s., is divided between poor persons in 
the township. In 1904 there were only two, both 
imbeciles. Miss Mary Cross of Myerscough in 1889 
gave {200 for the poor, and the income is divided 
as the preceding charity. 

William Daniel of Broughton in 1656 gave land 
there to trustees, charging it with 20s. for the main- 
tenance of a grammar school in the township, or in 
default for the repair of the church and church 
bridges. His widow added £20, and the trustees 
were able to purchase the land for the poor. In 
1734, after the payment of 20s. as directed, the rent 
was applicable to the purchase of white kersey for 
coats for the poor,2*4 for binding apprentices, buying 
Bibles or other orthodox books, a preference being 
had to widows, householders and dwellers in Broughton 
Row. The charity is still known as the Petticoat 
Charity, though for a long time only money has been 
given. The land now produces {17 a year gross ; 
£1 is paid to the school, and the rest in sums from 
5s. to £4 among the aged poor of Broughton, being 
Protestants. The fourth part of Thomas Houghton’s 
charity, already described, is distributed in sums of 
money varying from 2s. 6d. to 25s. A small rent of 
1s. 6d. from Almond’s Croft has been lost, the place 
not being known now. Miss Damaris Dixon in 1895 
bequeathed {£1,000 for the benefice of Broughton, 
£1,000 for the benefit of the poor, and £50 for the 
repair of her grave in the churchyard there. The money 
for the poor, producing £30 a year, is given to the 
sick, partly in money, partly by paying doctors’ bills. 

The township of Grimsargh has a share in that 
fourth part of Thomas Houghton’s charity which is 
due to Preston. By custom a third of the Preston 
share is given, and the money, 26s. 8¢. in 1903, is 
distributed on St. Thomas’s Day in money doles. 
John Charnley in 1737 charged his land at Pen- 
wortham with various sums, including 20s. yearly for 
the poor of Grimsargh. In 1824 the land > was 
owned by the representatives of one Henry Dawson, 


who died in 1823, and the money was distributed by 
the constable of the township to poor housekeepers. 
The payment was discontinued in 1881, no reason 
being assigned. A charge of £3 15s. a year for the 
use of the poor of Brockholes existed as early as 1650. 
The lands charged, known as the Boylton estate, 
were purchased by William Cross in 1808. The 
charge has been commuted and the capital is repre- 
sented by £125 6s. consols, now yielding £3 25. 8d. 
a year. This is allowed to accumulate, as there are 
no poor persons in the hamlet. 

The townships of Elston and Ribbleton benefit 
equally by the charity founded by John Farington in 
1670. He gave his tenement in Elston to bind 
children apprentices or to benefit the poor in other 
ways. As early as 1824 there were no cottagers in 
Elston, all the poor belonging to it residing elsewhere, 
and from two to eight persons sharing the interest. 
At Ribbleton the rents of a number of poor persons 
were paid and other help given. At the present time 
the land gives a rent of £78, and accumulations of 
over £10,000 are invested in consols. Of the total 
income, £145 175. 4d. is spent on education, and 
£193 8s. §d. is applicable for the benefit of the poor 
in various ways in accordance with an order of the 
Charity Commissioners in 1890.76 For Elston the 
charity is scarcely required ; for Ribbleton there is 
more demand, chiefly for gifts of clothes, food, fuel, 
and aid in sickness. Elston by itself receives a third 
part of the fourth share of Thomas Houghton’s 
charity appropriated to Elston and Alston; the 
£1 65. 8d. received in 1903 was given to Grimsargh. 
Ribbleton by itself had two charities : the Luck Field 
in Bruckholes and a rent-charge of {£5 10s. out of an 
estate in Elston known as Willacy’s Tenement. The 
former,?°7 augmented by a share of Ribbleto: Moor, 
on inclosure in 1870, was sold in 1873 and the price 
(£345) invested in consols, and, as no distribution 
was made, the capital increased to £608 by 1892, 
when a scheme was made similar to that for the 
Farington gift. Theincome is £19 35. 4d., but only 
a small part is used. The rent-charge, commuted, 
with accumulations was in 1869 invested in £307 
consols, and the income, ‘not being required in the 
township,’ continued to accumulate; but in recent 


352 These included £20 given by Seth 
Bushell, whose memorial brass has been 
mentioned, and other sums amounting to 
about £290, with rent-charges of gos. 
All had been ‘lost’ before 1824. It is 
possible that they had been used to build 
the above-mentioned almshouses and to 
found ‘Brown’s Charity.’ The bene- 
factions were for the poor, for distribu- 
tions of bread, and ‘for buying Bibles 
and Testaments for the poorer sort of 
boys who should be taught at the grammar 
school.’ 

258 Thomas Addison in 1729 charged 
land called Davil Meadows, near Preston 
Marsh, with a rent of £5 for twenty poor 
housekeepers. About 1820 the land be- 
longed to John Grimshaw, and in 1904 to 
T. Coulthard and Co. The rent-charge 
is still paid. Thomas Houghton in 1649 
gave land in Woodplumpton, now known 
as Houghton House Farm, for the poor of 
various townships ; the gross rent paid is 
£67, the share of Preston being about 
£2 135. 4d. Mrs, Smith in 1710 gave 
£io to found a bread charity, and the 
money was (with other funds) invested 


in land in Whittingham ; the share of 
the income due to the Smith charity is 
£2 45.4d. These three charities are ad- 
ministered together. Till recently bread 
or tickets for bread were given on St. 
Thomas's Day to poor persons, members 
of the Church of England ; but money is 
now given instead, 

What is known as Brown’s charity is 
the result of various gifts of ancient and 
unknown origin, represented by a share 
(now £5) of the rent of land in Kirkham, 
distributed by the vicar of Preston in 
Christmas doles of 2s. 6d. each to poor 
widows. 

Thomas Crooke in 1688 charged lands 
called Shaw, in Alston, with various 
sums, including £4 for the poor of 
Preston, to be distributed on Shrove 
Tuesday. Richard Hoghton in 1613 
gave land called Woodcrook in Whitting- 
ham for charities, including 15s. payable 
every Good Friday at the font stone 
within the parish church of Preston. 
The whole rent of this land is given, and 
one fourth is paid to Preston. The 
amount, £2 19s. 114., is distributed with 


go 


Crooke’s, to poor persons belonging to 
the Church of England, in money doles. 

Anne Oliver in 1825 bequeathed £300 
for the benefit of the poor, to be dis- 
tributed by the incumbent of St. George's. 
The income is now £6 155. 8d., and is 
distributed by the vicar, partly at Christ- 
mas time and partly during the year, in 
money doles. : 

Anne widow of Nicholas Winckley in 
1779 gave £100 for the benefit of poor 
widows. The interest, £2 125. 4d. is 
divided equally among poor widows of 
the ecclesiastical parishes of St. Saviour, 
Holy Trinity and St. Matthew. 

254 The trustees were to have ‘a paf- 
ticular respect to those who should be 
most sober, honest and industrious, and 
frequenters of the Protestant churches.’ 

255 Tt is called Crabby Nook. 

256 The money may be applied in sub- 
scriptions to hospitals, &c. provident 
societies, paying nurses, or providing cost 
of outfit, emigrants’ passage-money, 
clothes, tools, é&c.. money gifts, or 19 
other ways. 

257 The origin of it is unknown. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


years small weekly gifts of groceries, &c., in the 
nature of pensions have been given. The capital is 
now £618, producing about {14 65. a year. 

Edmund Robert Harris of Ashton in 1876 left 
£500 to provide a fund for gifts of clothing, bedding, 
&c., to the poor of Ashton, Lea, Ingol and Cottam 
on St. Thomas’s Day yearly. The income is £15, 
which is now usually given in money doles. 


PRESTON 


Prestune, Dom. Bk. ; Preston, 1169; Prestone, 
1292. 

Appel from the south, Preston, in spite of 
its factory chimneys, has a pleasing appearance, as 
across the broad stream of the Ribble, which forms 
the foreground, two well-planted public parks occupy 
the ascending bank at the other side. The town 
hall, which has a lofty clock-tower,' is about half a 
mile north of the river, and from it the principal 
thoroughfare of the town, the wide street called 
Fishergate, goes west to the railway station, and then 
turning to the south-west descends to the river- 
side,” and bending south* along the Ribble reaches 
Penwortham Bridge. The continuation of Fishergate 
east from the town hall is called Church Street,* the 
parish church standing on its south side ; after a short 
time it divides into three main branches—to the 
south-east and south as Stanley Street® and London 
Road, crossing Fishwick to reach Ribble Bridge, the 
main road southward; to the east, as Ribbleton 
Lane, to Ribchester ; and to the north as Deepdale 
Road, in which stands the Infirmary. East from 
Stanley Street begins New Hall Lane, which goes 
past the cemetery and is continued as the Blackburn 
Road. On the north side of the town hall is the 
open market place, around which may be seen the 
Harris Free Library, the new sessions house,® com- 
pleted in 1903, and the post-office, opened in the 
same year.’ An obelisk in the square commemorates 
the local men who fell in the Boer War. From this 
square Friargate leads north-west for about a quarter 
of a mile, when it divides ; Moor Lane leads north, 
past Moor Park and then across Fulwood to Garstang 
and Lancaster, while the Fylde road goes west to 
Kirkham. From Fishergate Lune Street goes north 


PRESTON 


to Friargate, and from Church Street Lancaster Road 
and North Road run north to join Moor Lane. On 
the south side of Fishergate Chapel Street, passing 
Winckley Square, goes down to the two parks by 
the Ribble, already mentioned, Avenham Park and 
Miller Park. In Winckley Square there is a statue 
of Sir Robert Peel, erected in 1852, and in Miller 
Park one of the fourteenth Earl of Derby, 1873. 
In Avenham Park are two of the Russian guns 
captured in the Crimea. Cross Street, in which is 
the grammar school, begins on the east side of 
Winckley Square ; while lower down Avenham Lane, 
an old thoroughfare, leads circuitously from the park, 
by Stonygate, to the parish church. 

The whole township, which has an area of 2,127 
acres,° is covered with a network of streets of dwelling- 
houses and shops, among which rise the numerous 
great cotton-spinning factories and other works which 
produce the town’s wealth. ‘There was a population 
of 101,297 in 1901.2 

The different railways had formerly separate termini, 
but now all are made to meet at the large station 
in Fishergate. The London and North-Western 
Company’s main line to Scotland is formed of the 
Wigan and Preston Railway, opened in 1838,” and 
the Preston and Lancaster Railway, 1840.7 ‘The 
Lancashire and Yorkshire Company’s system has 
amalgamated the lines joining Preston with Black- 
burn,” Bolton, Liverpool and Southport." The two 
companies together hold the Wyre Railway and the 
Preston and Longridge line, which latter has a station 
in Deepdale Road, its original terminus in 1840. 
The Lancaster Canal, first formed in 1798, begins 
on the north side of Fishergate, near the railway. 

The railways have three bridges across the Ribble ; 
there is only one bridge for ordinary traffic, that to 
Penwortham, and another for foot passengers, viz. 
the old tramway bridge at Avenham Park.’ 

Fairs are held annually in the first week of each 
year for horses, on 27 March, 25 August and 
7 November for cattle and earthenware, and on the 
last Friday of March, June and November for cheese. 

Though the town has a pleasant aspect and a long 
history, its buildings are all modern. ‘The ancient 
crosses and wells have gone.’® In addition to public 
buildings there are banks,” clubs’® and theatres. 


1The building was designed by Sir 
G. G. Scott. The spire is 150 ft. high. 

2 Here it is called Fishergate Hill. 

3 Here called Broadgate. 

4 Anciently Kirkgate. 

5 Formerly Finkale Street. 

®It has a tower 179 ft. high, The 
county records are preserved in this build- 
ing, having been collected from different 
repositories. The borough sessions house 
is near. 

7 For the development of the local 
post office see Hewitson, Preston, 336-41. 

8 The area of the county borough, ac- 
cording to the Census Report of 1901, is 
3,971 acres. It is that of the old town- 
ship, together with the whole of Fish- 
wick, large parts of Ashton and Ribble- 
ton, and bits of Grimsargh and Pen- 
wortham ; these were all united into one 
township or civil parish in 18943; Loc. 
Govt. Bd. Order 31607. The 3,971 
acres include 79 of inland water; there 
are besides 85 acres of tidal water and 
14 of foreshore. 

9 The population of the larger area of 
the county borough was 112,989. 


10 The station was on the site of the 
existing one. These details are derived 
chiefly from A. Hewitson, op. cit. 199, 
&e. 

11 The station was on the north side 
of Fishergate, but was soon afterwards 
connected with the station on the south 
side, the line being thus made con- 
tinuous, 

12 The Blackburn terminus occupies 
its original position. 

18 The Southport (West Lancashire) 
line had its terminus in Fishergate Hill. 
14 The terminus was in Maudlands. 

16 Foot passengers can also cross the 
Ribble by the East Lancashire railway 
bridge, that to Blackburn, by a side walk. 
This bridge had fifty-seven arches in all, 
mostly south of the river, but nearly all 
have now been covered by an embank- 
ment. 

16 St, Stephen’s cross is named in un- 
dated deeds ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 1486, 
1543, fol. 308, &c. Fishwick cross, 
probably on the boundary, is named in 
1339 (ibid. no. 1614) and the Butter 
cross # 15623 ibid. no. 847. See also 


gl 


Lanes. and Ches. Antig. Soc. xx, 156-62. 
The crosses known were the high cross 
in the market-place, afterwards replaced 
by an obelisk ; a butter cross in Cheap- 
side ; a cross near New Street and another 
in Friargate, and one on the Moor. Our 
Lady’s Well was near the Friary. The 
butter cross was taken down in 1739 by 
order of the corporation, and the 
materials used to repair the market- 
place, as appears by the records. . 

7 The Old Bank was opened in 1776 ; 
for a long time the Pedder family were 
chief proprietors. It failed in 1861. 
See Hewitson, op. cit. 238, where is 
given a view of the house (c. 1690) in 
which business was done. 

The Preston Banking Company, 
founded in 1844, had its head office in 
Fishergate. It has been absorbed by the 
London City and Midland Bank. Four 
other banks have branch offices, 

The Savings Bank was opened in 1816. 

18 These include the Conservative Club, 
the Reform Club and the Winckley Club. 
In 1824 there were two news-rooms, one 
in the coffee-house in Church Street and 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


The carlicst theatre of which there is any record was 
near lishergate, and described as ‘old’ in 1762. 
The present Theatre Rvyal in Fishergate was built 
in 1802 and the Gaiety or Prince’s Theatre in 
Tithebarn Street in 1882.8 The old sports of cock- 
fighting, bull-baiting, &c., have been suppressed.” 
The old-time punishments of cuckstool, pillory and 
stocks have likewise ceased." Archery used to be 
practised on the Spital Moss.” 

For more than a century the cotton manufacture 
has been the staple industry of Preston. There are, 
however, a number of minor ones: breweries, iron 
and brass foundries and engineering works, soap 
manufactories, and others, including one of the few 
in England of gold and silver laces and embroideries. 

The total abstinence movement found zealous 
propagation in Preston, which is popularly known 
as ‘the birthplace of Teetotalism ’—of the word at 
least.¥ 

The history of the manor of PRESTON 
is bound up with that of the hundred, 
of which it was the head.”* Its ancient 
axvessment was six plough-lands. The lords of 
Amounderness and subsequently the lords of the 
honour of Lanca-ter were lurds of Preston also,”® and 
though the manor seems once or twice to have been 
granted out,” the gift had no permanent reult. The 
kiny, therefore, as Duke of Lancaster, became lord of 


MANOR 


the manor of Preston, but the corporation, by obtain- 
ing a grant of the feudal dues at a fixed rent, became 
immediate lords of the manor, which lordship was 
finally secured by their purchase of the rent in 
1676. 

An extent of the manor made in 1244 showed 
that if the town had remained in the king’s hands it 
would have yielded over £20 a year”; while 
another extent a century later showed that in addition 
to the fee-farm rent of £15 paid by the community, 
the Earl of Lancaster received only 51s. 2d. a vear, 
derived, it would appear, from tenements which had 
escheated to him and been granted out again.” 

The borough may have been created 

BOROUGH by Roger of Poitou,” and there is an 
allegation that Henry I granted a 

charter in 1100," but this is probably an error. The 
first extant charter is one granted in or about 1179 
by Henry II conceding to ‘his burgesses of Preston’ 
—the borough therefore already existing—all the 
liberties and free customs of Newcastle-under-Lymc, 
saving the king’s right of administering justice.* 
John in 1199 confirmed both his father’s charter 
and one he had himself granted while Count of 
Mortain, adding the whole toll of the wapentake, 
and a free fair on 15 August lasting for a week ; also 
the right of pasture in Fulwood and liberty to take 
wood for building on view of the forester.” Henry III 


the other adjoining the Town Hall; the 
two, it was then said, connoted ‘ ancient 
and modern Preston ; the coffee room is 
the resort of the gentry and men of 
leveare, apd the Guildhall room affords 
its more am. i¢ accommo jation to com- 
mercial gentlemen and tradesmen’; 
Baines, Lanci. Dir. ii, 499. 

19 Hew.tson, op. cit. 354 

™ Ibid. 118. A view of the cock-pit 
is given; it was near the south-west 
corner of the parish church. 

Horse-races were run on Preston Mor 
from 1726 to I-gI. 

For a Corpus Christi play about 1620 
eee Lares, and Ches. Alnng. Notes, ii, 27. 
The Easter-egg rolling in 1882 is spoken 
of in Pal. Note-bk. ii, 108. 

31 The pillory was jist used at Preston 
in 1814.3 Hewitson, Preston, 126. The 
stocks, in the churchyar!, were in use 
till 1825 5 ibid. Cr. Leer Rec. 68. 

7) Hewitson, Preitn, 126. 

5 Ibid. 226-30; a facsimile of the 
first pledsc, 1 Sept. 1832, is given, with 
the <iznatures of the ‘scven men of 
Preston,’ including that of Joseph Livesey, 
the best known of them. 

34 See the account of Amounderness. 

% Thus in 1292 Edmund, brother 
of the kinz, proved that he was lord of 
the manor, Plac. de Quo H'a--. (Rec. 
Com.), 388. In 1361 Preston was 
amonz the manors of Blanche diuzhter 
of Henry Duke of Lancaster; Fire 
R. 162, m., t*. 

36 Soon after the Consuest the manor 
was granted to Warine Bussel, who held 
it for a time; Lancs. Inj. and Extents 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.’, i, 35. 

Again in 1254-5 the manor of Preston, 
probably in Amounderness, was given by 
Prince Eiward to Master Richard the 
Physician ; Pat. 49 Hen. III, m. 82. 

In 1400 the king granted 10 marks a 
year for iife out of the profits of the vill 
of Preston ; Duchy of Lanc, Misc, Bks. 
xv, fol. 21. 

@ Lancs. Ing. and Exter:s, i, 158-9 ; 


tse lands to the ploughing of feur ploughs 
would yield £6, the fisheries the same, 
the markets £3 and the mills £2, 
toli and stallages the same, perquisites 
of pleas 135. 4d.. meadows and pastures 
the same; escheats in the king's hands 
projuced 65, 8., 

To various tallages Prestn paid as 
follows: 1176 7, aid, £16 101.3 1205, 
tallage, £10 gs. 1213-15, picis of the 
forest, £2 61, 8d. 3; 1226, {10 08. G45 
P248-9, L125 1261, {20 13s doy 
Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 35, 202, 2513 
Lancs, Inp. and Extents, i, 135, &e. 

As implied at-ve, eschested lands were 
the king's, From a house escheated 2s. 
was accounted for in 1184-55 Furrer, 
op. cit. $4. In 1201-2 Alexander de 
Preston recovered a toft of which Roger 
de Leicester had disscisc i him ; ibid, 132. 
Again in 1226 the farm of a house which 
had been Harvey's (hanged) amounted to 
gu B45 Lacs. Ing. and Extents, i, 138. 
In 1256 8 escheats in Preston produced 
21s. gd. during eighteen months ; ibid. 
i, 222, These were in part held by 
Richard le Boteler, who paid 71. 6d. a 
year in 1258-62; ibid. 230. 

3 Add. MS. 32103, fol. 1473 of 1346. 
For escheats William Chapman paid 
5s. 6d. (an increase of 15. 6d.) and John 
de Ashton 1os., in addition to 12d. to the 
earl (part of the £15 fee-farm rent) and 
gi. to the Prior of Lytham. This latter 
tenement had belonged to Adam Buk- 
monger, for whom see Final Conc. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.,, ii, 15. 

The free tenants were: Nicholas de 
Preston, holding 1 acre for which he paid 
12d.; John Marshal and John Bennet, 
in right of their wives—Ellen and 
Christiana, daughters of Richard Marshal 
—each paying 2s. 6d. for half a burgage ; 
Robert son of Henry Maggeson, a bur- 
gage (once burnt by the Scots), 45.; 
N cholas son of Henry Wiiliamson, four 
plots of land, by Court Roil, 4s. 8d. 5 
Thomas de Y«mb’erjzh, a messuage 
lately belonging to Roger son of John de 


92 


Wich, $s. 3; Henry Chapman, a messuage, 
tos. ; Albred son of Robert and Alice his 
wife, a toft for life, 25.3 an acre in the 
hands of the friars (held in alms) had 
formerly paid 45.3 it was used for the 
channel conveying the water to their 
house. 

2 This was the opinion of Miss Bate- 
son, who discussed the Custumal of the 
town in Engl, Hist, Rev. xv, 496-512. 

89 Sir Thomas Walmesley about 1600 
certified that he had seen a charter to the 
burgesses so dated; Abram, Memorials 
of Preston Guilds, 1. The charter of 
Henry IL may have been dated by him 
conjecturally 1° Ifen., for if there was an 
carlier one extant it seems unaccountable 
that it was not named or included in the 
confirmations of the charter of Henry II 
by successive kings. 

51 Tbid. 2, 3. ‘The charter was given at 
Winchester, where the king spent the 
Christmas of 1179. The year is not 
named in the deed itsclf, but gathered 
from the place and from the names of the 
witnesses, 

In the Pipe Rolls of 1179-82 it is 
recorded that the men of Preston pave 
100 marks for the charter; Farrer, Lancs. 
Pipe R. 42, 46. Tire customs of New- 
castle at that date are not known. 

52 Abram, op. cit. 3; Cal. Rot. Chart. 
(Rec. Com.), 26. From the wording of 
the confirmation it may be gathered that 
the additions of the fair, pasturage, &c., 
had been made by John when Count of 
Mortain, 1189-94. The charter is dated 
at Le Mans, 18 Oct. 1199. 

The burgesses paid 60 marks and four 
chaseurs for the grant; Farrer, op. cit. 116. 
There was a dispute in 1z01 as to the 
right of gaol ; ibid. 130, 136. 

The fairs are mentioned in a charter 
of a few years later by which W:i-iam de 
Millom and Avice his wife (see Lancs. 
Ing. and Extents, i, 40) gave to Henry son 
of William son of Swain the fourth part 
of two burzazes (in Preston), formerly 
tenanted by Norasius and Aldwin, with 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


confirmed all in 1227.5 Edward III in 1328 con- 
firmed the foregoing acts of his progenitors, adding 
liberty of a weekly market on Wednesday and an 
annual fair of five days, 27 to 31 October.* This 
charter was granted five months after the holding of 
the first recorded guild merchant, at which it was 
expressly stated that ‘the king gives the freedom to 
the burgesses which are in the guild and to none 
other.’ ** The guild is not named in any of the 
charters, but may be implied in the ‘customs of 
Newcastle,’ which town certainly had a guild in 
the time of Henry JII.%8 he charters here de- 
scribed are known by their recital in later confir- 
mations; only one, that of 1199, is preserved at 
Preston. 

In 1292 the borough was called upon to show its 
authority for the rights of lordship exercised, and the 
bailiffs and community replied that their liberties 
and fair were granted by charter, except gallows and 
infangenthef, which were derived from ancient 
custom, this latter being also the origin of their 


PRESTON 


weekly market.” The town had a moiety of the 
Ribble fihery.® 

The Custumal of Preston in its present form may 
date from the charter of 1328," but had probably 
originated long before and been augmented from 
different sources? The need of such a document 
had been shown by the proceedings of 1292. ‘The 
first clauses, beginning ‘Ita quod,’ without an intro- 
ductory phrase, establish the guild merchant with 
exclusive rights of trading, except at the burgesses’ 
will. It appears that anyone“! could become a 
burgess if he liked; all that was necessary was for 
him to pay 12d. to the ‘prefect’ and then the 
‘pretors’ would assign him a burgage plot, which 
must have a frontage of 12 ft. at least, and on which, 
should there be no dwelling, he must build one 
within forty days.” Various clauses regulate the 
procedure in market and court“; a burgess was 
expected to attend three port-motes in the year, and 
must attend each great port-mote.“* ‘The fines, except 
in one or two cases, were not to exceed 124.“ ; trial 


all appurtenances, white gloves being 
payable at Preston fairs; Lytham D. at 
Durham, 3 a, 2 ae, 4. ae, Ebor. no. 3. The 
grantee was rector of Whittington, and 
his son Henry gave the tenement to 
Lytham Priory ; ibid. no. 2. 

38 Abram, op. cit. ; dated Westminster, 
16 Mar. 1226-7. 

The same king at Windsor, 29 Oct. 
1252, allowed that an appropriation of 
324 acres which the burgesses had made 
under Fulwood belonged to the borough 
and not to the king’s wood. The boun- 
dary reached to Eves Brook from Ribble- 
ton Scales to the point where the brook 
fell into the Savock, and then along the 
Savock to the old dyke which formed the 
boundary between Preston and Tulketh. 
Thus the land seems to have been what 
was later known as Preston Moor. The 
burgesses had liberty to cultivate the land 
as they pleased, up to within 40 perches 
of the cover of Fulwood, and their old 
rights of turbary outside and of fencing 
wood within Fulwood were admitted ; 
Cal. Chart. R. 1226-57, p. 406. 

In 12274 five years’ grant of dead wood 
from Fulwood for burning had been made 
to the men of Preston ; Cal. Pat. 1225-32, 
p- 112. 

84 Abram, op. cit. 4; dated Westmin- 
ster, 27 Nov. 1328. Four charters were 
produced—those of Henry II, John, and 
Henry III (2). The inspeximus is re- 
corded in Chart. R. 2 Edw. III, m. 1, 
no. 6. 

35 Abram, op. cit. 8. The first clause 
of the Custumal seems to be referred to— 
‘That they [the burgesses] may have a 
guild merchant with hanse and other 
customs and liberties appertaining to that 
guild,’ 

86 The charter, dated 18 Sept. 1235, is 
printed in Farrer, op. cit. 414. It may 
have been merely a confirmation of the 
liberties referred to in the charter granted 
by Henry II to Preston. It allowed a 
guild merchant with all its liberties ; the 
burgesses might pass through the king’s 
dominions, trading freely, and quit of 
toll, passage, pontage, ulnage, &c., and 
themselves have in their borough soc and 
sac, toll, infangenthef, and other jurisdic- 
tions. Similar liberties for Preston are 
recorded in clause 4 of the Custumal. 

In 1551 two inhabitants of Preston 
complained that they had been compelled 


to pay tolls at sundry places in Yorkshire. 
For Pontefract it was alleged that the 
tight to charge dues was earlier than the 
exemption claimed; Duchy of Lane. 
Plead. Edw. VI, xxviii, B 2. 

37 Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 385. 
The charter they alleged was that of King 
John (1199), still extant. They paid £15 
a year to the king for their liberties. The 
weekly market, nominally held on Wed- 
nesday, was actually on Saturday. As the 
charter did not specify the liberties, and 
as the burgesses were not able to prove 
the customs of Newcastle, the town lost 
its cause for the moment. The ‘ gallows’ 
does not reappear. 

88 Ibid. 387. The lord of Penwortham 
had the other moiety. 

89 The Custumal is printed in Engl. 
Hist. Rev. xv, 496-500, with a commen- 
tary by Miss Mary Bateson, who divided 
the document into forty-eight paragraphs. 
She considers that the phrase at the end, 
de lege Bretonica, refers to the laws of 
Breteuil, on which the statutes of a 
number of early English boroughs were 
founded ; ibid. 73, 302—see especially 
p- 318, where the phrase /ex Britannie 
occurs. A reduced facsimile of the Cus- 
tumal is given in Fishwick’s Preston, 16. 

The date is inferred from the heading 
which Randle Holme prefixes to his 
transcript—‘ Libertates Gilde Mercatorie 
confirmate per Edwardum Regem.’ 

40 Miss Bateson considers that the first 
four paragraphs have come from a royal 
charter, and that clause 36 was at one 
time the ending. Clause 47 is a sentence 
from 32, and 35 seems to be included 
in 4. 

41 Even a ‘native’ who obtained ad- 
mission to the guild and remained a year 
and a day undisturbed became absolutely 
free ; clause 3. 

In the phrases ‘burgensis de curia’ 
(no. 18, 20, 22) and ‘burgensis de villa’ 
(no. 32) Miss Bateson sees an opposition, 
as if the distinction between out and in- 
burgesses had already been fixed. The 
‘burgensis de curia’ of no. 20 may be an 
error for ‘pretor de curia.’ 

42 Clauses 5, 6, 16. A curious pro- 
vision was that 1d. was to be paid to the 
pretor’s servant for his testimony to the 
fact of entry. A disputed title was 
settled by the oath of the tenant’s ‘ prepo- 
situs’ and two neighbours at least, 


93 


affirming that he had held it a year and a 
day ; no. 7. 

A burgess might sell his burgage, but 
the next of kin had a right of pre-emp- 
tion. If he had only one burgage he 
must on selling pay 4d. for liberty to go ; 
no. 30. 

Nothing is said of an annual rent to 
be paid for the burgage, but this was 
probably 12d. In an undated charter 
William de Euxton granted a burgage in 
Preston to Richard the Smith, a rent of 
12d. being payable to the lord of the fee ; 
Towneley MS. OO, no, 1099. 

No plot of land is named in the Cus- 
tumal as appurtenant to a burgage, but 
from charters and inquisitions it may be 
inferred that some land was normally 
held with a burgage. 

In later times it was customary for a 
burgess to pay 7d. on ‘renewing his free- 
dom’ at each guild celebration ; Abram, 
op. cit. 65 (quoting Kuerden). 

43 Among other by-laws it was ordained 
that if a burgess bought anything and gave 
an earnest or instalment the seller might 
rescind the bargain on repaying double the 
earnest ; but should the purchaser have 
handled his purchase he might either 
retain it or accept §s. from the seller 
instead ; Custumal, no. 12. A stranger 
might not share in any bargain with one 
of the burgesses ; no. 29. 

44 One rule was that if anyone were 
taken and convicted for robbery or breach 
of trust (infdelitas) the prosecutor should 
*do justice’ on him; no. 19. 

45 Clause 10. A burgess was not to 
be compelled to go with his lord on a 
military expedition unless he could return 
home the same day ; no. 43. 

46 Clause 9. If one burgess wounded 
another and they desired to agree their 
friends might impose a penalty of 4d. for 
each thumb-length of wound in a covered 
part of the body and 8d. for each in an 
open place. The assailant must also 
make good any money loss due to the 
wound and pay the doctor; no. 21. The 
final clause of the by-law seems to mean 
that the wounded man should swear upon 
his arms that he had been wounded and 
was willing to accept the composition 
agreed upon. If a burgess should be fined 
124d. three times for breach of the assize of 
bread and ale, the fourth time he should 
pay a heavier fine, or else go to the cuck- 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


by battle, fire or water was allowed.” The burgesses 
could marry their daughters as they chose,*’ and were 
free in the matter of milling and malting“ ; they 
had right to common of pasture and to expenses 
when travelling on the town’s business.*! 

The titles of prefectus (or prepositus) and pretor for 
the chief officers are noteworthy, for the terms ‘mayor’ 
and ‘bailiff’ were already in use in the time of 
Edward II. ‘The community held the town of the 
king in fee farm,* and one clause of the Custumal 
ordains that the ‘pretor’ of the court should collect 
the king’s farm at the four terms, and if a burgess 
did not pay at the second demand the door of his 
house was to be taken off and might not be replaced 
till due payment had been made.“ The reeve had 
to account in the farm rent for the goods of a man 


who had been found carrying bad money.” The 
town court was the king’s court, and the common 
fund seems to have been called the king’s purse.” 

In 1314 began a series of grants of pavage to the 
mayor and town of Preston for the improvement of 
the ways. The charter was confirmed from time 
to time,®? but no change of importance was made till 
1566, when Elizabeth, confirming the previous 
charters, decreed that the mayor and bailiffs should 
be assisted in the government of the town by ‘ twenty- 
four men of the more discreet and worthy men’ of 
the borough, who should be called the capital 
burgesses and form the Common Council, meeting in 
the Tollbooth or Moot Hall. The mayor for the time 
being was to be the justiciary, coroner and clerk of 
the market.” 


stool (ad cukestolam); no. 31. Should 
anyone carrying false money be captured 
the ‘prepositus’ must account for the 
money and send the criminal to the king 
for punishment ; those who caught him 
should have the clothes; no. 41. 

47 Clauses 18, 22. Should there be 
wager of battle between a burgess and a 
knight the latter must fight in person ; 
no. 45. 

In 1184-5 a fine of 5 marks was levied 
by the king because a man had been put 
‘at the water’ without warrant ; Farrer, 
Lancs. Pipe R. 55. 

; ‘8 Clause 23. Succession to property 
is regulated by no. 32. 

49 Clauses 24, 25. 

50 Clause 36. 

51 Clause 27. 

52¢Pretors’ occur at Clitheroe also. 
Ralph the reeve of Preston occurs about 
1200, together with Roger his son; 
Lancs. Pipe R. 335. Roger, ‘pretor’ of 
Preston, apparently the reeve, attested a 
local charter about 1220 ; Kuerden MSS. 
iv, C255. 

Roger reeve of Preston, Ralph his son 
and Robert the Clerk of Preston occur 
about the same time ; Add. MS, 32106, 
no. 378. Baldwin de Preston was reeve 
in 1246, and chose the jury of twelve 
(including himself) who came from the 
borough ; Assize R. 404, m. 194. 

There seems to have still been no 
‘mayor’ in 1292, when the bailiffs ap- 
pearing for the town were Adam son of 
Robert and Robert son of Roger. 

To a charter already quoted Roger 
Pade, ‘then chief bailiff of Preston,’ was 
a witness ; OO, no. 1099. Local charters 
to about 1320 are usually attested by the 
two bailiffs of the town ; but in one early 
deed Adam brother of Filbard, mayor, and 
William and Roger brother of Roger (?), 
reeves, were principal witnesses; ibid. 
no. 1101. In 1311-12 William son of 
Robert the Tailor granted to John del 
Wich land in the new field under Ful- 
wood, and the witnesses were the mayor, 
Robert son of Roger, six bailiffs—Adam 
de Bury, William son of Nicholas, 
William son of Paulin, Henry Banastre, 
Roger Salley, Albred son of Adam—and 
the clerk of Preston, William de Wigan ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 2198. In the 
guild of 1328 the mayor and two bailiffs 
are named, and the government at that 
time was conducted in the name of the 
mayor, bailiffs and burgesses. 

The community had a common seal as 
early as 1250; Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 220-1. A seal of 1376 is in 
the British Museum (Birch, Catalogue, 
no. 5315); it shows the Agnus Dei, 


statant regardant, with banner flag, and 
on the lamb’s shoulder a shield bearing 
the duchy arms. It is surrounded with 
the legend + sic’ coMVNE BVRGENCIVM 
DE preston. The seal of 1415 is the 
same, with the addition of three P’s 


round the lamb, thus: ai ue About 


the end of the 17th century the statant 
posture was altered to couchant. The 
seals of 1415 and the present time are 
shown in Fishwick, op. cit. 36, 37. In 

1349 the king granted a seal for recogni- 
zances of debts ; the greater piece was to 
remain in charge of the mayor and the 
smaller piece with a clerk deputed by the 
king ; Cal. Pat. 1348-50, p. 266. William 
Clifton was appointed to be keeper of the 
smaller piece in 14233 ibid. 1422-9, 
p. 101. 

The Moot Hall is named in a deed of 
1377, by which Thomas de Molyneux of 
Cuerdale and Joan his wife gave the 
mayor, bailiffs and community of Preston 
a small piece of land (12 ft. by 12 ft.) ad- 
joining the said hall, at a rent of 6s. ; OO, 
no. 1506, 

58 This does not seem to be mentioned 
in any of the early charters. 

The original farm of the town was 
£9, but in or before 1179 was increased 
by £63 Farrer, op. cit. 42, 131. In 
1212 the burgesses held three plough-lands 
in Preston by a rent of £15 3 Lancs. Ing. 
and Extents (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 45, 138, 289. The diminution from 
the six plough-lands of Domesday Book is 
probably accounted for by the separation 
of Fulwood and Ribbleton. 

54 Clause rr, 55 Clause 41. 

56 ¢Curia nostra’; no. 9. 

57 If a stranger claimed a debt before 
the reeve and the debtor would not pay 
the ‘pretor’ paid it out of the king’s 
purse, and then seized the debtor’s 
chattels or took possession of his house ; 
no. 33. 

58 Cal. Pat. 1313-17, p- 186. The 
tolls which might be levied are printed 
in Fishwick, Preston, 25. Other grants 
were made in 1328 (for two years) and 
in 1333 (for five years) ; Cal. Pat. 1327- 
30, p. 2703 1330-4, p- 408. Ata trial 
in 1334 it was alleged that the men of 
Preston had obtained pavage charters for 
five and then for three years, and then, 
the town being sufficiently paved, pur- 
chased another charter to last for five 
years, ‘to the great oppression of the 
people of those parts.’ Nicholas de 
Preston and three others appeared for the 
community to aver that the additional 
paving was required, but the decision was 
against them, and they had to pay a fine. 


94 


The pavage dues were stated to amount 
to 10 marks a year ; Coram Rege R. 297, 
Rex m, 21. 

In 1337 an inquiry was made as to 
the right of pasture in Fulwood ; Lans- 
downe MS. 559, fol. 66/36. 

The taxation of the ninth of the borough 
of Preston in 1340 has been preserved and 
supplies forty-four names of persons 
taxed ; Subs. R. bdle. 130, no. 15. 

In 1341 a commission was appointed 
to inquire into a suspected misappropria- 
tion of the pavage money raised ; Cal. Par, 
1340-3, p. 313. Another grant of pavage 
was made by Duke Henry in 1356; 
Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 344. 

In 1582 Richard Stirrop was admitted 
burgess in consideration of his making 
the post-holes in the market stead at the 
yearly fairs and repairing the causeway 
between Barkhouse Hill and the windmill 
at the east end of the town; Abram, 
Mem. of the Guilds, 33. 

59 By Richard II in 1379, preserved 
at Preston; see Cal. Pat. 1377-81, 
p- 340. By Henry IV in 1401, also at 
Preston ; a new clause was inserted, 
allowing the burgesses to use any of the 
liberties, &c., granted by former charters, 
even if they or their predecessors had not 
hitherto fully availed themselves of the 
same. By Henry V in 1414. By 
Henry VI in 1425, now at Preston. By 
Philip and Mary in 1557, at Preston. 

For the charters of 1401 and 1414 see 
also Charter R. 2 Hen. IV, pt. i, no. 8 ; 
1 Hen. V, pt. iii, no. 3. 

60 The charter probably ratified customs 
in the government of the town which had 
grown up in the course of time. At the 
guild of 1500 it was ordained that the 
mayor should nominate two ‘ancient, 
discreet and honest burgesses,’ called 
elisors, who in turn were to nominate 
twenty-four burgesses, not bearing office 
in the town, to choose fit persons to be 
mayor, bailiff and sub-bailiff ; the mayor, 
after his election, chose a second bailiff 
and a serjeant for the mace; Abram, 
Mem, of the Guilds, 23. 

In a writ de guo warr. issued in 1487 
the corporation were called upon to show 
by what title they claimed to elect a 
mayor. The £15 a year rent to the 
Crown is named; Pal. of Lanc. Writs 
Proton. 13 Hen. VII. For part of the 
reply see Kuerden MSS. iv, P 10 (the 
markets). 

In 1527 Sir Richard Hoghton made a 
lawless attempt to impose on the town 
his own nominees as mayor, bailiff aod 
serjeant. It was then the custom to 
nominate priests as elisors; Fishwick, 
Preston, 38-42, quoting Duchy of Lane 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


A dispute as to the right of the aulnager for the 
county to seal cloths and levy dues in Preston occurred 
in 1571, it being contended that the charter ex- 
empted the town and that the goods made there, viz. 
‘narrow white kerseys,’ were not included in the 
statute.®! The guild of 1622 endeavoured to protect 
the burgesses in another way by keeping ‘ foreigners > 
out of the town, it being found that their living and 
trading therein was ‘to the great prejudice, loss and 
hindrance of the free burgesses.’ © 

The records of the court leet have been preserved 
from 1653.63 The ancient fee-farm rent of £15 as 
was redeemed by the corporation in 1650 and again 
after the Restoration in 1676. The guild of 1662 
distinguished itself by drawing up a code of by-laws 
from the records of former guilds and thus providing 
for the orderly government of the town.°® Imme- 

diately afterwards a new charter was procured from 
Charles II, substantially the same as that of 1566, 
but making some further provisions.” This was 
followed in 1685 by an extended charter, which for 
the first time recognized the aldermen, who were to 
be seven in number. The mayor was to be assisted 
in his office as a justice of the peace by the ex- 
mayor, the senior alderman and the recorder. ‘Two 


PRESTON 


markets were now allowed, on Wednesday and 
Saturday, and three fairs, beginning 15 August, 
27 October and 16 March. No other charter was 
obtained till 1828, when, as, owing to the growth 
of the town, further justices were needed, it was 
provided that all the aldermen should act, also that 
the mayor, ex-mayor and senior aldermen should be 
coroners. i 
Only seven years afterwards, in 1835, the Municipal 
Corporations Act abolished the old constitution and 
the first council election of the reformed corporation 
was held on 26 December ; the aldermen were chosen 
on 31 December and the mayor on New Year’s Day, 
1836. The borough, which included the townships 
of Preston and Fishwick, was at first divided into six 
wards, and the council consisted of the mayor, twelve 
aldermen and thirty-six councillors.” In consequence 
of the growth of the town parts of Ribbleton and 
Brockholes on the east and of Ashton on the west 
were taken into the municipal borough in 1880 7! and 
a further part of Ashton in 1888,’ but the number 
of wards, though the areas were readjusted, remained 
unchanged until 1900, when the enlarged borough 
was divided into twelve wards—St. John’s, ‘Trinity, 
Christ Church and Avenham in the centre or ancient 


Pleadings, Hen. VIII, xii, F 13 viii, 
W 9; vi, Wi11. Sir Thomas More was 
then Chancellor of the duchy ; he rejected 
the Hoghton claims and made certain 
‘ordinances’ for the peace of the town 
and the election of mayor; ibid. 43-4, 
quoting Pleadings, vi, Wt. Sir Richard 
again interfered with the election in 
Oct. 1534 3 ibid. 45. 

Disputes arose as to the nomination of 
both elisors by the mayor, and the charter 
of 1566, while confirming the mode of 
election of the twenty-four, gave them 
the choice of one of the elisors. A three 
weeks court for trying causes of debts, 
&c. ; the view of frankpledge on the days 
‘accustomed from ancient times,’ the 
markets and fairs (with court of pie- 
powder), were all expressly ratified by 
the charter, to be held by ‘the ancient 
rent and farm due to the Crown.’ 

The charter did not allay all the internal 
disputes which had been going on respect- 
ing the choice of the mayor, who, it will 
be seen, had large powers. It gave the 
elisors the right to choose an entirely new 
body of capital burgesses each year, but 
in practice no doubt the same persons 
were re-elected, if willing, and in 1598 
there is mention of a permanent body of 
aldermen, who were eight in number. 
It was ordered that ‘the whole number 
of benchers, commonly called aldermen,’ 
should stand and remain as they then were 
until the next guild merchant, and that 
the mayor should be chosen annually from 
this body, beginning with the senior 
member, and descending yearly according 
to seniority; ibid. 34. This rule was 
confirmed by the guild of 1602, which 
also decreed that out-burgesses who came 
to reside within the town should not be 
eligible as mayor or bailiff till they had 
resided for seven years; ibid. 36. In 
1642 it was ordered that on an alderman 
dying a successor should be appointed 
from the members of the common 
council ; ibid. 47. 

An attempt to disfranchise two bur- 
gesses was defeated by their appeal to the 
Exchequer Court in or before 1582; 
Abram, op. cit. 33. 


61 Abram, op. cit. 26-8. The decision 
seems to have been adverse to the town ; 
Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc, Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 236,256. An earlier claim 
to this immunity was investigated in 
1521, when the mayor and burgesses also 
claimed all the goods of felons, fugitives, 
&c., and view of frankpledge ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, no. 36. 

62 Abram, op. cit. 40. The making 
of bricks for sale was likewise forbidden, 
so that the ‘wastes’ of the town might 
not be impaired. 

There are other evidences that at that 
time the established guilds or trade com- 
panies were jealous of the growth of 
independent traders. The rules of the 
Preston Company of Drapers, Mercers, 
Grocers, Salters, Ironmongers and Haber- 
dashers of 1628 prohibited the sale by 
any ‘stranger’ of goods belonging to these 
trades ; ibid. 41-2, In 1633 the Society 
of Skinners, Whittawers and Glovers in 
Preston and other places made a petition 
against unlicensed traders ; Cal. S. P, Dom. 
1633-4, Pp. 330. 

© The records from 1653 to 1813 are 
preserved in three folio volumes at the 
Town Hall. An account of them, with 
copious extracts, was published in 1905, 
Mr. Anthony Hewitson being editor. The 
court leet was held twice a year. The 
Inquest, sometimes called the court baron, 
sat frequently. The Mayor’s Court was 
held on the Friday before St. Wilfrid’s 
Day for the election of mayor, bailiff and 
serjeant ; their inauguration was on the 
feast itself, The old procedure is related 
in Whittle’s Preston (1821), 194-206. 
The principal matters in the records relate 
to the right to carry on a trade and to 
pasture cattle on the marsh. The court 
leet became extinct in 1835, having long 
ceased to be of any utility in the changed 
conditions of the town. 

61 In 1504-5 the sheriff was directed 
to call for £45, the rent due to the king 
for three years from the mayor and 
bailiffs of Preston; Kuerden MSS. iv, 
P 118. 

5 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1870), ii, 448. 
The intermediate surrender of the pur- 


95 


chase in 1660, as evidence to the loyalty 
of the corporation, is printed in Manch, 
Guard. N. and Q. no. 375+ 

66 Abram, op. cit. 51-5. The guild 
meeting was continued for six wecks to 
allow of the codification, The orders 
were classified under the following titles : 
The Sabbath ; the oaths ; the town lands, 
rents, and other revenues; the marsh, 
mere and town field ; geese on the marsh ; 
swine ; brick and digging of sods ; preser- 
vation of the common, &c.; buying and 
selling between foreigners and others, and 
the tolls, stallages, pickages, lastages and 
other customs due for the same ; house- 
holders and their duties ; officers ; manner 
of holding a council ; weights and measures ; 
foreign burgesses ; restraining of foreign 
burgesses ; duties of foreign burgesses ; 
alehouse-keeping, tippling and victualling ; 
bailiffs and other inferior officers ; office 
of a serjeant ; streets and scavengers. 

“About 2,200 burgesses were enrolled 
at the guild of 1662, of whom something 
less than goo were foreign burgesses.’ 

67 Tbid. 56-7. 

68 Ibid. 68 ; Duchy of Lanc. Misc. Bks, 
xxiv, 222. 

69 Abram, op. cit. 135. A description 
of the old-fashioned way of ‘beating the 
bounds’ at Preston is given in Hewitson’s 
Preston, 121. It is included among the 
former sports of the place. 

70 Abram, loc. cit.; Act 2 & 3 
Will. IV, cap. 64. The six wards were: 
St. John’s, south-east from Church Street 
to the Ribble, including part of Fishwick ; 
Christ Church, to the west ; St. George's, 
to the north-west ; St. Peter's, north of 
Maudland ; Trinity, the east central part 
of the town (including the Town Hall) 
to the northern border; Fishwick, the 
eastern suburb of Preston, and the greater 
part of Fishwick township. Changes of 
area were made in 1881, and St. George's 
and Trinity were re-named Maudland and 
Park respectively. 

71 Under an Improvement Act of 1880, 
43 & 44 Vict. cap. 118, 

72 Under the Ribble Navigation Act of 
1883, 46 & 47 Vict. cap. 115. The 
enlargement came into force in 1889, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


urban area; Ashton on the west; Maudland, St. 
Peter's, Moor Brook, Park and Deepdale on the 
north ; Ribbleton and Fishwick to the east. Each 
ward has now an alderman and three councillors, so 
that the total membership is unchanged. The town- 
ship boundaries were altered in 1894, so that those 
of the township or civil parish of Preston coincide 
with those of the municipal borough.” Preston 
became a county borough under the Act of 1888. 
As a parliamentary borough it has been known since 
1295.4 By the Reform Act of 1832 the town 
continued to return two members, but Fishwick was 
added to the borough. No change was made in the 
boundary till 1888, when the enlarged municipal 
borough, together with the township of Fulwood, 
became the parliamentary borough, there being still 
two members. 

The borough court, a survival of the old manor 
courts, is held every third Friday by the recorder, for 
the recovery of small debts. The town has also its 
police force and court 7 and a quarter sessions court.’6 
A county court is held there, as also county quarter 
sessions. The county council has its offices and 
meetings in Preston, as the most central point for 
Lancashire.” The Preston Rural District Council 
also meets in the town. 

An artificial water supply, in addition to the wells, 
was begun as early as 172978; but an efficient 
modern supply was not opened until 1832,’ when 
a private company made a reservoir at Grimsargh. 


73 Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 31607. 

74 See above—introduction. 

75 About 1800 the watchmen were pro- 
vided by private subscriptions and a 
corporation grant. In 1832 a police 
station was opened in Avenham Street, 
the force numbering six men. A new 
station, with magistrates’ court, still 


was built 


Preston, 445. 


west of Friargate ; Goose Well, outside 
Church Street bars. 
in Avenham in 
Abbot, a Quaker, was the maker. 
Hewitson, Cr Leet Rec. ; 
In 1743 a new cistern 
was made at Syke Hill, from which 
water was distributed through wooden 


In 1853 the works were acquired by the town and 
fresh reservoirs have continued to be formed according 
to the needs of the district supplied. 

Lamps for lighting the streets on dark nights were 
first supplied in 1699, the corporation providing 
them.®! Fr. Dunn, a Jesuit stationed at Preston, 
having seen gas used at Stonyhurst, advocated its 
introduction in Preston, which was thus the first pro- 
vincial town in England to be lighted with gas, in 
1816.8 A private company, formed in 1815 and 
incorporated in 1839, supplies it.8 The Electric 
Supply Company supplies electric light, with which 
the principal streets are lighted. 

The first tramways were opened in 1879 and 
have been greatly extended. They are now owned 
by the town and worked by electricity. The corpora- 
tion also supplies electric power. 

The grammar school seems always to have been 
governed by the corporation ; various other educa- 
tional institutions and libraries have now been added. 
The Free Library was opened in the Town Hall in 
1879, but transferred to the Harris Free Public 
Library and Museum in 1903.8° A science and art 
school are held in the Harris Institute.8?7 The 
Victoria Jubilee technical school was opened in 
1897.88 

The corporation has carried out the usual works 
for sanitary purposes.®? It has erected a large town 
hall,®° a public hall or corn market ® and a covered 
market.®? It owns several parks and_ recreation 


Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, originally 
organized in 1828. Declining in use- 
fulness it was re-endowed by the trustees 
of E. R. Harris as a Technological and 
Science and Art School in 1882; 
Hewitson, op. cit. 235, 276. 

88 This building, in Corporation Street, 
is managed by the council of the In- 
stitute, who have acquired the old 


The old ‘cistern’ 
rgzg, R. 
See 
Hardwick, 


used, was opened in Lancaster Road in 
1858. The bench of magistrates was 
anciently regulated by the charters, as 
already described; since the passing of 
the Municipal Reform Act in 1835 the 
justices have been appointed by the 
Chancellor of the duchy. 

There is also a fire brigade, with 
station in Tithebarn Street. In 1271 
Thurstan de Holland complained that 
one Henry son of Mirre had destroyed 
one of his houses at Preston ; but it was 
shown that there was a fire in the town, 
and Thurstan’s house and some others 
had been destroyed to check the flames ; 
Curia Regis R. 201, m. 7d. 

76 The seneschal, later the recorder, is 
named in the charters of 1566 and 1663. 
He presides at the three weeks court and 
the quarter sessions of the borough. 

77 The offices, at the west end of 
Fishergate, were opened in 1882. The 
chief county officials have their offices in 
the building. 

The prison, at the east end of Church 
Street, was erected in 1789 to replace the 
old house of correction in the Friary. 
A court-house was built in 1829 
adjoining. The new county sessions 
house, already mentioned, has replaced 
it. The county police offices are part of 
the new building, in which is also the 
County Hall, used for the meetings of 
the county council. 

78 The town records mention five 
principal wells: Mincepitt, near the 
gas company’s land; Market-place, 
1654; Fishergate, 1666 ; Lady Weil, 


pipes ; see Hewitson, Preston, 378-80. 

79 Priv. Act, 2 & 3 Will. IV, cap. 27. 

80 16 & 17 Vict. cap.48. See Hewitson, 
op. cit. 381-3. Further large reservoirs 
have lately been constructed at Longridge. 
The works supply not only the borough 
but several adjacent townships, north and 
south of the Ribble. 

81 Ibid. 267. 

8? Hardwick, op. cit. 4443 Gerard, 
Stonyhurst, 125. The first works were 
in Avenham Lane (Glover Street). 

83 Act 55 Geo. III, cap. 22 3 2 & 3 Vict. 
cap. 3. Additional gasometers have been 
erected in North Street and at Ribbleton 
and Walton-le-Dale. 

84 Hewitson, Preston, 208-9. An 
omnibus service to Fulwood began in 
1859, superseded by the tramway in 
1879. Other tramway lines, from 
Ribbleton through the town to Fisher- 
gate Hill and to Ashton, were opened in 
1882. 

8 Ibid. 287-98. The new Harris 
Library, built for it between 1882 and 
1893, was opened in 1894. Dr. Shepherd’s 
library (1759) is housed with it. The 
Law Library, founded in 1831, is a 
private subscription one ; the building is 
in Chapel Walks, Fishergate. 

86 Ibid. 312-14. The museum was at 
first (1841) in Cross Street. An 
observatory, privately founded, was 
acquired by the corporation in 1879 and 
a new building erected in 1881 in Deep- 
dale Road. 

87 The building was erected in 1849 
in Avenham Lane as an Institute for the 


96 


buildings of the School for the Blind 
(1871), which has been removed to 
Fulwood. 

89 For example, baths and wash-houses 
were opened in 1850 and refuse destruc- 
tors in 1887 and 1892. 

Formerly there was a public cold water 
bath at the western end of the town, 
called the Spa Bath. It was closed about 
1860; Hewitson, Preston, 242. There 
was a spa well there ; ibid. 385. 

90 This building was opened in 1867. 
See Hewitson, op. cit. 359-66. 

91 It was first erected by the corpora- 
tion in 1822-4, and after enlargement 
was re-opened in 1882. There is accom- 
modation for 3,600 auditors It has a 
large organ. The corn market is held 
there on Saturdays ; at the front are sold 
eggs and poultry. The pork market was 
formerly held at the rear, but was dis- 
continued in 1881; Hewitson, op. cit. 
254. ; 
93 Tt ig in Lancaster Road, on the site 
of the old ‘Orchard,’ and was built in 
1870-5. Fruit and vegetables are sold 
there ; Hewitson, op. cit. 308. 

In Whittle’s Preston (1821), 116-20, 
is a description of the former markets. 
The Old Shambles, a street leading from 
the Market Place to Church Strect, were 
on the east side of the Town Hall. The 
Strait Shambles, erected in 1715 by 
Thomas Molyneux, went north from 
Church Street opposite Avenham Street. 
They were pulled down in 1882 to make 
room for the Free Library. Separate 


AAWPARSI : 
SY Se 


Preston: FisHERGATE wiTH Town Hatt In DISTANCE 


Salts Ss 


Presron: Harris Free Liprary, Marker Prace 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


1868.97 The infirmary is in Deepdale Road."* in 
addition the town has various societies and clubs. 
There are two daily and four weekly newspapers.” 


grounds.%8 
in 1855.94 


town a useful port. 


Preston possesses valuable 


cup and cover, dated 1615. 


The corporation built a workhouse in Avenham about 
1675 for the unemployed poor, and this was super- 
seded in 1788 by a new house on the moor. Under 
the Poor Law of 1834 Preston became the head of a 
union. A new workhouse at Fulwood was opened in 


slaughter-houses were erected in 1818 
near Syke Hill. The fish stones were on 
the northern side of the market-place ; 
they were removed in 1853. 

Whittle further states that then the 
market days were Wednesday, Friday 
and Saturday. A bell was rung at 
g a.m. when the sale of provisions and 
fish began ; it was rung again at 10 a.m. 
when ‘forestallers, hucksters and badgers’ 
might purchase to sell again; and at 
Ir am. when the com trade began. 
‘The various markets shall now have 
their place as to where they are held 
according to ancient usage. The cattle 
market in Church Street. The goose 
and pork market immediately under the 
church wall. The country butchers and 
others hold their market on the south 
side of Church Street.’ The market- 
place was apportioned to various kinds of 
produce. On the south side butter and 
poultry ; at the east corn and peas; in 
the centre earthenware, glass and toys; 
to the north, clothiers; west of the 
obelisk, confectionery, hats, boots, cutlery, 
small wares. The cheese market and 
fruit stalls on the west side of the 
square, with vegetables on both sides of 
Cheapside, which leads down to Fisher- 
gate. 

Still earlier arrangements as described 
by Dr. Kuerden about 1680 are printed 
in Hardwick's Preston, 209. The cattle 
market was in Church Street, swine 
were sold opposite the church, and sheep 
on the west side of the market-place ; 
the horse market was in Fishergate. 

98 While the town was still quite 
small the corporation in 1696-7 obtained 
from Alderman Lemon a piece of ground 
on Avenham, used as a walk, and thus 
secured it for public use. It was planted 
with trees, and forms a conspicuous 
object in Buck’s ‘Prospect’ of 1728; 
Hewitson, op. cit. 320, 236. Thoresby, 
the antiquary, who visited the town at 
the 1702 guild, described it as ‘a very 
curious walk and delicate prospect’ ; 
Thoresby, Diaries, i, 389-91. 

Avenham Park, to the south-west of 
it, occupies 27 acres by the Ribble side. 
Between 1843 and 1852 the corporation 
purchased the land, and formed it into 
an attractive pleasure ground in 1861-7 ; 
work being thus provided for the factory 
workers made idle by the American 
Civil War ; ibid. 319-22. Miller Park, 
11 acres, lies further to the west ; the 
land was given by Alderman Thomas 
Miller, and, after being laid out, was 
opened in 1867 ; ibid. 323. Fine views 
of the Ribble Valley can be obtained 
from these parks. 

The moor to the north of the town 
was inclosed by the corporation in 1834. 
From 1786 to 1833 horse-races had been 


f 


The cemetery in Ribbleton was opened 
The corporation has also done much to 
improve the navigation of the Ribble and make the 


regalia 
including the great mace presented by the Duke of 
Hamilton in 1703, a civic sword and the hanap, or 


PRESTON 


In addition to the church and the chantries, the 


and _ plate, 


run there, in opposition to those favoured 
by the Earl of Derby on the adjacent 
Fulwood Moor. Racing had taken place 
much earlier, an ‘intended horse course’ 
being marked in 1695. A park of 110 
acres has gradually been formed of the 
land inclosed. ‘The Marsh, another part 
of the old common land, is used as a 
recreation ground ; it measures 22 acres. 

Haslam Park was presented to the 
town in 1908 by Miss Haslam. 

%4 Hewitson, op. cit. 249. 

95 See the introduction. 

96 A full description is given in Trans, 
Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xiii, 1-47. 

9%” For the history see Hewitson, Preston, 
394-410. 

98 A dispensary was established in 
Fishergate in 1809 and a house of re- 
covery in Great Shaw Street in 1813. 
The latter was removed to ‘the Moor’ in 
1833. The two institutions are com- 
bined in the present infirmary, on the 
last-named site, opened in 1870; Hewit- 
son, op. cit. 284. 

99 The earliest newspaper, of no long 
continuance, was the Journal, 1744. Of 
the existing newspapers the Guardian was 
established in 1844 and the Herald in 
1855. 

The daily papers are the Lancashire 
Post and Northern Telegraph; the weekly 
ones the Preston Guardian, Preston Herald 
(Wednesday and Saturday), Preston Argus, 
and Catholic News. 

For a full account of the newspapers 
up to 1882 see Hewitson, op. cit. 

1-4. 

100 The site does not seem to be known 
exactly. A charter of 1311-12 describes 
a piece of land as situated under this 
hospital and extending to Swaghwell 
Syke ; Hist. MSS. Com, Rep.iv, 580. This 
name is probably the same as the Sewalle 
Syke of the Cockersand Chartul. i, 217. 
Possibly the well was one known later as 
Atherton’s Well, near the canal bridge on 
Fylde Road; Hewitson, Preston, 385. 
Spital Moss was close by. 

Charters of the hospital are in the 
Duchy Great Coucher, i, fol. 80, &c. 

The history of the hospital is narrated 
in the account of the religious houses of 
the county. After its confiscation by 
Edward VI it was in 1549 granted to 
John Doddington and William Ward ; 
Pat. 3 Edw. VI, pt. vi. They sold it to 
Thomas Fleetwood in 1550, and in 1560 
Thomas sold the estate to John Fleet- 
wood of Penwortham ; D.in Preston Chron. 
12 Oct. 1861. Thomas Fleetwood is 
here called ‘of Hesketh’ ; he was the 
brother of John, who died in possession 
in 1590; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xv, 
no. 34. 

101 See the account of the religious 
houses. Part of the building was granted 


97 


leper hospital and the Friary,!! the Knights 
Hospitallers,!°? Lytham 1 and Burscough Priorie 
Whalley,! Sawley,!9° and Cockersand Abbeys 17 had 
lands in the town. 
burgages and land Robert Abbot of Cockersand 
averred that the tenements were of the manor of 
Preston, which was of the ancient demesne of the 
Crown of England; the claimant denied this, 
saying that the manor was of the honour of 


g, 104 


In resisting a claim to certain 


to William Breres of Preston and Oliver 
Breres of Chorley in 1539-40, and Oliver 
was in possession in 15453; L. and P. 
Hen, VIIL, xv, p. §64.3 Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. 
Com.), i, 178. In 1540 the whole site 
was granted to Thomas Holcroft ; Pat. 32 
Hen. VIII, fol. iv. The building was 
used as a house of correction from about 
1640 to 1789; Hewitson, Preston, 
281. 

102 The Hospitallers’ lands in Preston 
were in 1544-5 given to Richard Crom- 
bleholme ; Pat. 36 Hen. VIII, pt. xvii. 

103 Lytham charters at Durham, 3a, 
2ae,4.ae Ebor.no.1-5. These are grants 
of rents by the heirs of Richard son of 
Roger of Woodplumpton. 

104 The tenement seems to have been 
known as Tinkler House, and a rent of 
2s. was derived from it ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Rentals bdle. 4, no. 7, 8; Mins, Accts. 
bdle. 136, no. 2198. 

105 Richard de Derbyshire gave land in 
Jugeler Ridding and in Woodholm (formerly 
Robert son of Stephen’s) to Stanlaw 
Abbey ; Whalley Couch. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 


465. 

106 Richard Rufus (? Russel) gave half of 
atoft in Fishergate to Sawley ; Harl. MS. 
112, fol. 74. This as a burgage was 
afterwards demised by the abbey to Hugh 
le Sposage, at a rent of 12d. to the abbot, 
12d. to the king (as chief lord) according 
to the use and custom of the vill, and 8d. 
to the heir of Hugh Fitton. By Adam 
son of Hugh le Sposage it was granted to 
Roger son of Adam son of Suard, by 
whom it was surrendered to the abbey ; 
ibid. 

Russel was an early surname in 
Preston; De Banco R. 195, m. 3313 
248, m. 44. 

107 Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 
216-25 ; iv, 1262-3. The lands seem 
for the most part to have been acquired 
by Master William de Kirkham and 
handed over to the canons. The charters 
contain a number of details as to the 
people and place-names, The latter in- 
clude Sicling Moor, Oldfield, Platfordale, 
Sewall Syke, Woodholme, Whitacre, 
Dustesahe Field and Gildhouse. 

Roger son of Robert Woodward in 
1326 granted Thomas Banastre and Joan 
his wife land held of the Abbot ot 
Cockersand and having a kiln-house upon 
it; Towneley MS. OO, no. 1114. 

Alice daughter of Adam de Rufford and 
widow of Simon released to the canons 
her claim in Thimsacre ; Towneley MS. 
DD, no. 10. 

In 1281 Amy widow of Robert son of 
Cecily claimed dower in two messuages, 
4 acres of land and a burgage in Preston 
against the Abbot of Cockersand, Adam 
de Bury and William son of Adam Albin ; 
De Banco R. 42, m. 15, 


es) 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Lancaster and an escheat of the king, as he was ready 
to verify by the ‘book of Domusdey’ and in all 
Many of the gentry of the county 


other ways.'® 


had burgages and lands in the town. 
they were stated to hold them of the king, in others 


1% Assize R. 408, m. 8. The plaintiff 
was Walter son of Jordan de Kirkham, 
brother of Master William de Kirkham, 
son of Richard. The abbot alleged 
bastardy, but an agreement was come to, 
and Walter released all his claim in the 
tenement. 

109 Of the 
burzage : 

Isabel widow of John Talbot, 14323 
and John Talbot of Salesbury, 14495 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 41, 55. 

Alexander Hoghton of Hoghton, 1489 ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, no. 66. A 
similar statement is made in the later in- 
quisitions in the case of this and other 
families, 

John Singleton of Broughton, 1522 ; 
ibid. v, no. 45. 

Sir Thomas Boteler of Warrirgton, 
15223 ibid. v, no. 13. 

Lawrence Starkie, 15323 ibid. ix, 
no. 21. One of his daughters married 
Humphry Newton ; see note 134. 

James Anderton of Euxton, 1552, in 
socage ; ibid. ix, no. 14. 

James Forshaw of Penwortham, 1563 ; 
ibid. xi, no. 41. 

Sir Richard Molyneux of Sefton, 1569 3 
ibid. xiii, no. 35. 

George Hesketh of Poulton, 1571; 
ibid. xiii, no. 15. 

Richard Greenacres of Worston, 1578 ; 
ibid. xiv, no. 16. 

Richard Chisnall [see Chisnall’, 1587, 
3 acres; ibid. xiv, no. 39. 

John Grimshaw of Clayton, 1587; 
ibid. xiv, no. § 3. 

Thomas Standish of Duxbury, 1599 3; 
ibid. xvii, no. 54. 

Of the C ~poration, ice. the mayor, 
bailitts and burgesses : 

John Skillicorne, 1478, four burgages, 
by a rent of 25.3 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soc.), it, 105. 

William Farington of Leyland, 1501 ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, no. 67. 

Richard Taylor (see Bretherton and 
Longton), 1596; ibid. xvii, no, 25. 
Another of the name died in 1631, leaving 
a son Henry, aged sixteen; ibid. xxvii, 
no. 63. 

Robert Hankinson (see Newton with 
Scales}, 1604 ; Lancs. Inz. p.m. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 1353 ii, 123. 

John Stopford of Ulnes Walton ; ibid. 
ty FOO 6H, Fa. 

George Rogerson, 1620, the Water 
Willows, &c. ; ibid. i:, 189. 

Thomas Shireburne of Heysham, 
1635-6 ; Towneley MS. C 8 13 (Chet. 
Lib.), 1083. 

Wiluam Critchlow of Lea, 1637-8; 
ibid. 252. 

Edward Lusse:i of Osbaliesten, 1637; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxx, no. 8. 

Other tenures: 

Rotert Singleton of Broughton, 1501 ; 
of St. John of Terusalem by a rent of 3d. 
ibid. ii, no. 63. 

Robert Singleton of Brockholes, 1525 5 
of the heir of Adam de Brockholes, by 
three grains of pepper ; ibid. vi, no. 64. 

William Mocre of Bank Hal, 16092 5 
of Sir Richard Hoghton 3 Lanes. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc, Lancs. and Ches.), i, 13. 

The unrecorded tenures include those 


Crown, mostly in free 


3 


corded.'” 


In some cases 
in the annals, 


of Balderston of Balderston, Clifton of 
Westby, Harrington of Westleigh, Hesketh 
of Rufford, Langton of Walton, Leyland 
of Morleys, and Travers of Nateby. 

Of the above it may be noticed that 
the Moores retained their Preston estate 
till 16913; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 226, m. 22. 

The Feet of Fines give some particulars 
of other families. For instance, in the 
16th cent., Park, bdle. 12, m. 63, 144, 
290; Newsham, bdle. 20, m. 63; Ark- 
wright, bdle. 43, m. 200 ; Forshaw, bdle. 
49, m. 77 5 57, m. 160; Haighton, bdle. 
58, m. 173. 

The following persons were recorded 
as frecholders in Preston in 1600 : Henry 
Ascroft, Thomas Ban:stre, Richard 
Blundell, Richard Cuerdall; Henry, James, 
Richard and William Hodgkinson ; Ed- 
mund Lemon, — Preston, George Sollom, 
Anthony and Thomas Wall, James and 
— Walton ; Mire. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 233. 

MU Kuerden’s collections, especially 
iv (P) and the folio volume (C, D), con- 
tain much relating to the local families. 

Numerous Hoghton deeds are in Add. 
MS, 32106. 

The Guild Rolls also are valuable for 
their pedigrees. For the earlier genera- 
tions some assistance may be derived from 
the witnesses to charters; e.g. about 
1260 there aprear Adam brother of 
Suard de Preston, Roger and William 
his sons ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 451. 

111 The following r<-ferences to the 
Plea Rolls, &c., will show that different 
families used this surname. 

A Gamel son of Gamel was admitted 
to the freedom of Preston by a charter of 
King John in 1199, confirming one 
granted when John was Count of Mor- 
tain ; Cal. Rot. Chart. (Rec. Com.), 26. 

In 1246 it was recorded that two bur- 
gages and 4 acres of land had escheste! 
to the king. Adam son of Suard held 
them at halfa mark rent; A<size R. 404, 
m. 19 d. Robert son of Stezhen de 
Preston unsuccessfully claimed a mes- 
suage and 3 acres against various persons ; 
ibid. m. 4. 

A Henry son of Baldwin de Preston 
did fealty on succeeding in 1254; 
Excerpta e Rot, Fin. (Rec. Com.), ii, 187. 
See also R:s. Lit, Claus. (Rec. Com.), i, 
4303 Cal Clise, 1279-88, p. 265. 

Roger son of Adam de Preston in 1262 
acquired a toft, at 1d, rent, from John de 
Balcerston and Alice his wife; Final 
Cone. i, 135. 

In 12-7 Maud widow of Roger son of 
Roger de Preston claimed dower in 
Preston against Robert son of Adam, 
Roger son of Belota, Paulin de Preston, 
and others; De Banc: R. 19, m. 14 4. 
Two years later Alice widow of Master 
William de Preston claimed a messuaze, 
&c.. against Wiliam son of Master 
William, and land against Nicholas son 
of Roger de Preston and Alice his wife; 
ibid. 20, m. 175 31, m 9. 

Agnes widow of iim de Hoghton in 
1290 claimed dower in hoses, bake- 
house, &c., in Preston agains: Alice 
widow of Rogerson of Adam de Preston ; 
ibid. 83, m. 127d. 


98 


of the corporation ; but often no tenure was re- 


Of the local families! several took a surname 


from the town itself, and Prestons occur constantly 
A 


One of these families recorded a 


In 1291 Geoffrey son of Roger son of 
Adam de Preston and Ellen his wife un- 
successfully claimed a messuage and 3 acres 
of land in Preston azainst Mud de 
Brockholes, William de Slyne and Eva 
his wife. It appeared that Ellen was 
dauzhter of Adam de Brockholes and Eva 
daughter of Adam de Preston (who had 
entcofted her fourteen years before). 
Geoffrey's father Roger is also called ‘son 
of Avice’; Assize R. 1294, m. 8d; 
1299, m. 16. The same Geoffrey and 
Ellen sued William the Carpenter of 
Preston and Eva his wife ; Assize R. 407, 
m. 43 1294, m.g. In this claim Eva 
daughter of Adam the Clerk of Brockholes 
was found to have been born out of wed- 
lock ; she had an elder brother William ; 
Assize R. 408, m. 7, 9, 38d. 

The following belong to the year 1292: 

Robert de Ribbleton and Cecily his wite 
claimed the fourth part of a messuage and 
toft against Roger son of Anot de Preston 
and Ellen his wife; it was proved that 
Ellen was in seisin before she married 
Roger ; Assize R. 408, m. 3, 44d. Roger 
son of Avice de Preston was defendant in 
another plea; ibid. m. 36d. 

Robert son of Adam de Preston com- 
plained of a trespass by William the Tailor 
of Preston ; ibid. m. 3, 17d. William 
the Tailor was non-suited in a claim for 
debt against Hugh and Robert sons of 
Adam son of Philip de Preston; ibid. 
m. 32. Robert son of Adam son of Siward 
held the moiety of a messuage claimed by 
Agnes wife of William de la Launde, on 
the ground that her mother Maud (sister 
of Alice daughter of Ivette) had held it ; 
ibid. m. 34. Robert son of Adam de- 
fended his title to land in Preston against 
Henry le Pestur and Christiana his wife ; 
ibid. m. 32. Robert son of Adam son of 
Philip also defended his title against 
Richard son of Henry del Wra; ibid. m. 
44d. Robert son of Adam de Preston 
was charged with trespass by Alan son of 
Master Thomas de Lancaster and others ; 
ibid. m. 103. Robert de Preston was 
defendant to a claim by Cecily widow of 
Jordan de Claughton; ibid. m. 54d. 
Robert son of Adam de Preston defended 
his claim to certain land (claimed by 
Nicholas de Burnhull) by saying that he 
had received it from Alan de Catherton ; 
ibid. m. 49. 

Christiana widow of Henry Mirreson 
de Preston claimed dower in various 
tenements against Robert son of Adam 
de Preston and Alice widow of Adam, 
against Adam son of Richard de Preston 
and against Paulin de Preston ; ibid. m. 
49d. She also claimed against Wi. iam 
son of Roger, when Robert son of Roger 
de Preston warranted William and by 
leave rendered dower to the claimant; 
ibid. m. 61. Woaliam son of Roger <e 
Preston claimed a debt from William son 
of William ; ibid. m. 102. William son 
of Roger son of Adam de Preston demised 
land to Richard the Teinturer, who 
retused to pay the balance of the amount 
he promised and was ejected ; ibid. m. 54. 
Robert son of R-ger son of Adam de 
Pr.ston was, together with Alice tre 
widow of Roger, defendant as to aclaim 
by William the Lister ; ibid. m. 58. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


though the title was not recognized from the Revolu- 
tion until 1800." Among other more ancient families 
may be named by way of example those of Banastre 


12 


pedigree in 1664, 


Viscount Gormanston,"* 


Hugh son of Wimark de Preston and 
Margery his wife claimed small plots of 
land against William son of Roger Fitz 
Award de Preston and Robert son of 
Adam son of Ralph the Barker of Pres- 
ton; ibid.m. 7. Albred another son of 
Adam son of Ralph was defendant ; ibid. 
m. 43. Hugh son of Hugh de Preston 
defended his title against William son of 
Pain de Preston ; ibid.m.44d. William 
son of Hugh de Preston had demised a 
messuage and lands to Roger son of 
Adam de Preston in consideration of 
maintenance, but on this failing he 
claimed damages against Alice the widow 
of Roger and others, and was allowed 72s. 5 
ibid. m. 99. 

The same Alice was defendant to a 
claim for money owing put forward by 
Paulin de Preston, and Amota widow of 
Richard son of Richard son of Malbe de 
Preston; ibid, m. 103. Adam and 
William sons of Paulin de Preston had a 
dispute about a charter ; ibid. m. 37d. 

Alice daughter of William son of-Ralph 
de Preston claimed a tenement against 
Alice daughter of Alexander de Preston ; 
ibid. m. 24. Another Alice daughter of 
Ketel de Preston and wife of Simon son 
Amabil de Ribbleton claimed land ; 
ibid. 

Roger son of Richard le Pestur of 
Preston (alias Richard de Preston) 
claimed parcels of land against Robert 
the Tailor, Richard son of Uctred de 
Preston and Avice his wife, Richard de 
Aldware and Robert son of Roger de 
Preston ; ibid. m. 41. In another claim 
the same plaintiff showed the following 
pedigree: Award de Preston —s. Roger 
~s. Richard -s. Roger (plaintiff). Award 
had given a messuage to Henry de Pen- 
wortham and Christiana his wife and 
they had died without issue; ibid. m. 
65d. 

Adam son of Agnes de Preston, Amery 
his wife, Robert son of Beatrice and Alice 
his wife claimed a strip of land (100 ft. 
by 1 ft.) against William son of Roger de 
Preston ; ibid. m. 52d. Ellen widow of 
Adam son of Philip de Preston claimed 
against Roger son of Adam Russel of 
Preston and Maud his wife, but was 
non-suited; ibid. m. 54d. Maud daughter 
of Fulk de Preston was a plaintiff ; ibid. 
m. gtd, Cecily daughter of Hugh 
Asellison claimed a tenement against 
Geoffrey son of Roger de Preston ; ibid. 
m. 58. 

In 1301 Robert son of Adam son of 
Philip de Preston was sued for dower by 
Amery widow of William Aldeware ; De 
Banco R. 136, m. 46. William son of 
Roger Mirreson had a dispute in 1305 
with Henry son of Robert Attownsend 
of Preston ; Assize R. 420, m. 8. 

Pleadings of 1308-14 show us Albric 
and Avice children of Adam son of Ralph 
de Preston contending with Ralph son 
of Henry son of Ralph; Assize R. 423, 
m. 5d.;424,m. 5. Adam son of Robert 
de Preston gave a release to John son 
of Robert son of Adam de Preston re- 
specting six messuages and various lands ; 
Alberic the brother of John and Nicholas 
son of William de Preston are named ; 
ibid. m. 2d. Robert son of William son 
of Roger de Preston and William son of 
Nicholas de Preston were defendants in 
other pleas; ibid. m, 1d. 9. Christiana 


another acquired lands in 
Ireland, and Sir Robert Preston was in 1478 created 
a peerage still in existence, 


widow of William son of Roger de Preston 
and Robert son of Roger son of Adam 
de Preston were concerned in suits of 
1324-5 ; Assize R. 426, m. 9. 

Other references might be added, but 
the above will show how generally the 
surname was used. In the following 
cases somewhat fuller details than usual 
were alleged: In 1323-4 William de 
Wigan claimed against Albred son of 
Ralph de Preston and Henry son of 
Robert Adcockson certain land which 
had been given by Benedict the Clerk to 
William son of Adam de Preston in free 
marriage with Cecily his daughter, and 
which should descend to plaintiff as son 
and heir of William son and heir of 
Cecily; De Banco R. 252, m, 114d. 
The Prior of Burscough claimed against 
Robert son of John de Preston a tene- 
ment granted by Nicholas the Prior 
(temp. Henry III) to Robert son of 
Adam de Preston by a rent of 18d. ; 
ibid. 340, m. 430d. Richard son of 
Adam son of Margery de Preston claimed 
an acre against Albred son of Robert son 
of Adam de Preston in 13463 ibid. 
345, m. 152d. 

In 1352 Alice daughter of John (who 
married Margaret) son of Albred son of 
Adam son of Ralph de Preston claimed 
two messuages, 24 acres, &c., against 
Adam Skillington and Alice his wife (in 
her right), Geoffrey de Hacconsall and 
John son of John son of Albred son of 
Adam son of Ralph de Preston (who was 
to inherit after the death of Alice 
Skillington) ; Duchy of Lance. Assize 
R. 2, m. 3d. (Pent.). Margery daughter 
and heir of Adam son of William Mirre- 
son claimed against Thomas son of 
William Mirreson ; ibid. m. 1d. (July). 
John son of Geoffrey son of Robert son 
of Cecily de Preston did not prosecute a 
claim put forward in 1355 against Roger 
son of Adam son of Margery de Preston ; 
ibid. 4, m. § d. 

John Preston of Preston had a pardon 
in 1391; Cal. Pat. 1388-92, p. 369. 

George Preston, drover, died in 1602 
holding of the corporation in free burgage ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 103 (will recited). 

12 Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 237 3 
there is a somewhat fuller one in Fish- 
wick, op. cit. 222-3. This is perhaps 
the family referred to by Kuerden about 
1690 in his notice of the former Moly- 
neux Square to the north-east of the 
market-place: ‘Most of which belongs 
to that worthy person and purchaser of 
the Townend, the ancient estate formerly 
belonging to the family of Prestons, but 
now in possession of Mr, Rigby, Pater- 
noster Row in London’; Hardwick, 
Preston, 210. Townend stood near the 
present St. Peter’s Church; ibid. 211. 
Henry son of Robert Attownend has been 
already named in 1305. 

Henry Preston, who died in 1549, 
married Isabel Argham, widow, and had 
for heir a son apparently posthumous. 
His principal house was held of the 
Hospitallers by a rent of 10d., but he 
held other lands of the heir of Nicholas 
Skillicorn (by 18d. rent), William Stanley 
(14d.) and the borough of the vill of 
Preston (4d.) ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
ix, no. 19; x, no. 10, Henry the son, 
whose will is recited, died in 1599 hold- 


29 


PRESTON 


ing his father’s lands, with the addition 
of Arom’s house and lands lately acquired 
of William Arom, deceased, held of the 
mayor and burgesses. William, his son 
and heir, was seventeen years old ; ibid. 
xvili, no. 45. William died in 1640 
holding the same estate and leaving as 
heir a son Henry, aged thirty-five ; ibid. 
xxix, no. 8, The pedigree states that 
Henry died about 1654, leaving a son 
William, aged eighteen in 1664. Henry 
was a Royalist, and his estate was 
sequestered by the Parliament ; Cal. Com. 
for Comp. iv, 2822. The arms of Preston 
of Preston have the chief gules in 
Dugdale’s visitation, but its tincture is 
sable in the visitation of 1613. 

M3 An earlier barony of Preston is 
said to have been conferred upon the 
family, 1360-90. See G.E.C. Complete 
Peerage, iv, §5. The arms of Preston 
Viscount Gormanston are Or on a chief 
sable three crescents of the field. 

1144 An outline of the family deeds, as 
extant about 1480, is printed in Hist. 
MSS. Com. Rep. iv, 574, &c. It is not 
possible to compile a clear descent there- 
from. The Preston deeds mostly range 
from about 1290 to 1350, and refer, it 
appears, to two families chiefly, one de- 
rived from an Award de Preston -s. 
Roger (the Tailor) -s. Robert (the Tailor) 
-s. Henry -bro. Roger; and the other 
from an Adam de Preston -s. William 
-s. Robert. Thus Roger son of Robert 
the Tailor of Preston made a grant of 
land to William de Preston, burgess 
of Drogheda. This family are often 
erroneously described as ‘lords of Pres- 
ton’; they were merely burgesses, as 
appears from their charters and the Guild 
Rolls. In 1397 Christopher son of 
Robert de -Preston—perhaps there were 
two of the name—was admitted as a 
burgess, and Christopher and Robert his 
son in 1415 3 Preston Guild R, 2, 5, 7. 

The following local names occur in the 
deeds: Fishwickgate, Fishergate, Aven- 
hamends, Broadlache, Broughton Bridge 
(1312), Gerelriding, Ingolriding, Quint- 
acre, Pepperfield, Newfield under Fulwood, 
Platfordale, Moorplat, the Friars’ Garden, 
Swaghwell Syke near the Magdalene’s 
Hospital. 

In 1458 Thomas Nelson acquired lands 
in Longton and Preston from Robert 
Preston of Drogheda, and four years later 
Matthew Bolton and Margaret his wife 
purchased all or part from Thomas Nelson 
and Agnes his wife ; Final Conc. iii, 121, 
131. 

Isabel widow of James Harrington of 
Wolfage in 1518 held lands of the heir 
of William de Preston in burgage ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, no. 2. 

Ewan Browne of Ribbleton in 1544 
held two burgages in Preston of Lord 
Gormanston by a rent of 12d., and George 
Browne likewise in 15675; but James 
Browne in 1586 held of the mayor, &c., 
in socage and by suit of court ; ibid. vii, 
no. 24.3 xi, no. 43 xiv, no. 42. 

Thomas Skinner in 1577 purchased 
Christopher Lord Gormanston’s estate in 
Preston and district ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F, bdle. 39, m. 97. Later deeds re- 
garding Skinner’s estate were enrolled 
in the Common Pleas, Trin. 1599, rot. 
15; Mich. 1599, rot. 27; Trin. 1600, 
Tot. 9. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


of Peel Hall, &c.," Blundell,""® Burnhull,'” Erghum 


115 Thomas son of Thomas Banastre 
claimed 3 acres in Preston in 1292 
against Simon the Clerk and Margery his 
wife, and it was found that one Richard 
Banastre had disseised Thomas Banastre 
the father ; Assize R. 408, m. 56. Richard 
Banastre then was defendant in another 
plea; ibid. m. ror. Also later, in 1306; 
De Banco R. 158, m. 115d. For others 
of the family, ibid. 152, m. 215d. 
Nicholas and Hugh sons of Paulin de 
Preston claimed land by inheritance in 
1305 against Richard Banastre of Pres- 
ton, Henry de Kirkstile and others ; 
Assize R. 420, m. 8. Henry son of 
Richard Banastre of Preston is named in 
13135 Cal. Part. 1313-17, p- 53- 

Ellen widow of William de Southworth 
in 1323-4 claimed 20 acres against 
Henry Banastre of Preston ; De Banco R. 
251, m. 117d. Amery widow of Roger 
at Kirkstile claimed dower against Henry 
Banastre of Walton and others in 1334 ; 
ibid. 300, m. 109d. 

The Banastres of Bretherton had land, 
&c., in Preston ; it descended like Bal- 
derston, but the tenure is nowhere stated; 
Lancs. Inz. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 16, &c. 

In 1465 Richard Banastre of Preston 
the younger received from the mayor, 
&c., land on Sicling Moor between the 
new intake of John Breton and Brome- 
field Bank (that had been Henry Banas- 
tre’s) ; Kuerden MSS. iv, P12. 

William Banastre and Grace his wife 
were defendants in 1494-5; Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R. 79, m. gd. Lawrence 
Banastre of Walton died in 1558 holding 
a capital mess .iaze in Preston of the mayor 
and burgesses in free burgage ; Duchy of 
Lanc, Ing. p.m. xi, no. §8. Richard 
Banastre appears as vendor in 1548 and 
later ; he and his wife Isabel in 1570 and 
1572 made settlements of messuages and 
lands in Preston and Walton; Pal. of 
Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 13, m. 1245 27, 
m. 148 (water-mill); 32, m. 733 34, 
m. 161, 

Among several Banastres at the guilds 
of 1562 and 1582 were Richard Banastre 
of Peel Hall, with sons Thomas, Law- 
rence and George ; Preston Guild R. 20, 32. 
See also the Maudlands deeds in Piccope 
MSS. (Chet. Lib.), iii, 330-4. Peel Hall 
seems to have been near Deepdale Road 
station. 

U6 Collections of the deeds of this 
family are in Harl. MS. 2112, fol. 
96/1375; 2042, fol. 171. They show 
that the estates in Preston and neighbour- 
ing townships had been acquired from 
various sources, 

William son of Adam the White gave 
lands to Cockersand Abbey about 1240; 
Cockersand Chartul. i, 216. White’ 
may be Blundell. Richard Blundell and 
Joan his wife had two burgages in Pres- 
ton in 1367; Harl. MS. 2112, fol. 
to1b/142b. Two years later William son 
of Richard Blundell had lands in Cuerden ; 
ibid, 1006/1416. William del Ashes in 
1373 complained that Richard Blundell 
had been depasturing his land at Preston; 
De Banco R, 451, m. 163. 

William Rose of Ingol in 1377-8 
granted Richard Blundell of Preston land 
in Ingol in Ashton formerly belonging to 
Robert son of John de Blackburn, and 
Richard occurs again the following year ; 
Harl, MS. 2112, fol. gy4/1406, 1016/1425. 
In 1387-8 Richard Blundell and John 
his son appear; ibid. fol. y3/139. John 


married Agnes daughter of John de 
Middleton about that time; Harl. MS. 
2042, fol. 171. Agnes was a widow in 
1420; Harl. MS. 2112, fol. 98/139. 
Richard son of John Blundell made a 
feoffment in 1435-63 ibid. In 1454-5 
various lands in Preston, Broughton, 
Ingol, Brockholes and Lancaster were 
granted by the feoftees to John Blundell 
(son of Richard son of John) and to 
Agnes widow of John Blundell the grand- 
father; ibid. fol. 1004/1414. In the 
following year John Blundell and Alice 
his wife made a settlement; ibid. An 
assignment of dower was made to Alice 
widow of John Blundell in 1493-4; ibid. 

The succession is not quite clear, John 
seems to have been succeeded by brothers 
William and Richard; ibid. In 1511 
Alice wife of John Blundell was bound 
to stand an award in matters disputed 
between her and Richard the brother of 
John Blundell ; ibid. fol. 98/139. John 
Hogson and Elizabeth his wife (daughter 
and heir of Richard Blundell) in 1524 
gave lands in Preston, Broughton, Haigh- 
ton, &c., to Agnes Blundell sister of 
Elizabeth ; ibid. fol. 1o1é/1424. The 
heir male seems to have been Richard 
son of Robert Blundell, described as 
cousin and heir of William Blundell, who 
in 1534 gave lands in Preston to Ellen 
Blundell, widow ; ibid. fol. 99/140. This 
Richard seems to have had a son John, 
living in 1546; ibid. fol. 100/141. Richard 
had also a brother Henry, to whom he 
became bound in 1543; ibid. fol. 994/140, 
Richard and Henry his brother were both 
burgesses of Preston Guild in 1542, and 
the latter seems to have been ancestor of 
the later Blundells; Fishwick, Preston, 
356. From a fine of 1558 it appears that 
Joan daughter of Richard Blundell, de- 
ceased, had married Henry Nicholson ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 20, m. 73. 
The estate was in Preston, Broughton, 
Ingol, Brockholes and Lancaster. Henry 
Blundell was in possession in 1560; ibid. 
bdle. 22, m. 93. 

Robert Blundell of Ince died in 1615 
holding a messuage in Preston of the 
king in socage ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), ii, 28. 

U7 Sir Thurstan de Holland, perhaps 
about 1270, granted a burgage in Preston 
to Nicholas de Burnhull ; Dods. MS. liii, 
fol. 88 5. Roger son of Adam and Henry 
son of Mirre, then bailiffs, attested, and 
the appended seal is curious as showing 
three bulls’ heads with a chief vair, and 
the legend ++ : THVRSTANI : DE : HOLAND. 
Robert de Burnhull and Beatrice his wife 
purchased a messuage in 13523; Final 
Conc. ii, 134. 

418 The name appears at the end of the 
14th century among the mayors and clergy 
of the parish church. William de Ergham 
(Arkholme) was guild mayor in 1397, and 
the name, degenerating to Arrom, appears 
down to the 17th century. It has been 
shown above that Arom House was sold to 
the Preston family ; it is said to have been 
acquired later by the Pattens, who on the 
site erected their great mansion, afterwards 
the town residence of the Earls of Derby; 
Fishwick, op. cit. 75. 

William Arram and Anne his wife had 
a messuage, &c., in Preston in 15833 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 45, m. 28. 

119 Gilbert de Fishwick held a messuage 
and 14 acres claimed by Roger son of 
Baldwin the Kirkman in 12923; Assize 


100 


or Arrom,"® Fishwick,"® Hacconsall,"” Marshall," 


R. 408, m. 39d. Maud widow of Hugh 
de Preston in 1323-4 claimed dower 
against John the Marshal and Hugh de 
Fishwick ; De Banco R. 248, m. 120d, 
Hugh son of Richard Mabbeson of Fish- 
wick was defendant in 1333; ibid. 294, 
m. 186d. William son of Roger de Fish- 
wick of Preston was defendant in 1346-7; 
ibid. 347, m. 1584.53 352, m. 338d, 
There was a dispute in 1360 concerning 
seven messuages, &c., between William 
son of William son of Richard de Ribbleton 
and others plaintiffs, and John de Fishwick 
and Christiana his wife defendants ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Assize R. 8, m. 11. 

In 1420 Thomas son of Nicholas Fish- 
wick acquired a messuage from John 
Tyrell 5 Final Cone. iii, 78. 

120 Geoffrey de Hacconsall and Margery 
his wife were among the defendants to a 
claim for dower brought in 1339 by Mar- 
gery widow of Henry son of Robert de 
Preston; De Banco R. 279, m. 192d, 
Geoffrey in 1340 obtained land in Wood- 
holme from Albred son of Adam son of 
Ralph de Preston ; Duchy of Lanc. Assize 
R. 2, m. iiid. William the son and Mar- 
gery the widow of Geoffrey were defen- 
dants in 1356, when Simon de Preston 
claimed certain land; ibid. 5, m. 26, 
This Simon was son of John son of 
Robert son vf Adam de Preston, and 
brother and heir of Robert son and 
heir of John; Assize R. 435,m.9. A 
claim made by Thomas son of Nicholas 
Deuias son of Agnes daughter of William 
the Smith shows that this William and 
Alice his wife had made a grant to William 
son of Geoffrey de Hacconsall. Nicholas 
Deuias had died at Calais, leaving Thomas 
his son under age in 1353 3 ibid. m. 22. 
William the Smith was living in 1338; 
Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 396. 

John the grandson of Geoffrey was out- 
lawed and hanged for felony at Berwick, 
and in 1406 his heir was found to be his 
brother Roger. A pedigree is given, but 
the tenure of the burgages, &c., is not 
recorded ; Lancs, Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 
81-3. In 1411 acharter was enrolled by 
which Robert Hacconsall gave William 
Dutton a house in Fishergate and a rood 
of land annexed to the same and 3 acres 
in the moor near the highway to Ribble- 
ton ; Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxili, App. 10. 

121 Richard the Marshal of Preston 
complained in 1292 that William son of 
Paulin de Preston had detained his wite 
Milla in prison for a week ; Assize R. 
408, m. 20. William the Marshal was « 
defendant in 1302; De Banco R. 144, 
m. 319. Alan the Marshal occurs in 

1329; ibid. 279, m. 192d. John the 
Marshal in 1330 received a messuage 
from William son of Adam de Tyrel of 
Preston ; Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 224. 
Alexander the Marshal in 1347 obtained 
a messuage, &c., from William son of 
John de Ashton and Alice his wife; 
Final Conc. ii, 124. In 1352 Cecily 
widow of Alexander son of William the 
Marshal acquired the fourth part of 
certain messuages owned by Roger Starkie 
and Maud his wife; ibid. 134 

John the Marshal and Alice his wife in 
1376 obtained 2 acres from John Hunt 
and Agnes his wife; ibid. 191. It is 
possible that Alice was the widow of 
Roger de Birewath, about whose lands 
inquiry was made in 1394-5, when ut 
was found that Roger had died without 
heir and that his widow had married John 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Leyland.” Molyneux of Cuerdale,”* Pelle, Wall, 


(OQ 


Preston of Preston. Breres. Ermine on ? Kurrven. Per bend 
Or on a chief gules three a canton azure a falcon sinister or and azure a 
crescents of the field. volant or. griffin segreant counter- 


Walton, with lands also in Fishwick and Ashton," 


le Marshal ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), 
i, 563; Dep. Keeper's Rep. xl, App. 527. 
Roger was living in 1372 ; Kuerden MSS. 
ii, fol, 224. 

James Marshall was a burgess in 
14593 Preston Guild R. 11. In 1483 he 
held lands in Preston in conjunction with 
Grace his wife ; the tenure is not stated ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 119-20. 

From a fine of 1526 it appears that 
George Henryson married Grace daughter 
of Lawrence Marshall; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 11, m. 168. 

122 Roger de Leyland and Maud his 
wife in 1307 claimed an acre against 
Richard son of Adam Russel ; De Banco 
R. 162, m. 198. John son of Thomas 
de Leyland was plaintiff in 1344 against 
John de Leyland of Preston and others ; 
Assize R. 1435, m. 43d. Margaret 
widow of John de Leyland and Cecily his 
daughter and heir, who had married 
Henry son of John de Coppull, appear in 
13583 Assize R. 438, m. 13d. Another 
John Leyland and Cecily his wife occur 
in 1387 and 1422 ; Final Conc. iii, 30, 81. 

18 Ibid. ii, 135, 148. This estate 
seems to have been afterwards held by 
Lord Mounteagle ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
p-m. v, no. 64. In 1560, however, his 
Preston lands were held as part of the 
lordship of Hornby ; ibid. xi, no. 1. 

124 William Pelle son of Adam in 1303 
claimed a messuage and 1} acres against 
Ismania Pelle, who had entry by Richard 
Pelle, to whom Adam had demised when 
(so it was alleged) he was of unsound 
mind ; De Banco R. 148, m. 43 5 Assize 
R. 420, m. 5. 

125 A Thomas Wall occurs in the guild 
of 14153 Preston Guild R. 7. The 
family did not attain any prominence till 
the first half of the 16th century, when 
two brothers Lawrence and Evan Wall 
acquired estates; Add. MS. 32109, fol. 
119. Fines of 1556 and later refer to 
their possessions ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 17, m. 1263 25, m. 183, &c. At 
the guild of 1562 Thomas Wall was 
mayor, Evan his brother was a seneschal 
and Lawrence clerk of the guild, while 
Anthony son of William (apparently 
deceased) and heir of Evan Wall was 
enrolled ; Preston Guild R. 20. See a 
subsequent note. 

126 In 1319-20 Roger son of Henry son 
of Wasce de Cuerdale granted half a bur- 
gage to John son of Geoffrey de Walton ; 
Towneley MS. OO, no. 1096. William 
de Walton and Alice his wife made a 
settlement in 1386 ; Final Conc. iii, 27. 

John de Walton, a mercer, was living 
in the time of Richard II, and acquired 


changed. 


messuages, &c., in Preston and Ashton ; 
Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 226. He made a 
feoffment of his lands in the townships 
just named and in Fishwick in 1407 ; 
Harl. MS. 2042, fol. 1675. He occurs 
again in the time of Henry V and his 
widow Agnes in 1419; Kuerden MS. ii, 
fol. 224. Henry Walton of Marsden in 
1437-8 released his right in the family 
estates to Richard son of John Walton of 
Preston ; ibid. A little later, in 1444-5, 
the feoffees gave lands to John Breton and 
Agnes his wife—apparently the widow 
above-named — with remainders to 
Richard Walton of Preston, &c.; ibid. 
fol. 226. 

Various members of the family or 

families occur in the pleadings about this 
time ; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 8, m. 13, 
3163 9, m. 104, 16, 194. A William 
Walton, spicer, and Joan his wife were 
living in 1465 ; Kuerden MSS. iv, P 120, 
no. 41. 
John Highfield (temp. Edw. IV) made 
claims against John the son and Isabel 
the widow of Richard Preston and against 
John the son and Joan the widow of 
William Walton ; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 
23,1. 6. 

James son of Richard Walton was a 
burgess in 14593; Preston Guild R. 11. 
In 1485-6 the feoffees gave to James son 
of Richard Walton certain burgages, &c.; 
Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 227. 

James the son of Richard occurs from 
1462 onwards, but was dead in 1499, 
when his widow Ellen and son James 
are named; Duchy of Lanc. Anct. D. 
(P.R.O.), L 1059 (the collection contains 
other Walton family deeds). 

From pleadings of 1528-32 the latter 
James appears to have had two sons 
Richard and Thomas, the latter settling 
at Bermondsey, while Richard was suc- 
ceeded by his son James, called ‘the 
younger,’ and his lands were in part the 
rectory lands, held on lease from the Dean 
and Chapter of the New College of 
Leicester by a rent of 13s. 4d.3 Duchy 
Plead. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), ii, 
5-8. 

The elder and the younger James 
Walton were aldermen of the guild of 
15423 Preston Guild R. 15. In 1544 
James Walton the elder purchased two 
messuages or burgages, &c., from John 
Stodagh ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 
12, m. 132. 

In 1558 Richard son and heir of James 
Walton—‘ the younger’ according to the 
Guild Roll—gave lands in Preston and 
Fishwick to George Walton his brother ; 
Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 227. Grace widow 


IOI 


PRESTON 


descending by an heiress to French, Werden,” and 


Wincktey. 


Per pale 
argent and gules an eagle 
displayed counterchanged. 


Wich ® ; of these the Walls recorded pedigrees in 


of James Walton and Richard their son 
and heir appear in 1564 ; ibid. 

Richard Walton died in 1569 holding 
certain burgages and a horse-mill of the 
queen in socage as of her manor of East 
Greenwich ; other burgages and lands, &c., 
in Preston, Fishwick and Ashton of the 
queen by a rent of 7s. James, the son 
and heir, was only four months old; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiii, no. 26. 
James Walton died in 1598 holding the 
same estate, and leaving a son Richard 
ten years old ; ibid. xvii,no.66. Richard 
Walton was an alderman of the guild of 
1622, and his sons James and William 
were then enrolled; Preston Guild R. 
65-6. 

James Walton died in 1635 holding 
the estate described ; his son and heir 
Richard was only two years old; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvii, no. 34. Richard 
died the same year, leaving an infant 
sister Anne as heir; ibid. xxviii, no. 63. 
Anne afterwards married Edward French. 

Besides this main line there were other 
branches of the family well known in 
Preston. 

127 Fishwick, op. cit. 274-6. 

James Werden, mercer, died in 1607 
holding burgages, &c., in Fishergate, Hep- 
greave, Cawsey Meadow and Great 
Avenham of the king in free burgage by 
2d, rent; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), i, 97. He left a son 
and heir Edmund, aged twelve. His will 
is recited in the inquisition. 

128 In 1325-6 William son of Paulin 
de Preston claimed land against John son 
of Roger del Wich and against John son 
of Adam del Wich; De Banco R. 260, 
m. 50. John (perhaps the second of 
these) in 1328 purchased a messuage in 
Preston from Adam Agnesson and Amery 
his wife ; Final Conc. ii, 70. Adam son 
of Adam del Wich appears in 1335 and 
1348 ; Towneley MS. OO, no. 1117; 
Kuerden MSS. iii, P7. A Roger son of 
John de Wich was in 1339 pardoned for 
the death of William son of Nicholas de 
Preston. He had broken out of prison at 
Lancaster and had abjured the realm ; 
Cal, Pat. 1338-40, p. 337. John del 
Wich was a bailiff of Preston in 1347, 
and Roger del Wich was mayor in 1366 ; 
OO, no. 1105, 1116. 

Alice widow of John del Wich re- 
covered a messuage, mill, &c., in July 
1351 against Roger son of Roger de 
Birewath ; Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 1, 
m. 4. At the same time Roger del Wich 
and Ellen daughter of Adam del Wich 
were defendants in a Mirreson suit ; ibid. 
The messuage of Roger del Wich escheated 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


1567'® and 1664,'° and Banastre'' and Blun- 
In 1613 pedigrees were 


dell in the latter year. 


recorded by two families named Breres, 


In 1664-5, in 


them holding the old Friary.'* 


addition to those named, the families of Ashton, 
Hesketh,” 
Johnson,“ Kuerden,'” Law,'? Legh,"* Lemon," 
Mort, Pigot,® Shaw “” and Winckley '* recorded 


Chorley,'* French,” 


to the duke for felony, and in 1359 was 
regranted to Roger and his heirs at a rent 
of 25.3 Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 340. 

12 Dugdale, isi, (Chet. Soc.), 49. 
Anthony Wall, the grandson and heir of 
Evan (already named), terminates the 
descent. He acquired Chingle Hall in 
Whittingham by his mother, Ann Single- 
ton. He died in 1601 holding nine 
messuages, a windmill and lands in 
Preston (tenure not stated’, and lands in 
Whittingham and Haighton; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xviii, no. 6. William 
his son and heir, then aged eicht, died at 
Whittingham in 1626, leaving a son 
William, eight years of age; ibid. xxvi, 
no. $0. 

189 Dugdale, #11, (Chet. Soc.), 323. 
Their arms are Argent a bend gules 
between three boars’ heads couped sable 
armed argent. For the later descents 
see Fishwick, Preston, 241. 

In 1664 the Walls of Moor Hall also 
recorded a pedigree ; Dugdale, op. cit. 324. 
They were descended from the above- 
mentioned Lawrence, brother of Evan 
Wall. Further descents may be seen in 
Fishwick, op, cit. 243-4. 

181 Dugdale, Visit, 25. Their arms 
were entered as Argent a pair of water- 
bougets sable, ona chief of the field three 
fleurs de lis of the second. One of the 
later members of the family is supposed 
to be the ‘brave Banastre,’ innkeeper, 
who entertained ‘Drunken Barnaby’ ; 
Fishwick, of. cit. 350, 

183 Dugdale, op. cit. 40. Blundell of 
Preston differenced the arms of Blundell 
of Ince by changing their canton into 
argent with a squirrel sejant gules, 

18 FF. (Chet. Ssc.), 93, 95. See 
also Fishwick, op. cit. 323-7. 

14 Oliver Breres purchased a messuage 
and land in Preston in 1544 from 
Humphrey Newton and Etheldreda his 
wife, and made a further purchase in 
1564 in conjunction with Elizabeth his 
wife, from Richard Greenacres; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 12, m. 135; 26, 
m. 58. Oliver Breres and John his son 
and heir were at the guild of 1562; 
Preston Guild R. 20. 

Oliver died in 1572, leaving as heir his 
above-named son John, then twenty-seven 
years of age, and husband of Elizabeth 
daughter of William Lister. The site of 
the Grey Friars, the church, belfry, ceme- 
tery, &c., was held of the queen by 
knight’s service; a kiln house, horse- 
mill, windmill, &c., were held of the 
mayor and burgesses by free burgage ; 
there were also lands in Bowland 3 Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiii, no. 13. Oliver's 
widow Cecily was living in 15923; Ex- 
chequer Dep. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.\, 7. 

In 1608-9 Oliver Breres of Hamerton, 
Mary his wife, Thomas his brother and 
Bridget his wife conveyed to Roger Langton 
of Preston a burgaze in the market-place 
with 14 acres appurtenant, the house of 
the Friars Minors or Grey Friars and 
lands therewith, with right of turbary in 
Penwortham Moss, and a windmill in 


Sone of 


135 


lawyers. 
Hodgkinson,” 


Preston ; Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), 
xiv, 73. From other deeds (p. 74) it 
appears that the burgage referred to was 
the Castle Inn. For the Langton family 
see the account of Broughton. 

185 Dugdale, Visit, 12 3 they were a 
branch of the Ashtons of Croston, whose 
arms, Argent a cheveron between three 
chaplets gules, they differenced with a 
crescent. 

136 Ibid. 82 ; see also Fishwick, op. cit. 
329. They bore the arms of Chorley of 
Chorley. 

187 Dugdale, Fisit, 112. The family 
was descended from Matthew French, 
rector of North Meols, whose son Edward, 
as already stated, married Anne daughter 
and heir of James Walton of Preston. 
No arms were exemplified, 

135 Dugdale, Visit. 1373 a branch of 
the family of Whitehill in Goosnargh. 
They differenced the arms of Hesketh of 
Rufford with a canton argent. 

189 TL id. 142. They bore arms Or a 
cross quarter-pierced and five cinquc- 
foils vert. An account of the family, 
with pedigree and abstracts of deeds, ap- 
peared in the Pal. Note Bk. iv, 163, 188, 
221. Among other local names appear 
the Rushy heys, the Knoll heys (between 
a venella called Ribbleton Lane on the 
south and a road called Daykergate on the 
west), Rawmoors and Farthing Hill. 

Luke Hodgkinson, who had adhered 
“to the forces raised against the Parlia- 
ment in the first war,’ compounded for 
his ‘delinquency’ in 1649. He had a 
horse-mill and some land in Preston ; 
Royalist Comp. P. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), iii, 231. 

Two of the name, Luke and Henry 
Hodgkinson, were attainted for taking 
part in the rebellion of 1715 ; Fishwick, 
op. cit. 66 3 Preston Guild R. 169. Fora 
Lancashire Jesuit named Charles Hodg- 
kinson, 1700-70, see Foley, Rec. S. J. 
vii, 363. 

M9 Dugdale, Visit. 164 ; they came 
from Welch Whittle and bore arms 
Argent a lion passant gules, on a chief or 
three acorns vert. 

Ml Tbid. 1673; see the account of 
Cuerden, 

8 Thid. 178. Their arms were Argent 
an eagle double-headed displayed vert. 

43 A branch of the family of Legh of 
Lyme, whose arms, Gules a cross en- 
grailed argent, they differenced with a 
canton or ; ibid. 182. 

M4 Thid. 184 ; a Walton-le-Dale family. 
A continuation of the pedigree may be 
seen in Fishwick, op. cit. 234. There is 
also printed the inventory of the goods of 
Edmund Lemon, 1609, showing the shop 
fixtures and household stuff of a prosperous 
townsman ; ibid. 226-30. By William 
Lemon’s will the estates went in 1724 to 
his kinsman John Winckley ; ibid. 232. 
No arms were exemplified in 1664. 

M5 Digdale, Visit, 212, where no 
arms are given, Adam Mort, mayor, 
killed when Preston was captured by 
the Parliamentarians in 1643, has been 
mentioned. The family occurs also in 


102 


their pedigrees as ‘of Preston.’ 
: ison 8 
names appear in the 17th century—as Addison, 
Patten,'™ ancestors of the Earls of Derby,"™ Pedder,'! 
Sudell '? and Walmesley.'* 
In later times others become prominent, 
as manufacturers brought wealth to the town and 
increased its population.’ 
Under the Commonwealth the estates of several of 


Other well-known 


Many of these were 


Leigh and Hulton. What became of the 
Preston branch is not clear; Fishwick, 
op. cit. 323. 

From the Royalist Comp. P. (iv, 196-8) 
it appears that Adam Mort of Preston was 
the third son of Adam Mort of Tyldesley 
and in 1622 married Elizabeth daughter 
of Seth Bushellof Preston. The younger 
Adam had two children (Seth and Janet), 
who petitioned the Sequestration Com- 
missioners in 1651, Scth's estate having 
been ‘secured for acts of delinquency 
supposed to have been done by him.’ 

M6 Dugdale, /isit. 233. Their arms are 
Ermine three lozenges conjoined in fesse 
sable, quartering Kay and Parkinson. 

M7 Tbid, 259 ; they traced their ancestry 
to ‘William Shaw of Shaw Hall in Ley- 
land,’ and bore arms Argent a cheveron 
ermine and a canton gules. The pedi- 
gree is continued to the present date by 
Fishwick, op. cit. 341. A junior branch 
acquired the manor of Fishwick (q.v.). 

M8 Dugdale, Visit, 334. See further in 
the account of Brockholes, 

49 Thomas Addison, haberdasher, and 
his three sons were burgesses in 1582; 
Preston Guild R. 44. Thomas Batty Addi- 
son was recorder of the borough till his 
death in 1874. 

150 William Patten and his two sons were 
members of the guild in 1642 ; ibid. 101. 

150a The inheritance passed by an heiress 
to the Stanleys of Bickerstaffe and so to 
the Earls of Derby; see the account of 
Thornley in Chipping. 

151 Richard and Thomas, sons of Thomas 
Pedder, deceased, were burgesses in 1682; 
ibid. 173. The Pedders were bankers and 
acquired great wealth and many estates in 
the neighbourhood, remaining till the bank 
stopped payment in 1861. 

Abram (Blackburn, 728) gives the descent 
thus: Thomas Pedder, d. 1680 -s. Richar/, 
d. 1726 ~s. Richard, d. 1762 —8, Edward, 
d. 1818 -s. Edward of Walton-le-Dale, 
d. 1835. The last-named had brothers 
Thomas and James, James Pedder of 
Ashton Lodge died in 1846. 

Colonel Charles Denison Pedder served 
in the Crimean War; Hewitson, Preston, 
376. 182 Fishwick, op. cit. 350-3. 

158 The Walmesleys seem to have in- 
herited the estate of the Walls of Moor 
Hall above-mentioned. A fine was made 
in 1739-40 concerning thirty-four mes- 
suages, lands, &c., in Preston, Fulwood, 
Haighton and other places, the deforciants 
being Lawrence Wall and Elizabeth his 
wife, Nicholas Walmesley, Elizabeth bis 
wife and Margaret Wall; Pal. of Lanc 
Feet of F. bdle. 322, m. 118, Four years 
later the same estate appears to have been 
divided between Nicholas Walmesley and 
Elizabeth his wife on one side and John 
Hardman and Margaret his wife on the 
other ; ibid. bdle. 330, m. 63. From the 
pedigree in Fishwick (op. cit. 244) it 
would seem that Elizabeth and Margaret 
were daughters and co-heirs of James Wall, 
elder brother of the Lawrence named. 

154 John Cross made a_ purchase of 
lands in 17733 Pal. of Lane, Feet of F. 
bdle. 400, m. 150. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


the townsmen were sequestrated for political or 
religious reasons," and in 1717 two ‘ Papists’ 
registered estates in the township.’ 

The parish church has been described above. 
The population remaining comparatively stationary 
no other church was needed in the town till 1724, 
when St. George’s '” was built as a chapel of ease at 
what was then the western edge of the town. A 
parish was attached to it in 1844."° ‘The building 
was encased in stone in 1845, and almost entirely 
rebuilt in 1885. After the lapse of nearly a century 
a great effort was made to provide additional accom- 
modation, and the following churches have been 
built :—Holy Trinity 1814-15," St. Peter’s 1822,' 
St. Paul’s 1823-5,’ Christ Church 1836-7,’ St. 
James’s, built by a newly-formed denomination, 
acquired in 1838, rebuilt 1870-81,'* St. Mary’s 
1836-8," St. Thomas’s 1837-9,'° All Saints’ 
1846-8." Somewhat later are :—St. Luke’s'® and 
St. Saviour’s 1859,'* St. Mark’s 1863,'° Emmanuel 
1870,'” St. Stephen’s, first opened as a chapel of ease 
to Christ Church in 1869, the present church being 
erected in 1888,’ St. Matthew’s 1880—3,'? and St. 
Jude’s 1893.'% There are mission rooms connected 
with several of the churches. St. Philip’s Protestant 
Church was opened in 1894-6." 


PRESTON 


Wesleyan Methodism obtained a standing in the 
town about 1781,'° when it is stated that a room in 
St. John’s Street was used"°; in 1787 a small 
chapel in Back Lane was erected.” The church in 
Lune Street succeeded it about 1817,'% and was 
practically rebuilt in 1862; Wesley Church, North 
Road, originated in 1839,’ that at Moor Park in 
1862,' Marsh Lane in 1873," and two others. 
The Primitive Methodists appeared in 1810,'* their 
first meeting-place being in a yard off Friargate ; 
then they built a chapel in Lawson Strect, which 
was in 1836-7 abandoned for that in Saul Street. 
A mission in Deepdale, begun about 1876, resulted 
in the present church there. The United Methodist 
Free Church’ has Orchard Chapel, built in 1831 
and rebuilt 1862, and Moor Lane, 1873, which has 
absorbed the congregation of Parker Street Chapel, 
built in 1852. 

The Congregationalists date from about 1772,’ 
when, probably on account of the Unitarianism of 
the old Nonconformist chapel, a place of worship for 
the more Evangelical members was opened in Back 
Lane. Lady Huntingdon helped the cause, which 
struggled on until in 1790 an Independent chapel 
was built in Chapel Street; it was in 1826 
removed to Cannon Street. This church was 


Notices of the families of Prichard and 
Grimshaw are given in Fishwick, op. cit. 
335) 353- 

155 Some cases have been already named. 
The lands of Thomas Shepherd of Preston 
were declared forfeit in 1652 and sold; 
Index of Royalists (Index Soc.), 443 Cal. 
Com. for Comp. iv, 3134. In 1649 
Thomas Vavasour compounded for his 
‘delinquency ’ in taking arms against the 
Parliament ‘in both wars’; ibid. iii, 
2012. This surname does not occur in 
the Guild Rolls, Two-thirds of the estate 
of Grace Wilkinson, deceased, had been 
sequestered for her recusancy, and a dis- 
charge was granted in 1655; ibid. vy, 
3220, She was perhaps the Grace 
Wilkinson named in connexion with land 
in Whittingham in 1598 ; Ducatus Lanc. 
(Rec. Com.), iii, 397. 

436 Richard Jackson and Anne Hodg- 
kinson ; Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Non-jurors, 97, 155. 

157 Hewitson, Preston, 471-5, where 
the monuments are described. One of 
the incumbents, Robert Harris, B.D., 
formerly Fellow of Sidney Sussex Coll., 
Camb., held it for the long period of 
sixty-four years, from 1797 to 1862. 
The vicar of Preston is patron. 

Descriptions of this and other modern 
churches with lists of incumbents will be 
found in Fishwick, op. cit. 153, &c. 

158 Lond. Gaz. 20 Feb. 

159 The site was formerly known as 
Patten Field. The money for it was 
raised by subscriptions and the sale of 
pews. It had at one time the most 
influential congregation in the town; 
Hewitson, op. cit. 475-6. 

A parish was assigned to it in 1844 3 
Lond, Gaz. 20 Feb, The vicar of Preston 
presents. 

160 The original cost was defrayed from 
‘the million grant.’ The spire was added 
in 1852. A tombstone in the graveyard 
commemorates Richard Turner (1846) as 
‘author of the word Teetotal, as applied 
to abstinence from intoxicating liquors’ ; 
Hewitson, op. cit. 478. The parish was 
formed in 18443; Lond. Gaz. 20 Feb. 
The vicar of Preston ie patron. 


161 This church also was built from the 
parliamentary grant ; Hewitson, op. cit. 
478. The parish was formed in 1844; 
Lond. Gaz. 20 Feb. The vicar of Preston 
is patron. 

16? Hewitson, op. cit.481. The mission 
room in Savoy Street originally belonged 
to the Methodists, but was sold by them 
in 1880; ibid. The patronage is vested 
in trustees, 

168 The builders styled themselves the 
* Primitive Episcopal Church’ ; they were 
unable to pay for it. It was first a 
chapel of ease to the parish church, but 
consecrated in 1841 for an independent 
parish ; Hewitson, op. cit. 485-92. The 
vicar of Preston presents. The district 
was created in 1844; Lond, Gaz. 20 Feb. 

164 Hewitson, op. cit. 485. The patron- 
age is vested in trustees. 

165 The cost was defrayed by the Hynd- 
man fund, and Miss Hyndman’s trustees 
are patrons ; ibid. 484. 

166 The origin of the church is interest- 
ing. A number of poor working men 
began subscribing for a new church for a 
clergyman who, as curate, had endeared 
himself to them; it was therefore called 
the ‘poor man’s church’; ibid. 492. 
The patronage is vested in trustees. 

167 Thid. 493. The parish was formed 
in 18603; Lond. Gaz. 3 Aug. Simeon’s 
Trustees are patrons. 

168 Hewitson, op. cit. 495-7. The 
church occupies the site of the old Baptist 
chapel, 1783. After being purchased in 
1859 it was used for service till 1866 and 
then pulled down for the erection of the 
present church, opened in 1868. The 
parish was formed in 1869 ; Lond. Gaz. 
16 Apr. The vicar of St. James’s presents. 

169 Hewitson, op. cit. 495. The parish 
was formed in 1866 ; Lond. Gaz. 2 Jan. 
The patronage is exercised alternately by 
the vicar of Preston and the trustees of 
Christ Church. 

170 Hewitson, op. cit. 497. The parish 
was formed in 1871 3 Lond. Gaz. 4 July. 
The vicar of Preston presents alternately 
with the incumbent of St. Peter's. 

171 Hewitson, op. cit. 483. The Bishop 
of Manchester collates. 


103 


172 Tbid. 498. The parish was formed 
in 1885. The Bishop of Manchester 
collates, 

78 Trustees have the patronage at 
present, but it will go to the Bishop of 
Manchester eventually. 

St. Philip’s, 1871, and St. Barnabas’s, 
1872, were school chapels of ease to St. 
Thomas’s and St. Paul’s, but have been 
disused for service since St. Jude’s was 
opened. 

‘74 Tt was built by those connected with 
St. Philip’s chapel of ease, who were dis- 
satisfied with St. Jude’s Church. 

15 The Methodist preachers first visited 
Preston about 1777 ; Hewitson, op. cit. 
519. 
6 Preston was included in Colne 
circuit in 1776, in Blackburn in 1787, 
and became head of a circuit in 1799. 
Wesley visited the town in 1780, 1781, 
1784. and 17903 Fishwick, Preston, 
170-1. 

177 This was afterwards sold and used 
as a warehouse ; Hewitson, op. cit. 520. 

V8 Ibid. 5213 lists of ministers are 
given. 

9 Ibid. 526. In 1868 this church 
became the head of a second circuit in 
Preston. 

180 Thid. 526. 

181 Thid. 525. 

182In St. Mary Street (1865) and 
Acregate Lane. There are also some 
mission rooms, - 

183 Ibid. 536. In addition to those 
named in the text there was an 
iron chapel in Fylde Road from 1879 
onwards, 

181 Thid. §34-5. The congregation 
which first built Orchard Chapel were 
known as Protestant Wesleyan Metho- 
dists ; Hardwick, Preston, 483. 

185 B, Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. i, 
21-47. The author, of whose work great 
use has been made in the present history, 
has since 1888 been minister of Cannon 
Street Church. 

186 This building was turned into 
offices and shops; it was at the west 
ern corner of Chapel Street and Fisher- 
gate. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


enlarged in 1352 and greatly altered in 1887. A 
second church was opened in Grimshaw Street in 
1808,!57 and this was rebuilt in 1859. A third, the 
result of a secession from Cannon Street, was built in 
Lancaster Road in 1863, a beginning having been 
made two years before.!™ 

The Baptist church in Fishergate has sprung from 
a small meeting which can be traced back to 1782.19 
‘A church was formed in the following year, with the 
concurrence of the Particular or Calvinistic Baptist 
Church in Prescot Street near the Tower of 
London. A building was erected in Leeming 
Street, now Manchester Road, in 1784—5,'%! and 
services went on there until about 1856; the old 
building was sold 19 and the present one in Fisher- 
gate was opened in 1858.!% A division in the 
congregation had in 1854 led to the foundation of a 
church in Pole Street,!* which had a continuous 
history until 1g01, about which time the congre- 
gation dissolved. The trustees afterwards reopened 
the building, known as Carey, the new church being 
formed in 1905 or 1906.!%° The General Baptists 
had a mission in the town from 1825 till about 
1840; they are thought to have used Vauxhall 
Chapel. This building, which had had various 
uses, was acquired about 1845 by a body of 
Baptists who clung to Calvinistic tenets when the 
denomination in general was relinquishing them 1’ ; 
in 1833 a division led to the building of a small 
chapel, called Zoar, in Regent Street,!% from which 
the congregation has migrated to Great Avenham 
Street. The Tabernacle, St. George’s Road, is 
another small Baptist church which has existed for 
about thirty years. 


The Presbyterian Church of England has a place 
of worship in St. Paul’s Square, opened in 1878.'% 

The Unitarian church in Preston, as in many 
other places, represents the old Nonconforming 
congregation, which had a more or less secret 
existence from the Act of Uniformity of 1662 till 
toleration was granted at the Revolution. The 
chapel, near the east end of Church Street, was built 
about 1717 by Sir Henry Hoghton of Hoghton. 
The doctrine is said to have been Arian or Unitarian 
from an early period of its history. 

The Society of Friends can be traced back to 
1680.2" Their meeting-house between Friargate 
and Back Lane was acquired in 1784 and rebuilt in 
1797 and 1847. The district and county meetings 
of the Society are held in it.2°% There is a Free 
Gospel church dating from 1858, and the Salvation 
Army has stations. The New Jerusalem Church in 
Avenham Road began in 1844.7°5 The Catholic 
Apostolic Church, or Irvingites, after meeting in 
various rooms acquired in 1882 a small church in 
Regent Street ?°° originally built by the Particular 
Baptists.2°7 Some minor religious efforts failed to 
secure a permanent standing.?°° The Mormons also 
failed to establish themselves.?° 

In spite of the large number of faithful adherents 
of Roman Catholicism known to have lived in Preston 
during the times of persecution there is here, as 
elsewhere, the greatest obscurity in the story of their 
worship,”!” though rooms may have been secretly 
used for mass even in the town itself, particularly in 
the Friargate district.2!!_ It was here that the first 
St. Mary’s Chapel was built in 1761. It was 
demolished by the mob during the election contest 


Is" Nightinzale, op. cit. i, 48-60. The 
first minister, William Manning Walker, 
had been the minister of the Unitarian 
congregation. Another notable pastor 
was Richard Slate, 1826-61, author of a 
Lfe of Oliver Heywood, &c. 

13 Nightingale, op. cit. i, 60-66. 

YW. Shaw, Fishergate Baptist Ch. 
(Preston, 1883). It is an error to regard 
these Baptists as belonging to the 
Arminian or General denomination. 

199 Some of the Preston Baptists were 
members of this congregation, which 
dates back to about 1635. 

191 The cause appears to have been a 
struggling one; it was fin a low con- 
dition’ in 1794 ; Rippon, Reg. 7. 

199 St. Saviour’s Church stands on the 
site of it; see above. The (Harris) 
Institution was used for service pending 
the erection of Fishergate Church. 

198 The Fishergate congregation was 
augmented by a small Scotch Baptist 
church formed about 1829. Hardwick 
(quoting Baines) calls them Sandemanians; 
they had a room in Church Street and 
from 1845 occupied a small chapel in 
Meadow Street. 

1% This section acquired a chapel 
caned St. Mark’s, built in 1826 for the 
Calvinistic Methodists of Lady Hunting- 
don’s Connexion, who had previously met 
in Cannon Street ; Baines, Lanes. Dir. 
1825, ii, 488. 

195 This and other information as to the 
Biptists is due to the Rev. Dr. Whitley, 
minister of the Fishergate Church. 

196 It was built originally for the New 
Connexion of Methodists about 1814, but 
was in 1819 sold to a ‘body of semi- 
Episcopalians,’ and called St. Paul's ; the 


service followed the form of the Estab- 
lished Church, but the minister was not 
ordained ; Baines, op. cit. Afterwards 
the Wesleyans had it, then the Baptists 
and others. 

‘97 Hardwick (quoting Baines) states 
that this congregation sprang up in 1833 
and met in Cannon Street. 

19% Hardwick, Preston, 482. 

199 Hewitson, op. cit. 537. 

200 The celebrated Nonconformist, Isaac 
Ambrose, formerly vicar, resided in the 
town from 1662 till his death in 1664. 
There is evidence of other Nonconformists 
living and preaching there ; Nightingale, 
op. cit. i, 9, 68. In 1689 licences for 
two Nonconformist meeting-places were 
granted ; Hist. MSS, Com. Rep. xiv, App. 
1¥, 232: 

John Turner, the minister in 1715, 
who was ‘a Calvinist of the most strict 
and rigid form,’ actively assisted the 
government forces during the Jacobite 
occupation of the town, he and his con- 
gregation being employed by General 
Wills as scouts; Nightingale, op. cit. i, 
Il. 

21 Hewitson, op. cit. 515-17. Mr. 
Nightingale, however, brings evidence to 
show that Unitarianism did not prevail 
till about 1770 3 op. cit. i, 22-3. 

202 A meeting-place was registered in 
1689; Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 
231. The registers begin in 1660 and 
the minutes of the Fylde (now Preston) 
monthly meeting in 1700 ; Fishwick, op. 
cit. 172. George Fox visited Preston 
several times, but it is not recorded that 
he preached there. 

203 Hewitson, op. cit. 517-19. 

*4 bid. 536. nas 


104 


205 Ibid. 535. 306 Thid. 537. 

207 Zoar Chapel, named above. 

208 The Countess of Huntingdon’s Con- 
nexion and the Methodist New Connexion 
have been mentioned. Hardwick (op. cit. 
483) states that a Primitive Episcopalian 
Chapel was built in Gorst Street in 1837 
for Mr. Aitkin’s New Christian Society. 
Nothing is known of this now, and there 
may have been some confusion with the 
original of St. James’s Church. 

209 Ibid. 538. 

210 Mass appears to have been said at 
Cottam, Tulketh, Broughton and Fish- 
wick. 

211 The story that a chapel existed there 
as early as 1605 is not supported by any 
definite evidence. It could not have re- 
mained in use during the Commonwealth 
period. 

In 1689, however, we learn that ‘the 
soldiers unslated the Popish chapel,’ so 
that one had been opened, perhaps in the 
time of James II ; Hewitson, Bellingham 
Diary, 73. ; 

The Jesuits served the Preston mission. 
‘Mr. Gray,’ i.e. Gilbert Talbot, after- 
wards Earl of Shrewsbury, was in charge 
in 1701, with a salary of £10; Foley, 
Rec. S. J. v, 320. A house at the lower 
end of Friargate was used about that time 
and is supposed to have been that pur- 
chased by Fr. Alexander Leigh in 17333 
it was called Greystocks and St. Mary's 
is on the site of it. The first chapel of 
the name was built in 1761. ‘The 
greatest caution was used ; the chapel was 
built behind the front houses in Friargate 
so as to be quite shut out from view. 
The mysterious building was carried on in 


the name of Mr. Clifton of Lytham, and 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


of 1768, and though the priest in charge managed to 
escape across the Ribble he died soon afterwards 
from alarm and horror.? Shortly afterwards another 
was built on the site, but was closed when St. 
Wilfrid’s was opened in 1793 and it became a ware- 
house. However, in 1815 it was restored to divine 
worship as a chapel of ease, its present status, and 
served till 1856, when the present St. Mary’s was 
built on its site.248 It stands back from the street, 
being approached from Friargate through an arch- 
way. St. Wilfrid’s, built, as stated, in 1793, was 
rebuilt in 1879,7/4 St. Ignatius’ followed in 1836,715 
and St. Walburge’s, with its tall spire, one of the 
landmarks of Preston, in 1852.26 These churches, 
with St. Mary’s, are served by Jesuit Fathers. The 
Secular clergy have St. Augustine’s 1838—40,7!7 
St. Joseph’s 1862-74 7/8 and the English Martyrs’ 
1863-88.219 The Sisters of Charity manage St. 
Joseph’s Institutions, founded in 1872 by Mrs. 
Holland. The teaching orders of the Sisters of the 
Holy Child Jesus and the Faithful Companions of 
Jesus have convents.22° A society formed in 1731, 
but of earlier origin, exists for the relief of the poor 
and charity towards the dead ; it is called the ¢ First 
Catholic Charitable Society.’ 


RIBBLETON 


Ribleton, 1200; Ribbleton, 1202; Ribbelton, 
1226; Ribilton, 1251 ; Rybelton, 1292. 

This township has an area of 757 acres, including 
the 108 acres of Ribbleton Moor. As the hamlet of 
Brockholes in the adjoining township had rights in 
the moor, this was formerly regarded as a semi-inde- 
pendent district, and its L-shaped form divided 
Ribbleton proper into three distinct parts—north- 
east (in which is Ribbleton Hall), north-west (Scales), 
and south (in which is Farington Hall). A large 
part was taken into the borough of Preston in 1880 
and has been incorporated with that township since 
1894,’ so that the present township of Ribbleton, 


PRESTON 


the eastern part of the historical township, has an 
area of only 305 acres. The population of the 
reduced township in 1901 numbered 66.2 

The surface is elevated but comparatively level 5 
on the south it descends very sharply to a plot of 
low-lying ground in a bend of the Ribble. The 
principal roads are those from Preston to Blackburn 
on the south side and from Preston to Longridge on 
the north. The railway between the last-named 
places crosses the north-west corner. Preston 
cemetery, formed in 1855, lies on the west side of 
the township on the Blackburn road. ‘There are 
also some pleasure-grounds opened in 1885; they 
are now called Farington Park. This side is be- 
coming residential, being served by the electric 
tramways. 

The Royal Cross Training School for Deaf and 
Dumb Children, opened in 1894, stands on the 
Blackburn road. 

There was formerly a cross on the moor and 
another in Ribbleton Lane on the Preston boundary.‘ 

The story of the manor of RIBBLE- 
MANOR TON isobscure. Before the Conquest it 
seems to have been part of the great 
lordship of Preston held by Earl Tostig, and is not 
separately named in Domesday Book.® In later times 
its assessment was one plough-land, and it was held 
in thegnage, by a rent of 8s. Henry de Ribbleton 
died possessed of it in or before 1201, leaving a son, 
who was a leper, and a daughter. Henry son of Alan 
de Holland of Downholland purchased the wardship 
and marriage of the daughter,® and by 1212 Ribbleton 
had become incorporated with the Holland manors 
and had been granted out to Roger de Leicester 
for an annual service of 8s. and four arrows.” 
Roger in turn in 1202 gave it to Henry de Fish- 
wick and Maud his wife, a rent of ros. being payable, 
but the agreement was varied in 1224.8 ‘The mesne 
lordship of the Hollands was not long recognized.§ 

In 1324 Roger de Elston held the vill by the rent 

of 8s. and doing suit to the county and wapentake.1° 


passed by the name of the “ New Build- 
ing”’; ibid. v,395. In 1750 the priest 
in charge had a stipend of £40 and 520 
‘customers’ ; the numbers of those con- 
firmed and of Easter communicants were 
274 and 940 in 1784 and 488 and 1,302 
in 1793 ; ibid. v, 321-5. 

212 Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. ii, 
146; Foley, op. cit. viii, 719. 

28 Hewitson, op. cit. 501-2. The 
chapel, a small plain building, has been 
lined with marble. 

314 Thid. 503-6. Joseph Dunn, S.J. 
(vere Earpe), was priest in charge from 
1776 till his death in 1827, and won a 
high position in the town. The House 
of Recovery and the gasworks were due 
to him ; Gillow, op. cit. ii, 143-7. 

215 Hewitson, op. cit. 507. It was the 
first church in Preston which had a spire. 
The school for boys was opened in a 
building erected as a ‘hall of science’ by 
local Secularists. 

216 Thid. 508. The dedication was due 
to a remarkable cure attributed to the use 
of St. Walburge’s oil ; N. and Q. (Ser. 1), 
x, 186. The church stands, it is believed, 
on or near the site of the old Hospital of 
St. Mary Magdalene. 

*17 Hewitson, op. cit. 508. St. Augus- 
tine of Canterbury is the patron; see 
Gillow, op. cit. ii, 481-3. 

7 


i 


218 Hewitson, op. cit. 515. A school- 
chapel served from 1862 till 18-4. 

219 Ibid. 513. The ‘Martyrs’ named 
are St. Thomas of Canterbury and St. 
Alban. A school-chapel was opened in 
1865 and the church in 1867, but this 
was not completed till 1888. 

220 The last-named community occupy 
Lark Hill, formerly the residence of 
Samuel Horrocks, cotton spinner, M.P. 
for Preston 1804-26. The English 
Benedictine nuns of Ghent, driven from 
their house by the Revolution in 1792, 
resided in Chapel Street till 1812, when 
they removed to Staffordshire. 

1 Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 31607. 

2 The Census Report gives as part of 
Preston an area of 645 acres (including 
g of inland water), with a population of 
936 in 1901. This refers principally to 
the part of Ribbleton now in the borough. 

8 The founder was Mary Cross, the late 
Archdeacon Rawstorne contributing. It 
depends partly on voluntary contributions. 

4 Lancs. and Ches. Antiq. Soc. xx, 172. 

5 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 2882. 

6 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 132. Henry 
(de Holland) gave 10 marks for the ward- 
ship, undertaking to provide all neces- 
saries for the brother and reasonable 
dower for the mother. The daughter's 
name is not known. 


105 


Robert de Preston and Richard his 
brother had offered toos. for the grant, 
and promised 16s. instead of the old 8s. 
service for the plough-land in Ribbleton ; 
Rot. de Oblatis (Rec. Com.), 115, 123. 

7 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 49. Roger de Leices- 
ter was seneschal of Amounderness under 
Theobald Walter; Farrer, op. cit. 143, 169. 

8 Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 21 ; an assize of mort d’ancestor 
had been summoned between them, but 
the descent of the parties is not recorded. 
Roger de Leicester had a wife Alice; 
ibid. i, 43. In 1224 Maud, described as 
‘daughter of Henry,’ complained that 
Roger son of Roger de Leicester had not 
kept the agreement made by his father, 
and she received 3 oxgangs of land for a 
rent of 2s, Roger to warrant her; on 
the other hand she renounced all claim 
to the rest of the plough-land ; ibid. i, 4.5. 

9 Henry de Holland paid the thegnage 
rent of 8s. in 12263 Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents, i, 140. In 1297 the vill paid 
8s. to the earl, the tenants not being 
named ; ibid. i, 289. 

10 Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 39. Some 
grants to Roger de Elston are recited in 
a later note; his estate seems to have 
been acquired by a number of separate 
purchases. 


14 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Again in 1346 William de Elston and Roger his 
brother were said to hold four plough-lands in Ribble- 
ton, Preston and Elston of Henry Earl of Lancaster by 
knight’s service and 18d. for castle ward" ; but in the 
same year Thomas Travers and William Lawrence 
held between them one plough-land in Ribbleton in 
socage, rendering 8s. a year at the four terms.” 
latter record is confirmed by later testimonies,’* but 
nothing is known as to the source of their right." 
The estate was not usually called a manor. 
Travers moiety descended like Nateby * until 1579, 
when it was sold to John Shireburne.'”® 
moiety was in 1524 held by Robert Lawrence, who 
died on 27 March holding his part of Ribbleton of 
the king in socage by the rent of 4s. 
two daughters, Margaret and Agnes, aged seventeen 
The elder daughter 


and fourteen respectively. 


Ing. p.m. 20 Edw. III (2nd nos.), 
no. 62. In 1342 the feoffee granted to 
William son of Roger de Elston and 
Roger his brother various lands in Ribble- 
ton and Brockholes; Harl. MS. 2042, 
fol. 169. 

12 Surv. of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 48. The 
same partners also held a moiety of Ash- 
ton at the other side of Preston. In 
both cases the right seems to have de- 
scended through Haydock, as below. In 
1331 Thomas son of Lawrence Travers 
had lands in Ribbleton; Kuerden MSS. 
iv, G2d. 

13 Thomas Travers and Robert Law- 
rence in 141§ granted Roger Elston the 
younger for his life right of way through 
a field called Riddings to Roger's field 
called Newhey in Ribbleton; Add. MS. 
32107, no. 2986. In 1445-6 Thomas 
Travers and Robert Lawrence held the 
plough-land in Ribbleton, rendering 8s. 
yearly ; Duchy of Lanc. Knights’ Fees, 
bdle. 2, no. 20, 

11 A large number of Ribbleton deeds 
(Farington family) are in Piccope MSS. 
(Chet. Lib.), iii, 17-29. None are so 
early as 1346, and the first relating to 
Lawrence is of 1412, as will be seen 
below. 

15 John Travers was in 1362 found to 
have held 36 acres in Ribbleton in socage 
by arent of 4s.; Ing. p.m. 36 Edw. III 
(2nd nos.), no. 52. 

William Travers died in 1524 holding 
lands in Ribbleton of the king as duke 
by the annual service of 4s.; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, no. 62. A similar 
record was made in 1559 ; ibid. xi, no. 68. 

16 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 36, 
m. 262. The vendors were Richard 
Travers and Grace his wife: the estate 
is described as four messuages, &c., in 
Ribbleton and Fulwood. 

WIn 1354 William Lawrence and 
Alice his wife made a settlement of their 
estate in Thornton, Great and Little 
Layton, a moiety of the manor of 
Ribbleton and a fourth part of the 
manor of Ashton. The remainders, after 
their children (John and others), were, 
so far as Ashton was concerned, to the 
right heirs of Alice ; and as to Ribbleton 
to Joan daughter of Geoffrey de Cuerdale 
for life, and then the same as Ashton ; 
Final Conc. ii) 141-2. The fine proves 
that Lawrence held in right of his wife. 
Joan de Cuerdale was then wife of Thomas 
de Molyneux, and much of her estate 
went to the Osbaldeston family. 

John Lawrence died in 1398, having 
made a settlement of his estate on his 


visitations of 
and 


The 


The 


The other 


His heirs were 


wife Margaret in 1368. He left a son 
William, aged eighteen ; Lancs. In. p.m. 
(Chet. Soc.), i, 72. 

Roger de Elston of Ribbleton in 1412 
demised to Robert son of John Lawrence 
a messuage in Ribbleton for life, and in 
1438 John Elston and William his son 
and heir granted land in Ribbleton fields 
to Robert Lawrence ; Piccope MSS. iii, 
27. Robert Lawrence, as above recorded, 
was a partner in the manor in 1445-6 
and Edmund, the son and heir of Robert, 
in 1448; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R.11, m. 1d. 

Robert seems to have been still living in 
1459, when John son of Henry Compsty 
granted land in Ribbleton to him, while 
to Edmund son of Robert Lawrence a 
quitclaim was given by William son of 
John Compsty in 1475 ; Piccope MSS. 
loc. cit. 

18 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, no. §7. 
Robert Lawrence is described as ‘of 
Claughton in Amo-inderness’ ; his lands 
were in Layton, Ribbleton and Thornton. 
A feoffment made in 1513 is recited, 
giving the following details : A messuage 
in Ribbleton called the Maiden’s House, 
with closes named the Town Field and 
Fishwick Banks, with other closes called 
Blackearth, Over and Nether Crooked 
Riddings, Oxhey, Wall Banks, Moor 
Furlong, Little Furlong, with the orchard, 
and the orchard about the hall. 

By an award of the same time Isabel 
widow of Robert Lawrence and their two 
daughters were to pay 26s. 8d. a year to 
James Walton of Preston and provide 
a man horsed and harnessed for the king’s 
service ; Piccope MSS. iii, 17. 

Richard Walton in 1579 released to 
Richard Farington all his interest in lands 
in Ribbleton ; ibid. 21. 

19 Visit, of 1567 (Chet. Soc.), 45. 
Some notes on this family will be found in 
the account of Longton in Penwortham. 

An inquisition after the death of 
Richard Farington was made in 1596. 
He held land in Ribbleton of the queen 
in socage by a rent of 10d., and his heir 
was his son Hugh, aged thirty-six ; Piccope 
MSS. iii, 29. 

Hugh Farington died in 1637 holding 
a messuage and land in Ribbleton of the 
king. His heir was his son Charles, aged 
thirty-seven ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13 
(Chet. Lib.), 423-4. A settlement was 
made by Hugh Farington and Charles his 
son in 1620; Piccope MSS. iii, 23. 

Deeds by Richard Farington, the son 
of Charles, may be seen in the same col- 
lection ; he appears to have sold or mort- 
gaged the estate in 16723; ibid. 23, 25 


106 


married Hugh Farington of Hutton," and their 
descendants were seated in Ribbleton for some time, 
recording pedigrees at the 

1567, 
1665.% The younger 
daughter’s share” seems to 
have gone to Evan Browne, 
who died in 1545 holding a 
capital messuage called Rib- 
bleton and messuages, lands 
and windmill there in socage, 
by a free rent of 25.” 
son and heir Richard ® dying 
without issue, the six sisters 
made a partition in 1559 by 
which Ribbleton Hall became 
the property of Robert Shuttleworth and Jane his 


1613 


His 


Farincton. Argenta 
cheveron gules between 
three leopards’ faces salle, 


See also p. 206 for a sale to John 
Winckley. 

20 Printed by the Chetham Soc. : 1567, 
P- 453 1613, p. 103; 1664-5, p. 106, 
The descent from Hugh and Margaret is 
thus given: -s. Richard —s, Hugh -s, 
Charles (d. c, 1650) ~8, Richard -da. Jane, 
Jane married a Southworth and was 
living in 1695 ; Piccope MSS. iii, 25. 

John Farington founded a charity in 
1670 for the poor of Elston and Farington, 
at the discretion of Richard Farington 
of Ribbleton or those who might be owners 
of Richard’s estate. In 1824 James 
Pedder and Thomas Walmesley were 
trustees for the charity, their fathers and 
grandfathers having acted before them ; 
End. Char. Rep. 

21 About 1550 a division of the Law- 
rence estates was arranged. By this 
Margaret, widow of Hugh Farington, and 
Richard their son and heir were to have 
a moiety of Ribbleton and all the land in 
Goosnargh, while Henry Smith, Agnes 
his wife and William their son and heir- 
apparent were to have lands in Ribbleton 
and all the estate in Layton and Stainall ; 
Piccope MSS. iii, 19. William Smith and 
Mary Smith, widow, had this estate in 
1593 3 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. §5, 
m. 139. 

® Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. vii, no. 
24. Evan Browne probably acquired 
Agnes’s share by purchase, though the 
date in the preceding note causes a diffi- 
culty, but he had an estate in Elston by 
inheritance. Thus James Browne in 
1479 gave land in Ribbleton to the 
younger John Elston and his wife on 
their daughter's marriage with his son 
William Browne; Add. MS. 32108, 
fol. 288. (There was a remainder to 
William Elston and Catherine his wife, 
so that the land may have been part of 
the Elston estate.) Then in 1503-4 
Ewan or Evan son and heir of William 
son and heir of James Browne (living) was 
contracted to marry Elizabeth daughter 
of John Singleton of Shingle Hall ; ibid. 
Evan’s widow Elizabeth is named in 
the inquisition, and seven daughter 
Anne, Alice, Jane, Katherine, Laura, 
Ellen and Bridget. Laura does not 
occur again. Evan Browne hada number 
of scattered properties, including two 
burgages in Preston and a messuage !8 
French Lea. 

2% Evan Browne, Richard and James 
his sons were out-burgesses of the guild 
of 15423 Preston Guild R. (Rec. Soc 
Lancs. and Ches.), 18. Richard was 63 
years old at his father’s death. 


ONT AA LsdM-HLYONT + YVOS aay + sHTOHMOOUG ANV HOUVSNITUL) 


WALALALAS 
i Ges 


PALA 


CReee 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


The Farington estate is said to have been 
sold to the Heskeths of Rufford about the end of the 


wife.™ 


17th century.” 


John Shireburne, already named, married one of 
the daughters and seems to have acquired the shares 
His grandson of the same name 
recorded a pedigree in 1613,” and being a recusant 
and Royalist his estates were sequestered under the 
His son Henry seems to 
The Shireburne 
estate is said to have been sold to Richard King in 
1656; his descendants sold to Thomas Birchall, 
whose son, also Thomas, built the present Ribbleton 
Hall not far from the old house.” 


of two others.” 


rule of the Parliament.” 
have removed to Lincolnshire.” 


“4 Towneley MS. C8, 13,S125. Of 
the other daughters, Anne married 
Richard Shireburne of Bailey; Alice 
(dead in 1§59), Hugh Jones; Katherine, 
John Shireburne ; Ellen, Richard Shire- 
burne the younger ; and Bridget, Thomas 
Whittingham. 

In 1559 a settlement of a sixth part of 
the manor of Ribbleton, with dovecote, 
windmill, &c., was made by John Shire- 
burne and Katherine his wife, the re- 
mainder in default of issue being to her 
son (by her first husband) Richard Elston ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 21, m. 3. 

Hugh Shireburne in 1594 sold mes- 
suages and lands in Ribbleton and Haigh- 
ton to George Talbot ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F, bdle. 56,m.48. This was another 
part of the Browne estate, George Talbot 
being the son of Anne Shireburne by a 
first husband ; C. D. Sherborn, Sherborn 
Fam. 71. 25 Hewitson, Preston, 388. 

% John Shireburne in 1566 purchased 
two messuages, &c., in Ribbleton and 
Preston from Thomas Whittingham and 
Bridget his wife ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F, bdle. 28,m.63. Next year he bought 
a messuage and land from William Wood- 
ward and Elizabeth his wife ; ibid. bdle. 
29,m.99. In 1579 he purchased two 
messuages, &c., in Ribbleton and Fulwood 
from Thomas Jones and Jane his wife 
(presumably the heirs of Hugh and Alice 
Jones), and followed this in 1585 by 
purchasing further lands from them and 
the sixth part of the manor of Ribbleton ; 
ibid. bdle. 41, m. 99 3 47, m. 38. 

The estate of Richard Shireburne and 
Anne his wife (another co-heir) occurs 
in 1572; ibid. bdle. 34, m. 23. 

W Visit, (Chet. Soc.), 109. The descent 
is given thus: John (s. of Thomas) 
married Katherine Browne -s. Thomas 
~8. John (1613) -s. Henry (aged twelve). 

% Cal. Com. for Comp. v, 3233 3 John 
Shireburne died in 1655, and a claim to 
land in Ribbleton put in by Thomas 
Parker of Browsholme was allowed. 

39 C, D. Sherborn, Sherborn Fam. 87-90. 

80 Hewitson, loc. cit. 

_ 3! Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 233. 

Richard Whalley in 1574 purchased a 
messuage, &c., from John and Katherine 
Shireburne; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 36, m. 155. Similar estates were 
sold to Edward Belshaugh, John Ridley 
and Richard Tomlinson ; ibid. m. 178, 
184, 259. 

82 In 1346 as above. Various Elston 
families occur in Brockholes, Ribbleton 
and the neighbouring townships. Thus 
John de Haighton gave 3 acres in Haigh- 
ton to Roger son of William de Elston 
and Paulin his brother ; Kuerden MSS, 
lil, H 2, Adam son of Roger del Scales 


Birchall. 


manor.*! 


The estate is 


gave to the same brothers land in the 
Scales in Ribbleton ; Add. MS, 32107, 
no. 2959. Roger de Elston granted 
Paulin de Elston land in Haighton and 
t acre in Ribbleton Scales ; Kuerden, loc. 
cit. John son of William de Haighton 
in 1327 gave land in Haighton to William 
son of Paulin de Elston ; ibid. Richard 
son of Henry de Brockholes gave land in 
Ribbleton Scales, descending from his 
mother Maud, to Roger de Elston ; 
Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 50 B. 

Richard son of William Drury gave 
Roger de Elston a release of his claim to 
lands in Ribbleton, attested by William 
and Paulin de Elston, Henry and Simon 
de Ribbleton ; Add. MS. 32107, no. 2961. 
In 1316-17 Henry de Ribbleton and 
Agnes widow of Richard de Brockholes 
released to Roger de Elston their rights 
in Ribbleton; ibid. no. 2965, 2967. 
The date of the former deed may be 
fixed approximately by a claim for dower 
in 1269 by Amery widow of William 
Drury v. Robert son of Richard Drury ; 
Cur. Regis R. 195, m. 35 d. 

William son of Roger de Elston ob- 
tained from William de Methop (son of 
Robert the Harper) in 1333 a release of 
a rent of 2s. 9d. from Ribbleton, and in 
the same and later years he obtained 
further grants and releases from Adam 
son of Henry de Ribbleton (1333), 
Gilbert de Knaresborough and Alice his 
daughter (1336), Adam de Compsy, Alice 
his wife, and Robert de Claughton of 
Ribbleton (1342); Add. MS. 32107, 
no. 2968, 2970, 2971-2. 

88 John de Elston the younger in 1369 
made a grant to William the Tailor ; 
ibid. no. 2975. In 1379-80 he obtained 
a quitclaim from Robert le Sagher of 
Ribbleton ; ibid. no. 2977. 

84 Kuerden MSS. vi, fol. 803 John 
Elston gave his manor of Ribbleton to 
feoffees. In 1461 William Elston gave 
lands in the same place, &c., to feoffees ; 
ibid. fol. 74. John Elston of Ribbleton 
obtained an exemption from jury service 
in 1504-5 ; Dep. Keeper’s Rep. xl, App. 


ar Ralph son of William de Ribbleton 
released to Henry son of Robert de 
Ribbleton his right in all land in the 
Musifield in Ribbleton ; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 666. Henry, the grantee, gave all 
his land in the same field to John de 
Grimsargh and his heirs for the rent of 
an arrow ; ibid. no. 678. 

Robert de Ribbleton granted land in 
Ribbleton and Brockholes in 1325-6 to 
Henry de Ribbleton and Agnes his wife ; 
Kuerden MSS. iii, B 14. Thomas 
Kendal, cousin and heir of William 
Ribbleton, had in 1407 lands in Preston 
and Ribbleton ; ibid. ii, fol. 224. 


107 


PRESTON 


reported to be owned at present by Mr. R. R. 
Rothwell of Sharples, by bequest of the late Mrs. 


The freeholders recorded in 1600 were Hugh 
Farington, John Shireburne and Richard Whalley.” 
The ‘manor’ appears no more in the records. 

The Elston family, at one time described as hold- 
ing the vill,®” continued to be considerable landowners 
there,* and in 1454 their estate was described as a 


A Ribbleton family appears at times,” and the 
Haydocks once held a large part * ; 
landowners are recorded.” 


family named Brewer had Ribbleton Lodge, the 


; names of other 
In the 18th century a 


Tunnock daughter of Robert son of 
Vivian de Ribbleton Scales and Adain her 
son granted all her land to the west of a 
certain hedge to Master William de 
Preston, clerk; Towneley MS. OO, 
no. 1095, 1164. In 1303 Robert de 
Ribbleton Scales gave land there, received 
by the gift of his brother Roger, to Roger 
his younger son ; Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 
224, 

Kobert de Ribble'on son of Adam de 
Ribblescales in 1313-14 granted his son 
Robert the moiety of a messuage in 
Preston ; ibid. iii, P 7. 

86 From the fine of 1224 above cited 
it appears that Maud de Ribbleton had 
3 oxgangs of land. The other 5 oxgangs 
seem to have been held about 1280 by 
the Haydock family, for in 1285 Joan 
widow of John son of Henry de Haydock 
claimed dower in messuages and lands in 
Ribbleton, &c., afterwards described as 
eleven messuages and § oxgangs of land ; 
De Banco R. §9, m. 33 64, m. 122. 
The defendant was Henry de Haydock, 
whose widow Alice in 1290 claimed 
against the said Joan and her daughters 
Alice and Aline ; ibid. 86, m. 174. It 
seems most probable that the Travers 
and Lawrence inheritance descended from 
these daughters. 

87 Forfeited lands of the Yorkist, Sir 
James Harrington, probably inherited with 
Balderston, were granted to the Earl of 
Derby in 1489, but the tenure is not 
stated in 15213 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
p.m. v, no. 68. Thomas Radcliffe of 
Winmarleigh, also through Balderston, 
held lands in Ribbleton in 1521, but 
the tenure is not separately stated ; they 
descended to Sir Gilbert Gerard ; ibid. 
v, no. 33 xvi, no. 2. Edmund Dudley 
had another part of the Balderston 
inheritance ; ibid. iv, no. 13. Sir 
Alexander Osbaldeston had another part ; 
ibid. viii, no. 1. 

Sir Thomas Boteler of Bewsey in 1522 
held lands in Ribbleton in socage ; ibid. 
y, no. 13. 

John de Elston in 1370 granted 2 acres 
in Ribbleton to John de Walton ; Add. 
MS. 32107, no. 2976. In 1559 William 
Walton of Preston died holding a mes- 
suage, &c., in Ribbleton of Richard 
Browne in socage by 1d. rent, and his 
son Richard Walton apparently held the 
same in 15933; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
pm. xi, no. 273 xvi, no. 42. But 
Richard Walton seems to have mort- 
gaged or sold it to Richard Farington in 
1579 and to Hugh Farington in 1589. 
so that it probably became incorporated 
with the Farington estate ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdles. 41, m. 355 51, m. 67. 

A purchase by John Ridley has been 
recorded. He died in 1599 holding a 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


domestic chapel there serving the Roman Catholics 
of the district.* Several ‘ Papists’ registered estates 
in 1717.” — 

The Knights Hospitallers had some land in Rib- 
bleton,” afterwards owned by the Shireburnes of 
Stonyhurst." ; 

A dispute in 1564 as to the lordship and moor of 
Ribbleton gives the bounds on the Fulwood side as 
follows : From Jackson Hey and Clough north-east to 
the mere hills, five in all, on the south-west side of 
a close called the Park Falls in Fulwood.” The 
moor was inclosed in 1870." 

In connexion with the Church of England St. 
Mary Magdalene was consecrated in 1889 ; a district 
had been formed for it in 1883," and services began 
about that time. The patronage is in the hands of 
trustees. 


GRIMSARGH axnp BROCKHOLES 


Grimesarge, Dom. Bk.; Grimisharg, 1242 ; 
Grimsarche, Grimsharg, 1244; Grimesherg, 1253 ; 
Gremesargh, Gremeshargh, Grymesharth, Grymes- 
haruth, 1292; Grymesargh, 1293; Greymesargh, 


1301; Grymsar, xv cent. This last shows the 
pronunciation (i short). 
Brochole, 12123; Brocholes, Brochols, 1290. 


Locally pronounced Brockus. 

‘This township consists of two distinct parts con- 
nected by a narrow strip of ground beside the Ribble. 
\ small part was included in the borough of Preston 
in 1880 and in the township of Preston in 1894.' 
Grimsargh, the northern half, has an area of 1,184 
acres, stretching from the Ribble to Savock Brook. 
It is divided from Elston on the east by a wooded 
clough. In the southern corner the land rises 
steeply from the river, and here is Red Scar, a mansion 
commanding fine views over the valley. The surface 
of Grimsargh is comparatively level, but mostly above 
200 ft. over sea level. 

The principal road is that from Preston to Long- 
ridge, going north and then east. The railway 
between those towns crosses this part of the town- 
ship in a north-easterly direction, and has a station 
named Grimsarzh, from which a branch line runs 
north-west to the asylum at Whittingham. 

There are reservoirs of the Preston Waterworks in 
the north of the township. Near Red Scar there 
was formerly a well reputed to be medicinal; ‘it 
went by the name of Boilton Spa, and it is said that 
its water cured consumption. This well was in the 


form of a double trough, 2 yds. long and = ft. broad, 
and was approached by about half a dozen descending 
steps. The water came out of the breast of Boilton 
Wood, and in front of the drain or pipe by which it 
entered the well there was a piece of carved work in the 
shape of a human head, through the mouth of which 
the water ran into the receiving trough. .. The 
well was done away with and the water drained off, 
about thirty years ago [i.e. about 1850], by the late 
Colonel Cross.’ ? 

Brockholes lies in a bend of the Ribble, its 
boundary on the east and south, being closed in by 
Ribbleton on the other sides. The greater part of 
it is low-lying level ground, but on the border of 
Ribbleton the surface rapidly rises for nearly 100 ft. 
Lower Brockholes and Higher Brockholes are in the 
south-west and north-east respectively. Near the 
former house the Preston and Blackburn road crosses 
the Ribble by a bridge, first erected in 1824, and 
then in stone in 1861. It was known as the Half. 
penny Bridge, from the toll formerly charged. There 
are very few houses in this part of the township, 
which has an area of 7534 acres. 

The area of the original township is 1,9374 acres,’ 
and in 1go1 there was a population of 453 for the 
present reduced township.‘ 

The soil is clay and alluvial, with subsoil various, 
The land is chiefly in pasture. 

The township is governed by a parish council. 

A wayside cross, known as Three Mile Cross, 
formerly stood in Grimsargh.® The line of a Roman 
road, called Watling Street, has been traced in 
Grimsargh and Elston. 

In 1066 GRIMSARGH, then assessed 
as two plough-lands, was a member of 
Earl Tostig’s Preston lordship.* Some 
time after the Conquest the manor was divided ; 
Grimsargh, as half a plough-land, was held in 
thegnage ; Brockholes, also half a plough-land, was 
given to the baron of Manchester; and Elston, 
the remaining plough-land, to the baron of Pen- 
wortham. 

Roger son of Augustin de Heaton of Heaton in 
Lonsdale had a confirmation of his half plough-land 
in Grimsargh in 118g from John Count of Mortain ; 
Roger had obtained the manor from Roger son of 
Orm (son of Magnus),” who held Hutton near Pen- 
wortham and Medlar near Kirkham.’ Roger d: 
Heaton demised it to Gilbert de Grimsargh.’ His 
son Roger de Heaton held it in 1262, the tenant 
then being William de Grimsargh, who paid the 3s. 


MANORS 


messuage, &c., in Ribbleton of the queen 
in socage, and leaving a son Richard over 
fifty years old ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soc.), ii, 162. This son died four years 
afterwards, his son and heir John being 
twenty-two ; ibid. ii, 163. John Ridley 
died in 1637 holding the same estate ; 
his son and heir Richard was twenty- 
four years old; ibid. ii, 165. He was 
perhaps the in-burgess of Preston appear- 
ing in 1662 and 16823 Preston Guild R. 
135, 174. 

Sir Thomas Walmsley of Dunken- 
halgh had land in Ribbleton in 1612; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 250. 

* Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. i, 
291, giving notices of two Benedictines, 
members of the family. 

89 John Gregson, Richard Bolton (also 


at Catterall), John Ridley, Adam Helme, 
Thomas Kellet, Richard Kendal, Edward 
Parkinson ; Estcourt and Payne, Engl. 
Cath, Non-jurors, 91, 138-40. 

40 It is named among the Hospitallers’ 
lands in 1292; Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. 
Com.), 375. 

41 Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 132 3 Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvi, no. 4. 

Another part of the Hospitallers’ land 
was held ia 1603 by Thomas Barton of 
Barton by 64. rent; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 10, 

42 The depositions are printed in Fish- 
wick, Preston, 345-6. 

% Stat. 24 & 25 Vict. cap. 1. In 
the award a parcel of 54 acres was granted 
to the overseers as a recreation ground ; 
End. Char, Rep. (Preston 1905), 102. 

44 Lond, Gaz. 23 Aug. 1883. 


108 


1 Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 31607. About 
192 acres were transferred to Preston. — 

2 Hewitson, Preston, 388. Boilton 1s 
on the north-west boundary of Brock- 
holes, adjoining Ribbleton. 

3 1,748, including 53 acres of inland 
water ; Census Rep. 1901. : 

4In addition the part included io 
Preston contained 108 persons. 

5 Lancs. and Ches. Antig. Soc. xX, 173+ 

6 VCH, Lancs. i, 2880. ; 

7 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 437 ® Ibid.409- 

9 So stated in the charter of his grand- 
son William de Heaton cited below. 

In 1212 Grimsargh is not separately 
named among the Heaton lands; Lancs. 
Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 48. Roger had died in 1204, 
leaving a son of the same name, who was 
under age, 


LNOU LSVA-HLIOG 2: UVOG day + SHIOHNOOU aNvV HOUVSINTUL) 


VN 
wi 


cweewee= 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


thegnage rent due from Roger to the king.” William 
the son and heir of Roger afterwards confirmed the 
title of William de Grimsargh, 
the rent being unchanged." 
The Earl of Lancaster re- 
ceived 3s. from Grimsargh in 
1297." 

About this time the Hogh- 
tons of Hoghton appear to 
have acquired lands in the 
township,” and eventually 
purchased the lordship from 
the Grimsargh family.“ In Hocuxos: of diggs 
1324 the mesne lord, William — ton. Sable three bars 
de Heaton, was said to hold argent. 
it by the old rent of 3s.,"° 
but in 1346 the immediate tenant only was re- 
cognized, viz. Adam de Hoghton.’® The manor 
descended in this family without noteworthy in- 
cident” until 1772, when it was sold by Sir Henry 
Hoghton and Frances his wife to William Shawe 
the younger,'® from whom it seems to have passed to 
the Cross family, seated at Red Scar in this town- 


PRESTON 


ship." Mr. William Cross is the present lord of 
the manor,” but lives in Surrey, Red Scar being let. 
RED SCAR™ stands in a commanding situation 
facing south-east above a bend of the River Ribble 
on its north bank about three miles north-east of 
Preston, and is a picturesque two story gabled building 
of timber and plaster, partly dating probably from 
Elizabethan times, but so much restored and added 
to that few of its original architectural features remain. 
It was enlarged and altered in 1798 and again in 
1840 when the library was added. The exterior 
timber and plaster work is almost wholly imitative 
and modern, but a thatched one-story wing at the 
north-east end, now used as a dining-room, preserves 
to some extent an interesting ancient feature. The 
interior contains some oak furniture and carvings 
formerly in the old church at Grimsargh. 
BROCKHOLES, as already stated, was a member 
of the fee of Manchester. It was granted to the 
Lathom family,” and of them held by a tenant 
assuming the local surname. The first of them known 
by name was one Award de Brockholes,?” whose son 
Roger appears in pleadings of 1246 and otherwise.” 


10 Tbid. 231 3 thus Roger had nothing 
from Grimsargh except relief and ward- 
ship. Roger’s heir was his son William. 

11 Kuerden MSS. vy, fol. 113. 

© Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 289. 
The tenant is not named. 

13 In 1292 Adam de Hoghton held a 
messuage and 12 acres in Grimsargh, as 
heir of his father, who had purchased 
from Richard soa of John de Flitchcrofthaw. 
The plaintiff, Richard son of Robert son of 
John de Goosnargh, said that these Johns 
were the same person, but he was non- 
suited ; Assize R. 408, m. 22. 

At the same time William son of 
Robert de Elston claimed the sixth part 
of a water-mill in Grimsargh against 
Richard de Hoghton and Alexander de 
Hyde. The plaintiff, who recovered, 
stated that his father had purchased the 
mill from Thomas de Grimshagh 
(? Grimsargh), but Agnes widow of 
Thomas had a third part in dower, which 
she had granted to plaintiff till he had 
received the cost of repairing the mill; 
ibid. m. 3d. Again, Roger de Eccleston 
(? Elston) complained that Thomas de 
Grimsargh and Richard de Hoghton had 
obstructed his right of way; ibid. m. 
32d. 

“The time of purchase does not 
appear, but in 1301 Richard de Hoghton 


seems to have had a fair estate in - 


Grimsargh ; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 192. Richard son 
of Sir Adam de Hoghton granted 9 acres 
in Grimsargh to Henry de Eccleshill ; 
Dods. MSS, Ixx, fol. 1604. 

In 1325-6 William son of Roger de 
Caton granted William de Heaton and 
Anilla his wife the service of Sir Richard 
de Hoghton for lands in Grimsargh ; 
quoted in Memo. R, (L.T.R.) 128, m. xv 
(37 Edw. III). 

An agreement as to arbitration on 
various matters in dispute was made in 
1334 between William de Grimsargh and 
Sir Richard de Hoghton, two neighbours 
and a man of the law being chosen by 
each to view and decide; Add. MS 
32106, no. 318. 

The transfer of the manor docs not 
seem to have been complete until 1362, 
when William de Grimsargh granted to 
Sir Adam de Hoghton all his messuages, 


lands, rents, services, &c., in the vill of 
Grimsargh ; ibid. no. 520. 

Or the Grimsargh family little is 
known. A William de Grimsargh 
appears between 1242 and 1262, followed 
by a John de Grimsargh in 1293 ; Lancs. 
In7. and Extents, i, 151, 231, 280. 
Gilbert son of Thomas de Grimsargh in 
1292 claimed common of pasture against 
John ce Grimsargh and William de 
Brockholes, but was non-suited ; Assize 
R. 428, m. 58. To charters of 1284 John 
de Grimsargh and Gilbert his brother 
were witnesses; Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 
74, 50 (B 5). John de Grimsargh 
attested a deed in 1312-13 ; ibid. fol. 74. 
William de Grimsargh contributed to the 
subsidy in 13323 Exch. Lay Subs, (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), 58. 

15 Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 39. 

16 Survey of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 59. 
This shows that the deed of 1362 above 
cited was only the completion of a sale 
that had taken place long before. 

The manor of Grimsargh, as held 
by the service of 3s., occurs among 
Hoghton properties in inquisitions, fines, 
&c., but the family do not seem to have 
resided there. See Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 145 (1422); Duchy of Lanc. 
Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, no. 20 (1446) ; Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 89, no. 141 
(1616), &c. 

Grimsargh was held by Elizabeth 
Kighley at her death in 1524 by 35. rent, 
the reversion being to Sir Richard 
Hoghton ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, 
no. 61. 

18 fal, of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 387, 
m. 114. 

19 It is stated that the manor was sold 
by Sir Henry Philip Hoghton (d. 1835) 
to William Cross of Red Scar (Fishwick, 
Preston, 93), in which case the apparent 
sale to Shawe must have been a mortgage 
only. 

20 For pedigree see Burke, Landed 
Gentry. This gives John Cross, d. 1799 
-3. William (of Red Scar), d. 1827-. 
William Assheton, d. 1853 —s. William, 
b. 1850. 

20a There is an illustration in Twycross, 
Lanes. Mansions, ii, 48. 

"Jn 1212 Richard son of Robert (de 
Lathom) held half a plough-land in 


10g 


Brockholes, part of the Grelley fee, by 
the thirteenth part of a knight's fee ; 
Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 54. 

The dependence upon Manchester, 
though merely nominal, continued to be 
recorded down to the 17th century. 
In 1322 Robert de Lathom held the 
thirteenth part of a fee in Brockholes by 
John de Brockholes ; Mdamecestre (Chet. 
Soc.), ii, 379. For sake fee 8d. was 
paid, also gd. for castle ward, and puture 
of the serjeants was due; ibid. ii, 288. 
In 1473 the wife of Nicholas Singleton 
held the lordship of Brockholes by the 
Ribble by the same tenure; ibid. iil, 
480. 

22 Award de Brockholes attested a 
charter by Henry de Lea; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 69. 

In the account of Samlesbury has been 
mentioned an Edward son of Edward son 
of Orm de Brockholes ; the first Edward 
(living 1227) may be identical with the 
Award of the text. 

One Ellis de Brockholes appears in 
Yorkshire in 1284 ; Cal. Close, 1279-88, 
p- 271. There may have been other 
places of the name; Gen. (new ser.), xi, 196. 

?3In 1246 Roger de Brockholes re- 
covered common of pasture in 4 acres in 
Brockholes against Maud de Ribbleton, 
Robert and William her sons and Richard 
de Ellesley ; Assize R. 404, m.4. The 
first of these defendants was perhaps the 
Maud daughter of Henry who unsuccess- 
fully claimed 20 acres at the same time 
against Roger de Brockholes, Richard de 
Lathom and others; ibid. m.13. Roger 
and his wife Christiana acquired land in 
Byrewath in Garstang ; Add. MS, 32106, 
no. 1105. 

In Dec. 1253 an agreement was made 
between Roger de Brockholes and Huard 
de Bradshaw as to certain quarrels respect- 
ing land in Bradshaw given in free 
marriage with MHuard’s sister Mabel; 
Harl. MS. 2112, fol. 65/107. It appears 
that Mabel had married Roger, for 
William son of Roger de Brockholes 
released his claim (derived from Mabel 
his mother) to 4 acres in Bradshaw to 
Robert son of Henry son of Huctred de 
Bradshaw ; Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 50 B. 

Roger had also a son Richard, who 
gave William his brother land in Brock- 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Roger's son Adam de Brockholes?! died in 1290 
hu'ding the manor of Brockholes of Sir Robert de 
Lathom by the eighth part of a knight’s fee ; also 
land in Byrewath in Garstang and in Paychorne in 


Gisburn.2® His son Roger succeeteJ, but was still 
under age in 1292.°% He married Nichola daughter 
and heir of Isolda de Rigmaiden,”” and was succeeded 
** He wa: 


in or before 1311 by their son John. 


> 


sy 
apy 


a 


4 , i \ 
I 


vm 
| 


MAy 
» WY \ 


| | \\ 
i Hh 
A 


holes and Old Brockholes ; ibid. William 
son of William de Brockholes in 1284 
gave his uncle Richard (son of Roger) his 
right in an oxgang of land in Ribbleton 
called Hysokecroft ; ibid. Another 
version of the charter places Hysokecroft 
in Brockholes; Add. MS. 32108, fol. 
288. In 1341 William son of William 
son of Roger de Brockholes claimed 9 
acres in Grimsargh against Richard son 
of William son of Roger de Brockholes ; 
De Banco R. 328, m. 524d. 

*4In 1280 Adam de Brockholes, as 
grandson and heir of Award de Brock- 
holes, claimed a messuage and half an 
oxgang of land in Brockholes against 
Robert Noel, Agnes his wife, and Cecily 
(under age) the sister of Agnes, who held 
two-thirds, and Henry de Walton and 
Agnes his wife, who had one-third; De 
Banco R. 36, m. 70. The claim was 
still being prosecuted in 1287 against 
Robert son of Adam Nowell of Mearley, 
Agnes and Cecily, it being alleged that 
Award de Brockholes had demised the 
land for a term (then expired) to Uctred 
de Brockholes; ibid. 69, m. 75 d. 
About 1284 an exchange seems to have 
been made, Robert Nowell and the sisters 
taking land in Paythorne ; Kuerden fol. 
MS. fol. 273. Robert Nowell and Agnes 
his wife claimed common of pasture in 
Brockholes in 1288 against Adam de 
Brockholes and William his brother ; 


Rep Scar: Tue Dininc-room 


Assize R, 1277, m. 31. It may be 
added that an Alice daughter ot Koger 
son of Uctred de Brockholes released 
(c. 1285) to her sister Agnes all her 
inheritance in Brockholes; Kuerden MSS. 
vy, fol. 1184. Roger son of Agnes de 
Brockholes in 1314-15 gave land in the 
township to Thomas son of Roger Hyde; 
Towneley MS. HH, no. 1875. 

Henry son of Robert de Ribbleton 
released to Adam son of Roger de Brock- 
holes half an oxgang of land in Brockholes 
held of Adam ; Add. MS. 32107, no. 996. 
The same Adam and Henry made an 
exchange of land called Elondes, the 
boun/s naming the brook which formed 
the division between Brockholes and 
Ribbleton ; Towneley MS. HH, no. 1877. 
Adam gave his brother William a part of 
the waste of Brockholes, within certain 
bounds; a field called the Hyles is 
named ; ibid. no. 1888. 

25 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 274. Henry 
de Haydock and William le Blund were 
the executors of the will of Adam de 
Brockholes in 1292; Assize R. 408, 
m, 100. In the same year John de 
Rigmaiden claimed a debt—but was 
non-suited — against the executors of 
Cecily widow of Adam de Brockholes ; 
ibid. m. 54 d. 

26 Maud widow of Wil'iam de Clifton 
claimed a messuage and half an oxgang of 
land in Brockholes against Roger son of 


110 


Adam de Brockholes, but the trial was 
adjourned till Roger should be of age; 
Assize R. 408, m. 5 d. 

William de Clifton and Maud his wife 
gave all their land in Brockholes with a 
messuage there to Robert their son, and 
this Robert made an exchange with Adam 
de Brockholes about 1284 ; Kuerden fol. 
MS. fol. 75, 74. 

27 About 1290 Adam son of Richara 
de Disteshaw granted all his land io 
Brockholes to John de Rigmaiden and 
Isolda his wife ; Towneley MS. HH, no. 
1867. In 1308-9 Isolda de Rigmaiden 
released to Nichola de Brockholes, her 
daughter and heir, all right in the same; 
ibid. no. 1868. 

In continuation of the last note it may 
be added that in 1310-11 Maud widow 
of Robert son of William de Clifton 
released her dower land to Nichola widow 
of Roger de Brockholes, and that Roger 
son of Robert de Clifton soon afterwards 
granted all his lands in Brockholes to the 
same Nichola; Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 


4 The last note shows that Nichola 
was a widow in 1310-11. In 1316-17 
John son of Roger de Brockholes released 
to Nichola his mother a third part of the 
manor of Brocxholes, &c., a8 dower 5 Kuer- 
den MSS. y, fol. 1184, Nichola afterward 
gave to her son John the rent trom the 
third part of the manor ; HH, no. 1869. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


followed at Brockholes about ten years later by his 
brother Adam; by what title is not quite clear, 
but probably by a family partition, John’s descendants 
having the manor of Claughton in Garstang. 

Adam de Brockholes, who was living in 1341, had 
several children, including Nicholas his heir* and 
Nicholas had at least two sons,* but the 
manor appears to have descended to two daughters 
or granddaughters: Margaret, who married Roger 


Roger.*! 


John was still in possession in 1322; 
Mamecestre, ii, 379. 

A dispute in 1323 between William de 
Ribbleton and Roger son of Richard de 
Ribbleton concerning 12 acres, &c., in 
Brockholes shows that the father had 
held of Nichola de Brockholes by knight's 
service. John and Adam de Brockholes 
and Richard Deuyas and Isolda his wife, 
formerly wife of William (?) de Ribbleton, 
are named; Assize R. 425, m. 1, 5. 
John de Brockholes appeared for Nichola 
and the others. 

29 Nichola widow of Roger de Brock- 
holes in 1319 procured a messuage and 
land to be settled on her with remainder 
to Adam son of Roger de Brockholes and 
Margaret his wife ; Final Conc. ii, 35. 
Roger son of Agnes de Brockholes, 
already named, in 1324-5 made a release 
to Adam de Brockholes ; HH, no. 1890. 
In 1329 Adam son of Roger de Brock- 
holes made a feoffment of a third part of 
the manor, &c. ; ibid. no, 1874. 

30 In 1339 Robert du Marreys, clerk, 
regranted to Adam son of Roger de 
Brockholes and Margaret his wife two- 
thirds of the manor of Brockholes, with 
the homage and service of the free tenant 
William de Brockholes ; with successive 
remainders to Nicholas, Adam, John, 
Robert and Henry, sons of Adam, and 
then to the right heirs of William de 
Brockholes ; Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 259. 
An Adam de Brockholes son of William 
was living in 13493; Add. MS. 32108, 
fol. 289. 

In 1341 Roger son of Roger de Elston 
exchanged certain land in Brockholes with 
Adam son of Roger de Brockholes and 
Margaret his wife ; the remainders were 
to Adam’s sons Nicholas and John ; HH, 
no. 1894. 

31In 1349 Roger son of Adam de 
Brockholes released to his brother 
Nicholas all right in the manor of 
Brockholes ; ibid. no. 1906. 

Roger de Singleton of Singleton and 
Alice his wife in 1348 granted to 
Nicholas de Brockholes all the lands in 
Brockholes which had belonged to Adam 
de Singleton ; J. Harland’s note. 

82 The preceding note shows that 
Nicholas was in possession in 1349. In 
1355 he granted leave to get turves in 
Brockholes ; Add. MS. 32108, fol. 289. 
In 1358 he received from John de 
Preston a release of all the right in 
Brockholes which John had had from 
Edmund de Brockholes; Kuerden MS3. 
v, fol. 1186. Three years later he made 
a feoffment of the manor; HH, no. 
1884. Another feoffment was made in 
1396-7; Kuerden MSS. iii, B14. The 
seal shcws a cheveron between three 
brocks (?). Nicholas de Brockholes and 
Margaret his wife occur in 1402 ; HH, 
no. 1880, 

_ Roger son of Nicholas de Brockholes 
in 1377-8 quitclaimed to Nicholas his 
father and Margaret his wife all right in 
Brockholes ; ibid. no, 1558. Thomas 


de Bredkirk was in 1387 pardoned for 
the death of Geoffrey son of Nicholas de 
Brockholes, killed at Preston in 1385 ; 
Cal. Pat. 1385-9, p. 284. 

In 1378 William del Pole and Margery 
his wife had some interest in the Brock- 
holes estate ; Final Cone. iii, 5. 

83 The deeds preserved (those of Elston 
of Brockholes) are not clear on this point. 
In 1419 (or perhaps 7 Hen. IV) a moiety 
of the manor of Brockholes, held for life 
by Margaret widow of Nicholas, was 
settled on Roger Elston and Margaret 
his wife, the heir of Nicholas, with 
remainder to their son John, contracted 
to marry Agnes daughter of John 
Fleetwood ; Add. MS. 32107, no. 548. 

John Elston had a son William, who 
as early as 1428-g was contracted to 
marry Ellen daughter of Thomas 
Haighton ; Add. MS. 32108, fol. 289. 

According to the pedigree the other 
heiress married Thomas Singleton ; 
Fishwick, Preston, 288. 

34 John Elston was bound in 1437-8 
to Nicholas Singleton for the performance 
of an agreement as to lands in Brock- 
holes; Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 115. 
From notes by Kuerden (MSS. vi, fol. 
74) it seems that a division was made in 
1453-4 and an award relating to it in 
1478. In 1458-9 William son of John 
Elston granted a lease of Old Brockholes ; 
ibid. 

Another note of agreement between 
Nicholas Singleton and Roger Elston 
states that the latter was to have Old 
Brockholes for life; Add. MS. 32107, 
no. 2987. Again in 1445-6 Roger 
Elston, whose son John had granted 
Nicholas Singleton the reversion of a 
moiety of the manor of Brockholes, 
released his own life interest in the 
same; HH, no. 1901. The moiety of 
the manor was the subject ofa settlement 
in 1453-4, when the elder John, son 
and heir-apparent of William Elston, was 
contracted to marry Agnes daughter of 
Nicholas Singleton of Brockholes ; Add. 
MS. 32108, fol. 2894. The parties 
being near akin a dispensation was 
obtained; Kuerden MSS. vi, fol. 74. 
William Elston had a younger son also 
named John. 

Robert son and heir-apparent of John 
Elston, senior, was in 1483-4 married to 
Anne daughter of John Singleton of 
Withgill; Add. MS. 32108, fol. 289/. 
In 1515 John Elston agreed with 
Margaret daughter of Robert Waddington 
as to her marriage with his cousin and 
heir Ralph Elston (apparently son of 
Robert); ibid. Again im 1553-4 
William Elston, who had _ married 
Katherine daughter of Evan Browne, 
was to have Brockholes; ibid. It 
appears that he was the younger son of 
Ralph Elston; Richard the elder son 
had died. 

Ralph Elston and Richard his son 
were out-burgesses of the guild of 1542; 
Preston Guild R, 19. In the same year 


111 


Elston, and another who married — Singleton. 
A partition was afterwards agrecd upon, by which 
the former had Old or Higher Brockholes and the 
latter New or Lower Brockholes.™ 

The Elston moiety descended regularly * to Robert 
Elston, who died in 1662.°° 
was purchased in 1694 by ‘Thomas Winckley of 
Preston,” and descended to Frances Lady Shelley,” 
after whose death in 1873 it was sold to Edward 


FRESTON 


Ry 


After some changes it 


two messuages, &c,, were settled on 
Ralph Elston and Richard his son and 
heir-apparent ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 12, m, 81. Ralph Elston occurs as 
vendor (or trustev) in 1553; ibid. bdle. 
Iq, m. 44. 

In 1538-9 Roger Asshaw and Jane 
his wife claimed a ‘form or kneeling 
place’ in Preston Church in right of his 
manor of Elston, but Ralph Elston of 
Old Brockholes asserted his right to it. 
The churchwardens, seeing that ‘man- 
slaughter, sedition, and great unquietness 
were like to have ensued,’ took away 
the form till a legal decision could be 
given; T. C. Smith, Preston Church, 
250-1. 

85 Ralph Elston, named above, died 
4 Nov. 1556 holding a capital messuage 
and lands in Brockholes of the executors 
of the will of Lord La Warre in socage 
by a rent of 4d. yearly. The kinsman 
and heir was Richard Elston, aged five 
years ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. x, no. 
3. The following field-names, &c., are 
given : Grey Bank, Margaret Acre, Boat- 
field, Holme, Eases, Oldhouse, Brew- 
house, &c. 

Richard Elston, a minor, made com- 
plaint in 1571 as to invasion of his 
grandfather’s lands by John Shireburne 
and Katherine his wife ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Plead. Eliz. Ixxxii, E 1. 

From the Preston Guild R. (p. 27) it 
would seem that Richard was the son 
and heir of Richard (? William) Elston, 
deceased. A settlement of Richard 
Elston’s estate in Brockholes or Over 
Brockholes was made in 1574; Pal. of 
Lance. Feet of F. bdle. 36, m. 73. He 
died in 1592 holding the same estate of 
John Lacy (as of his manor of Man- 
chester) by the twenty-sixth part of a 
knight’s fee and a rent of 4d. ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Inq. p.m. xv, no. 14. The service 
was that due for a moiety of Brockholes. 

William the son and heir was thirteen 
years of age. He died in 1636 holding 
his Brockholes estate of Edward Mosley 
of Manchester by the fourth part of a 
knight’s fee and 4d. rent ; Robert his son 
and heir was twenty-eight years of age; 
ibid. xxix, no. 1. William Elston, a 
scholar and a Puritan, was the author of 
a history of his family (Harl. MS. 1727, 
fol. 336), under the title of Mundana 
Mutabilia: Ethelestophylax. Extracts 
from it were printed in the Preston 
Guardian of 1881, Feb. 5, 19, &c. 

86 Robert Elston’s son William died in 
1664 without issue, and Robert’s six 
daughters in the same year sold the estate 
to Paul Moreau of Knowsley, who settled 
at Brockholes. 

37 The vendor was Paul Moreau, 
grandson of the purchaser in 1664. Paul 
Moreau, James his son and Paul his 
grandson, &c., were out-burgesses of the 
guild of 1682 ; Preston Guild R. 191. 

38 For pedigree see Fishwick, op, cit. 
276. Thomas Winckley was son of 
John Winckley, curate of Garstang 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


e in 1875 ; from him it has come to his son, the 
in been Mr. Oswald Henry Philip Turville- 
Petre, of Husbands Bosworth.39 

HIGHER BROCKHOLES, now a farm-house, 
stands on low ground near the Ribble below Red 
Scar, the river here flowing in a south-easterly direc- 
tion on the east side of the house, the front of which 
faces south. It is a long, low, two-storied stuccoed 
building very much modernized, but retaining for 
the most part its grey slated roof and some portions 
of its original timber framing.4? The house, how- 
ever, is architecturally uninteresting except for a 
portion at the east end now disused, which is a good 
example of 17th-century black and white work on a 
low stone base, with overhanging upper floor and 
gable. The work is simple in detail, consisting 
mostly of the structural framework filled in with 
straight and diagonal pieces and quatrefoils. A 
carved oak panel bears the date 1643 and the initials 
REA, probably those of Robert Elston and Ann his 
wife. The interior has been almost entirely moder- 
nized, but contains old oak stairs and thick oak 
doors.41 

The Singleton moiety ?? descended to William Sin- 
gleton, who died in 1556 without legitimate issue." 
A pedigree was recorded in 1613.44 The estate was 
in 1564 sold to Sir John Southworth of Samlesbury,*® 


and afterwards changed hands, being at last in 1696 
acquired by the above-named Thomas Winckley.* 
The two moieties thus reunited have so continued to 
the present time. 

LOIfER BROCKHOLES, now a farm-house, 
stands in a low situation close to the bend of the 
Ribble near Brockholes Bridge, facing east towards 
Samlesbury.47 It is a small two-story bu'lding of 
no particular interest architecturally, having been very 
much modernized and the exterior covered with Tough- 
cast. [he windows are all modern, but the roof 
retains its grey stone slates, and the north wing, which 
has a separate gabled roof at right angles to that of 
the rest of the house, preserves its old half-timber 
construction above the ground floor, though much of 
the timber has been renewed. There is a wide open 
gabled porch of two stories projecting 9 ft. 6 in. and 
measuring 8 ft. square inside, over the archway of 
which is a stone dated 1634 with the initials and 
arms of Francis Bindloss, the arms with helm, crest 
and mantling, and a crescent for difference. The 
interior is structurally uninteresting, but a small oak 
staircase of good design with turned Jacobean balusters 
still remains, and in one of the bedrooms is some oak 
panelling forming a dado, on which is the inscrip- 
tion, ‘Quamlibet expectes horam tibi ducere mortem, 
disce mori mundo Christoque resurgere spera, 1630.’ 


(1637) and of Broughton (1661); he 
was registrar of the duchy Chancery 
office. He died in 1710 and was 
succeeded by his son John, who died in 
1753. John’s son Thomas left an only 
daughter Frances, who married Sir John 
Shelley, sixth baronet (d. 1852). 

39 Mr. E. H. Petre died in 1902. 

The timber construction shows 
externally at the back, 

41 Fishwick, op. cit. 298. 

Nicholas Singleton, possessor in 
the time of Henry VI, has been men- 
tioned. There was an arbitration in 
1474 between Alice widow of Nicholas 
Singleton and the sons—James (the 
heir), John, Lawrence and Roger ; HH, 
no. 1918, John Singleton of Brockholes 
in 1485 granted all his lands to Sir 
Alexander Hoghton, apparently as 
trustee; ibid. no. 1902. In 1495-6 
Robert Singleton, another son of Nicholas, 
released all his claim to his brother John ; 
no. 1895. 

In 1487-8 James Singleton and 
Thomas his son became bound to 
Richard Singleton of Broughton, en- 
gaging to make no alienation of the 
inheritance of Nicholas, father of James, 
so that it might descend to Richard the 
son of James, except as to lands of 20 
marks yearly, the dower of Agnes wife of 
James and daughter of Richard Hoghton 
of the Lawnd in Bowland. Richard was 
to occupy the Bank in Broughton ; 
Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 389. 

Richard Singleton died in 1499, having 
been married or betrothed as early as 
1458, while his grandfather Nicholas was 
living, to Elizabeth his wife, who survived 
him. He held the moiety of the manor 
of Brockholes of Sir Thomas West Lord 
La Warre in socage and other lands in 
Bolton-le-Sands, &c. Thomas his son 
and heir was twenty-seven years of age ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, no. 52. 
Thomas Singleton about two years later 
made a feoffment of messuages and lands 
in Brockholes called Rishmelfield, Gam- 


ridding, a water-mill and a fishing, to 
fulfil the muirriage covenants of his sons 
Robert and Henry with Anne and Aline, 
daughters of John Singleton of Shingle 
Hall ; Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 381. 

Robert Singleton died in 1525, his wife 
Anne having died before him, leaving a 
son and heir William, only about two 
years old. He held one moiety of the 
manor of Brockholes and various lands, 
&c.. in the other moiety of Lord La 
Warre, as of his manor of Manchester, 
by knight’s service. He also held a 
burgage and land in Preston of the heir 
of Adam Brockholes by the rent of three 
grains of pepper, and other tenements in 
Broughton, Barton, Ribchester, Whitting- 
ham, Bolton-le-Sands, &c.; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. vi, no. 64. 

43 Ibid. x, no. 1, in which his will is 
recited as well as various family settle- 
ments. To Mary his wife he allowed his 
dwelling-house, a close called Gamridding, 
with mill and fishing; to Robert his 
bastard son he gave certain closes and 
his interest in the tithe of Brockholes. 
Brockholes was held of Lord La Warre 
by the seventeenth part of a knight’s 
fee and the rent of 4d. The heir was 
his uncle Henry Singleton, chaplain, 
aged fifty-five. From later depositions it 
appears that Henry had been a friar. 
For Robert Brockholes see Exch. Dep. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), 2. 

4 Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 81. 

45 An indenture concerning the manor 
1s enrolled in the Common Pleas, Mich. 
3 & 4 Phil. and Mary. An account of 
the disputes which followed William 
Singleton’s death will be found, with 
copies of depositions, in Fishwick’s 
Preston, 94-6, 289-93- It appears that 
the above Henry Singleton and his 
nephew William son of Thomas Single- 
ton of Bank Hall in Broughton sold the 
estate to John Singleton of Ripley, who 
in 1565 sold to Sir John Southworth. 
John son of Henry Singleton in 1557 
gave his life interest in the Eyes in 


112 


Brockholes to John Singleton of Ripley ; 
Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 389, no. 399. 
Fines relating to the settlements at the 
same time are Pal. of Lance. Feet of F. 
bdles. 17, m. 33, 803 27, m. 171, 

After the death of Sir John Southworth 
in 1595 his estate in Brockholes, not 
called a manor, was said to have been 
held of the lord of Manchester by the 
three-hundredth part of a knight's fee 
and the rent of 4d. A free fishery in 
the Ribble was included ; Duchy of Lanc, 
Ing. p.m. xvii, no. 3. 

By Thomas Southworth (son of Sir 
John) Brockholes was mortgaged and 
then (1620) sold to Edmund Breres of 
Preston, and sold again the next year 
to Sir Robert Bindloss of Borwick Hall. 
It descended to a grandson Francis and 
then to his sister Dorothy wife of Sir 
Charles Wheler, who in 1668 sold to 
Paul Moreau, owner of Higher Brock- 
holes, and John Walshman of Preston, 
who divided the estate ; Preston Chron, 
May 1862. Fishwick (op. cit. 96) states 
that Lower Brockholes was in 1682 
the property of Hugh (John) Walshman, 
who died in 1694. 

46 The Walshman share was sold to 
Winckley in 1696 and the Moreau share 
in 1698. A full abstract of the title isin 
Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), iii, 292-310 

47 Lower Brockholes was formerly 
reached from Preston by a roadway 
known as Brockall Lane, which now 
forms part of the high road from Preston 
to Blackburn made in 1824, ‘There was 
a direct way between the two towns 
previous to that date, but it was a mere 
lane, and there was either no bridge of 
a very primitive one across the river a 
Lower Brockholes, When the road and 
bridge were projected the landowners and 
farmers petitioned Parliament to refuse 
authority for its construction, their con- 
tention being that if the new road were 
made it would give Samlesbury farmers 
the means of competing with them + 
Preston ; Preston Guardian, 28 Dec. 19°7- 


GrimsarGH AND BrockHores: Hicuer BrockHo.es 


te “Th i 


I 


i 


Hi 
met ek 


GrimsarcH anp Brocxyotes: Lower BrockHo res 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Apart from the lords of the manor there are few 
records of estates in the combined township,*® and in 
most cases the owners of them did not reside there. 
A branch of the Hoghton family, however, was in the 
17th century resident in Grimsargh, and in 1653 
William Hoghton, a ‘ delinquent,’ whose estate had 
been ordered for sale by the Parliament, desired to 
compound, but was too late? William Elston and 
William Hoghton in 1631 paid £10 each, having 
refused knighthood.® Several estates of Grimsargh 
«Papists’ were registered in 1717.5! 

In connexion with the Church of England a chapel 
was erected at Grimsargh about 1716 by the efforts 
of Samuel Peploe, vicar of Preston.®? It was dedi- 
cated to St. Michael. It was entirely rebuilt in 
1868-9 by the Rev. John Cross, brother of the lord 
of the manor.®3 It had a separate parish assigned to 
it in 1875.54 The vicars are presented by the vicar 
of Preston. _ 

A Congregational mission was begun in 1903. 

St. John’s College, Grimsargh, is a private adven- 
ture school for boys.®* 


ELSTON 


Etheliston, 1212; Echelyston, 1284; Echilston, 
1285; Ethelston, 1297 ; Etheleston, 1301 ; Elston, 
Elleston xv cent. 

This township has an area of 9614 acres,! and in 
igor there was a population of 59. The Ribble 
forms a large part of the boundary, and in a bend of 
it there is some low-lying level ground, but the sur- 
face in general is elevated, rising quickly till over 
200 ft. above sea level is attained. ‘There are woods 


PRESTON 


overlooking the river at the eastern end, and the 
western boundary is formed by a small wooded clough. 

The principal road runs south from the Preston and 
Longridge road, through the middle of the township, 
till it reaches the level tract mentioned ; here is the 
hamlet of Elston, 

The land is chiefly in pasture. The soil is clay, 
loam and alluvial, with subsoil various. 

The pipe line of the Manchester water supply from 
Thirlmere passes through the township, and thence 
through the Ribble into Samlesbury. 

The manor of ELSTON, assessed as 
one plough-land, appears to have been sepa- 
rated from Grimsargh after the Conquest 
and given to the lord of Penwortham. Warine 
Bussel gave it with Heaton in Lonsdale to Hamon le 
Boteler in free marriage,” and 
Hamon appears to have given 
it to the Knights of St. John eS = 
of Jerusalem, a gift ound ere. 
by Albert Bussel.2 The - 
knights gave it to William 
son of Hamon, to be held 
free of suit to their court of 
Amounderness, but paying an 
annual rent of 8s. and an 


MANOR 


obit of 2 marks.4 This free 

rent, representing the lord- Warmsizy. Gules 

ship of the Hospitallers, was a chief ermine two 
ures. 


in 1613 acquired by the 

Shireburnes of Stonyhurst.® 
The estate of William son of Hamon in Golborne ° 

descended to the Hoghton family, but Elston went in 


48 Ellis de Knoll and Alice his wife 
about 1290 granted Edmund Earl of 
Lancaster a piece of land in Grimsargh 
lying on the east side of his park of 
Hyde ; Great Coucher, i, fol. 62, no. 13. 
Matthew de Huyton (?Heaton) and 
Maud his wife in 1323-4 claimed land 
in Grimsargh against Alice the widow 
and Adam the son of Ellis de Knoll; 
Assize R. 425, m. 5d. 

In 1351 Roger de Blackburn acquired 
a messuage and land in Grimsargh from 
John son of Ralph de Freckleton and 
Maud his wife 5 Final Conc. ii, 131. 

William Pole and Margery his wife in 
1378 held two messuages with land and rent 
in Grimsargh, Brockholes and Preston ; 
ibid. iii, 5. Their tenant Richard de 
Smewes was perhaps the Richard who 
occurred as defendant in July 1351; Duchy 
of Lanc. Assize R. 1, m. 5. 

William Pole was in 1398-9 accused 
of felling and carrying away certain trees 
belonging to Nicholas de Brockholes ; 
Add. MS. 32107, no. 1020. Later 
(1454-5) an agreement was made between 

» John Pole and John son of Roger Elston 
as to the bounds of their lands in Brock- 
holes; Kuerden MSS. vi, fol. 74.. 

John Singleton in 1530 held land in 
Grimsargh of Sir Richard Hoghton in 
socage ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. vi, 
no. 32. In 1541 Gabriel Hesketh pur- 
chased from another John Singleton lands 
in Claughton and Grimsargh ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F, bdle. 12, m. 60. Bar- 
tholomew Hesketh of Rufford made a 
purchase in 1536-73; Pal. of Lanc. Plea 
R. 162, m. 15. George Hesketh of 
Poulton died in 1571 holding land in 
Grimsargh of Thomas Hoghton by a 
tent of 4d,; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 


Zz 


xiii, no, 15. See also Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ili, 363. 

Evan Browne of Ribbleton in 1545 
held land in Grimsargh of Richard 
Hoghton by a rent of 20d.; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. vii, no. 24. Thomas 
Brockholes in 1567 also held land there 
of Thomas Hoghton ; ibid. xi, no. 6. 

The Gerards of Brynn had land in 
Grimsargh said to be held of the king in 
thegnage by a rent of 2d. in 1537; ibid. 
viii, no. 29,13. William Pemberton in 
1575 purchased a messuage and land 
there from Sir Thomas Gerard; Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdie. 37, m. 154. 
Richard Pemberton died in 1619 holding 
of Sir Richard Hoghton bya rent of 6d. ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), ii, 224. 

Thomas Asshaw in 1564 purchased a 
tenement there from the Earl of Derby ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 26, m. 
152. This was perhaps the messuage 
held in 1627 by Sir John Radcliffe of 
Ordsall, the tenure not being stated in 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxv, no. 6. 

Thomas Shireburne of Heysham held 
land in Grimsargh of Hoghton in 1635 5 
Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 1083. 

49 Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 301; Index of 
Royalists (Index Soc.), 42. See also Fish- 
wick, Preston, 361. 

Two husbandmen of Grimsargh, 
Thomas and John Cosson, being ‘sus- 
pected of popery,’ were in 1653 summoned 
before the committee for compounding. 
They did not appear, and the two-thirds 
of their estates were sequestered; Cal. 
Com. for Comp. i, 656. 

50 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 221. 


113 


51 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurors, 95, 136-7. Their names were 
Paul Charnley, John Coseney, Robert 
Hummer, Richard Fishwick, George 
Clarkson, James Rogerson, Gilbert Slater 
and Thomas Slater. 

52 Gastrell, Notitia (Chet. Soc.), ii, 

70. It was consecrated in 1726. 

53 T, C. Smith, Longridge, 210-143 
notices of curates in charge and vicars are 
given, with a view of the church. See also 
Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 85-8. 

A ‘Capellanus de Brockholes’ attested 
an agreement in 1253, but the place- 
name may be the surname only; Harl. 
MS. 2112, fol. 65/107. 

54 Lond. Gaz. 14 May 1875. 

55 T, C, Smith, Longridge, 216. The 
place was formerly known as The Her- 
mitage, the residence of a family named 
Chadwick. 

lgsg acres, according to the Census 
Rep. 1901, including 30 of inland water. 

2 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs: and Ches.), i, 30. 

8 Ibid. Elston (30 acres) was confirmed 
to the Hospitallers by Henry IJ and 
Richard I (1189); Carte Antique T 39 
and RR17 (noted by Mr. R. Gladstone, 
jun.). It is named among their lands in 
1292; Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 


ane Ing. and Extents, loc. cit. from 
Kuerden MSS. vy, fol. 824. 

5 Elston is named among Hospitallers’ 
lands granted in 1611 to George Whit- 
more and others; Pat. 9 Jas. I, pt. xxvii. 
It was sold to Richard Shireburne of 
Stonyhurst in 1613 ; Kuerden MSS. ii, 
fol. 132. It is named in an inquisition ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvi, no. 4. 

6 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 74+ 


ES 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


a different way, as the Hoghton holding there appear: 
to have been acquired by purchase,’ and was after- 
wards said to be held of the Crown in socage by 
Several families, possibly younger 
branches,’ assumed Elston as a surname, one of them 
of long continuance in the neighbouring township of 
The immediate lordship seems to have 
descended to one John de Elston, living in the 
time of Edward III.” About a century later, in 1446, 
Sir Thomas Harrington and others purchased it from 


a rent of 184.° 


Brockholes. 


7 Alexander son of William de Elston 
released to Adam de Hozhton his rights 
in waters, mills, fisheries, &c., within the 
vill, 20s. being paid, and William son of 
Alexander de Elston confirmed to Adam 
de Hozhton all his part of the mill, with 
mill-stead, &c., for a rent of a pair of 
white gloves ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 168, 
132. 

or 1301 Richard son of William son of 
Warine de Elston gave Master Richard de 
Hoghton all his right in Elston ; Dods. 
MSS. cxlii, fol. 59. In the same year 
Elston is named among the Hoghton 
estates; Final Conc, (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 192. 

Maud daughter of Paulin de Westacre, 
as widow, released to Sir Adam de Hogh- 
ton in 1330 all right in her father’s lands 
in Elston and her right of turbary in 
Grimsargh for her life ; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 84, fol. 254. A Henry de Wedacre 
was plaintiff respecting land in the town- 
ship in 1285 ; Assize R. 1271, m. 12. 

8 Sir Richard Hoghton in 1422 was 
found to have held a messuage and 40 
acres in Elston; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soc.), 1, 146. See also Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. xiv, no, 26, where the rent is 
not stated. 

® William de Elston and Roger his 
brother were stated in 1346 to hold four 
plough-lands in Elston, &c., by knight's 
service; Ing. p.m. 29 Edw. III (2nd 
nos.), no. 62. Toa charter of 1349 the 
following were witnesses : John de Elston, 
William son of Roger de Elston, William 
son of Paulin de Elston and Roger de 
Elston ; Towneley MS. HH, no. 1906. 
John de Elston of Elston, John de Elston 
of Ribbleton and Roger de Elston attested 
a charter of the year 1362 ; Piccope MSS. 
(Chet. Lib.), iii, 27. 

William son of Roger de Elston, Roger 
his brother and William son of Paulin de 
Elston occur together in 1355 3; Kuerden 
fol. MS. fol. 50, B 8. 

A deed of about 1280 names Roger son 
of William de Elston and Paulin his 
brother ; Kuerden MSS. iii, H2. Henry 
de Blackburn and Eve his wife (about 
1302) granted their son John their right in 
20d, rent due from William son of Paulin 
de Elston; Add. MS. 32106, no. 309. 
Christiana widow of Paulin de Elston and 
William her son occur in 1340 ; Kuerden 
MSS. ii, fol. 2565. 

The following pleadings show that the 
partition between several Elston families 
goes back some distance of time. In 1280 
James de Elston claimed half a messuage 
and oxgang of land against Robert de 
Elston and Roger his brother; William 
de Elston was called to warrant; De 
Banco R. 36, m. 69; 42, m. 38. In 
1284 James de Elston was non-suited in 
a claim for land against Robert son of 
William de Elston; Assize R. 1268, 
m. 12d. Itseems that James was the son 
of a Rozer de Elston 3 Kuerden fol. MS, 
(Chet. Lib.), 904, D 5% 


William de Myr of Elston in 1282 
sought a messuage and oxgang of land 
against Robert de Elston, and the same 
against Roger de Elston ; while Robert 
son of William de Elston and Roger his 
brother sought a small tenement against 
John son of Agnes de Elston ; De Banco 
R. 47, m. 32, 34d. Robert de Elston 
and Roger his brother attested a charter 
c. 12845 Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 74. 

Again in 1298 Cecily daughter of 
Robert de Elston and her sisters Margery, 
Elizabeth and Emma claimed goods to the 
value of £12 from William son of Ralph, 
Alice his wife and Roger de Elston; 
De Banco R. 124, m. 64. 

10 The descent seems to be: William 
de Elston —s. Robert -s. William -s. 
John. 

To William de Elston, ‘his lord,’ the 
Alexander son of William son of Arthur 
de Elston already mentioned granted land 
in Elston; Harl. MS. 2042, fol. 171. 
He was probably the William called to 
warrant in 1280. 

Robert son of William de Elston has 
been named as defendant in 1284-5. To 
his son Richard in 1318 he granted all 
his lands in Elston; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 164, fol. 271. The manor, however, 
seems to have descended to another son 
William, who in 1328 was defendant to 
a claim put forward by Roger and Paulin, 
sons of William de Elston and Roger son 
of Roger; Assize R. 1400, m. 233. 

John de Elston was lord in 13373 
Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 150. He (as son 
of William) was in that year one defen- 
dant to aclaim by William son of William 
de Elston; Assize R. 1424, m. 311. In 
1346 Margery daughter of William son 
of Richard de Ashley (of Whittingham) 
claimed three messuages and a plough-land 
in Elston in right of her mother Christiana, 
daughter and heir of Nicholas the Clerk, 
seised in the time of Edward I. The 
defendants were Maud widow of William 
de Elston and John the son of William ; 
John said that the tenement was only one 
messuage and 6 acres of land and that he 
held jointly with Maud his wife; De 
Banco R. 342, m. 20; 345, m. 21; 348, 
m. 304. The suit went on for some 
years. At Pentecost, 1352, John de 
Elston further defended his right by say- 
ing that plaintiff's mother had released to 
his grandfather Robert all her right in 
Elston, but the charter was denied ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Assize R. 2, m. vijd. In the 
end Margery lost her case ; ibid. 6, m. 7d. 

In 1346 John de Elston made a feoff- 
ment of his manor of Elston with all its 
buildings, homages, services, reliefs, &c. ; 
Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 111. He made an 
exchange of lands in 1358, Roger de 
Elston and William son of Paulin de 
Elston being witnesses ; Add. MS. 32106, 
No. 433- 

In 1357 John de Elston purchased 10 
acres in Elston from William de Dodhill 
and Alice his wife; Final Conc. ii, 154. 


114 


Isabel and Joan, daughters and heirs of John Shaw." 
On the partition of Sir James Harrington’s lands in 
1516 Elston fell to the share of his daughter Mar- 
garet,'? who married Christopher Hulton, and so it 
descended to Asshaw " and Radcliffe of Ordsall."" In 
1610-11 it was sold to Sir Thomas Walmesley,"® and 
after changing hands again was acquired by Thomas 
Walmsley,'® in whose family it remained till recently. 
The present lord of the manor, it is stated, is 
Mr. William Cross of Frensham, Surrey. 


In 1363 it was found that the tenement 
of Joan wife of Gilbert the Tailor in 
Elston, taken into the king’s hands for 
felony, was held of John de Elston the 
elder by the rent of gs. §d.; Ing. p.m. 37 
Edw. III (1st nos.), no. 23. 

In 1359 there were two Johns, but the 
John de Elston who attested a Ribbleton 
charter granted by John de Elston the 
younger was probably the lord of Elston; 
Add. MS. 32107, no. 2975. At the same 
time a John son of William de Elston 
complained that Alice widow of William 
de Elston was causing waste in Elston; 
De Banco R. 433, m. 425 ; see also 447, 
m. 189. 

In the following year John de Elston 
the elder made a settlement of lands in 
Elston, Preston and Haighton ; Kuerden 
MSS. iv, E 5. 

It was perhaps his son who as Roger 
son of John de Elston obtained land in 
the township from William son of Robert 
West of Elston in 1382-3; ibid. Roger 
de Elston in 1395 purchased three mes- 
suages, &c., from John de Shorrock the 
younger and Agnes his wife; Final Conc. 
iii, 46. There was, however, a Roger de 
Elston of Ribbleton and Brockholes, 

" Tbid. 112. The estate was described 
as the manor of Elston, with messuages, 
land and wood in Ribchester, Haighton 
and Preston and the moiety of a mill in 
Haighton. The purchasers were probably 
trustees of Harrington of Wolfage. 

Sir James Harrington of Brixworth, in 
a deed dated at Elston, made a feoffment 
of all his lands in Elston, Haighton, 
Fishwick, Dinckley and Lancaster ; Add, 
MS. 32106, no. 473. Isabel his widow 
in 1498 made a release of the same; ibid. 
no. 830. 2 Norris D. (B.M.). 

13 Lancs, Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.) ii, 
171-2. 

In 1552 Joan widow of Roger Asshaw 
and daughter of Margaret, one of the 
daughters and co-heirs of Sir James Har- 
rington, gave her son Anthony an annuity 
of 4 marks from her lands in Elston, 
Haighton, Goosnargh, &c.; Add. MS. 
32105, fol. 214. At the same time she 
made a general settlement ; ibid. fol. 213. 

14 See the accounts of Heath Charnock 
and Salford. 

15 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 78, 
no. 223 77, no. I, 8. 

16 Fishwick, Preston, 93. 

In 1625 Robert Randolph leased to 
Thomas Heneage the manor of Elston 
and a messuage in Preston for five years; 
Cal. S. P. Dom. 1625-6, p. 49- See also 
Lancs. and Ches, Rec. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), fi, 247. . 

In 1652-3 the manor of Elston, with 
messuages, windmill, tithes, &c., and 3 
free fishery in the Ribble were held by 
John Box, Anne his wife, Thomas Ince, 
Robert Charnock, esq., Thomas Harrison, 
esq., Elizabeth his wife and Hester Char- 
nock ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 151 
m. 127, 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


There are but few other details known regarding 
estates in this township.17_ Henry Gregson paid £10 
in 1631, having declined knighthood! Robert 
Hothersall#® and Henry Walmesley!® had their 
estates sequestered under the Commonwealth. Two 
or three ‘ Papists” registered small estates in 1717.20 

Apart from Mr. Cross’s land the principal holding 
is that of the Goosnargh Hospital, comprising the 
tenements called Marsh House (or Elston Hall), 
Salisbury and Moorfields, in all about 220 acres.2! 

John March’s house in Elston was in 1672 licensed 
for a Presbyterian meeting.” 


FISHWICK 


Fiscuic, Dom. Bk.; Fiswich, 1202; Fiskwic, 
1203; Fyswic, c. 1220 ; Fischwic, 1225 ; Fissewyk, 
c. 12503 Fiswike, 1251; Fixwyk, 1297; Fisshe- 
wyke, 1302; Phisick, xviii cent. This last shows 
the local pronunciation. 

This township extends from the south-east border 
of Preston to the Ribble. A large part of the surface 
is low-lying level ground in bends of the river, but in 
the west and north the surface rises steeply and 
irregularly, a height of about 150 ft. above sea level 
being attained. The hall is in the eastern part of 
the township, near the foot of the slope and at the 
opening of a small clough. The Swillbrook was the 
boundary between Fishwick and Preston ; it has now 
disappeared. Frenchwood lies between it and the 
Ribble, to the west of the road to Walton. The 
area is 692% acres, and the population in 1901 was 
4,884. 

The ancient highway from Preston to the south, 


PRESTON 


by way of Walton-le-Dale, passes through Fishwick, 
and the bridge across the river there has long been 
pre-eminently ‘Ribble Bridge.’ From the bridge a 
minor road leads north-east towards the hall and 
thence to Preston, while another road and footpath 
lead west towards Avenham Park. 

Dwelling-houses have spread over the border from 
Preston, with which town Fishwick has been joined 
for municipal and parliamentary purposes since the 
Reform Acts. In 1894 the township ceased to exist, 
being now part of the enlarged township of Preston.! 

The manor of FISHWICK was in 
1066 a member of the Preston lordship 
of Earl Tostig, and was assessed as one 
plough-land.?_ Some time after the Conquest it was 
given to the Forester of Lancaster, as part of his fee,® 
and descended in the same way‘ as the Gernet 
moiety of Eccleston in Ley- 
land, coming into the hands 
of Richard Molyneux of Sefton 
in 1539.5 The manor of 
Fishwick and the lands, &c., 
in Fishwick, Ribbleton and 
Brockholes were in 1569 
found to be held of the queen 
in socage by fealty only °; 
and this statement of the 
tenure was repeated later.” 

It does not appear that the 
lords of the manor ever re- 
sided there, and the chief 
interest of the Molyneux possession arises from the 
fact that in the 17th century the hall became the 
centre of a Roman Catholic mission,’ and it was 


MANOR 


Motyneux. <Asure 


a cross moline or. 


Thomas Walmsley of Elston and his 
sons Thomas and Richard were burgesses 
at the Preston Guild of 1782; Abram, 
Mem, of the Guilds, 104. 

W Sir Thomas Ashton (1514) purchased 
lands in Elston and Haighton from his 
father-in-law Sir James Harrington, but 
the tenure is not stated ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. iv, no. 80. 

Ralph Elston’s capital messuage in 
Brockholes was in 1557 described as ‘in 
the town of Elston’ ; ibid. x, no. 3. 

_ 17a Misc, (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), 
i, 222. 

18 His estate was sequestered for recu- 
sancy. In 1650 he settled part on his 
wife Katherine, who after his death sold 
her interest, and the purchaser in 1654 
desired an examination of his title; 
Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), iii, 262. 

19 Henry Walmsley, husbandman, was 
in 1653 ‘suspected of popery,’ and there- 
fore summoned before the committee for 
compounding. On his refusing to abjure 
his religion, two-thirds of his estate was 
sequestered ; Cal. Com. for Comp. i, 656. 

“) Henry Cumaleach, son-in-law of 
John Walmsley ; Alice and Anne Charn- 
ley ; Estcourt and Payne, Eng. Cath. Nox 
Jurors, 139, 104, 

"| End, Char. Rep. (Kirkham, 1 904), 42, 
123. 2 Cal. S. P. Dom. 1672, p. 200. 

' Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 31607. 

2 VCH. Lanes, i, 2885. 

5 Lanes, Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 43, 121. In 1252 
Roger Gernet held one plough-land in 
chief of the king by service of the forest ; 
he had all the land except 1 oxgang 
and 60 acres, the moiety of a fishery in 


the Ribble, and a mill worth 30s. yearly ; 
ibid. i, 187-8. 

In 1225 an agreement was made 
between William and Roger Gernet as 
to the manor of Fishwick. It was held 
in dower by Cecily widow apparently of 
Benedict Gernet, father of Roger and 
grandfather of William; Farrer, Lancs. 
Pipe R. 204, &c. Cecily married one 
William known as the Villein, and Roger 
warranted the manor to them, while 
William Gernet renounced all claim to 
it on behalf of himself and his heirs in 
return for half a plough-land in Crophill. 
Roger Gernet’s lordship of Fishwick was 
therefore undisputed ; Final Conc. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), i, 46. 

4 William de Dacre held Fishwick by 
knight’s service in 1297; at that time 
the vill rendered 7s. 8d, to the Earl of 
Lancaster ; Lanes. Ing. and Extents, i, 
298, 289. From a return made in 1302 
it would appear that the tenure had been 
altered from forestry to knight’s service ; 
ibid. i, 317. The old service of master 
forester was, however, recorded in 1324, 
Randle de Dacre being lord ; Dods. MSS. 
exxxi, fol. 414. A further change was 
made before 1458, when Sir Thomas 
Dacre of Gillesland was found to have 
held the manor of Fishwick of the king 
as of his Duchy of Lancaster in socage 
by the service of a grain of pepper; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 65. 

In 1324 the annual value of the estate 
was returned as £7 18s., made up thus: 
A messuage with fruit and herbage, 25. ; 
60 acres arable, 30s.; 6 acres meadow, 
6s.; a fishery in the Ribble, 26s. 8d. ; a 
water-mill, 40s., and 8 oxgangs of land, 
held by free tenants who paid 6s. 8d. for 


11s 


each oxgang—53s. 4d.; Ing. p.m. 18 
Edw. II, no. 41. Sir William de Dacre 
in 1358 complained that Robert son of 
Henry de Kuerden and others had taken 
hares and pheasants from his free warren 
at Fishwick ; Assize R. 438, m.7. The 
clear value of the manor was stated as 
io marks in 1375; Ing. p.m. 49 
Edw. III, pt. i, no. 39. 

After the confiscation in 1461 this manor 
was granted for life to Eleanor widow of 
Sir Randle Dacre in 1467 as compensa~ 
tion for dower ; Ca/. Pat. 1467-77, p. 26. 

Richard Fiennes Lord Dacre in 1486 
held the manors of Fishwick and Eccles- 
ton by knight’s service ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. iii, no. 58. His successor 
Thomas Fiennes Lord Dacre in 1506 
sold them to Edmund Dudley ; ibid. iv, 
no, 21; Dep. Keeper’s Rep. xl, App. 545. 
From John Dudley the manors passed to 
Sir Thomas Seymer in 1530 and to 
Edward Elrington in 1538 ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F, bdle. 11, m. 113, 16. 

5 Ibid. bdle. 12, m. 15. The manor 
is named in a Molyneux settlement of 
1558; ibid. bdle. 20, m. 80. 

® Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. xiii, no. 35. 

7 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), iti, 3903; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
p-m. xxvii, no. 59. 

8In 1586 Evan Banister, an ‘old 
priest,’ was harboured by Jane Eyves of 
Fishwick, widow; Baines, Lancs. (ed. 
Harland), i, 180, from Harl. MS. 360, 
fol. 32. ‘It is probable that the chapel 
within the hall was regularly served before 
Dom Bartholomew Gregory Hesketh 
took charge of the mission in 1685 and 
built the chapel there, wherein were 
organs, bells, vestments and a pulpit, aa 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


reported to the Government in 1717 that Lord 
Molyneux had given the place to the English 
Benedictines both as a mission station and an en- 
was true proof was 
wanting, and the manor was retained by the family 
It was purchased by Sir 
Henry Hoghton in 1731, and from a later Sir Henry 
in 1785 by William Shawe of Preston.” 
it descended to Thomas Rigby Knowles, who died 
The estate is in 
No courts have been held for 
The hall was parted from the manor, 
and in 1731 sold to Thomas Astley of Preston, a 
chief rent of 3s. 8¢. being then payable to the 


dowment.? If the report 


until the sale in 1729." 


in 1901, leaving an infant son. 
the hands of trustees. 
many years. 


deposed before the Commissioners of For- 
feited Estates in 1718’; J. Gillow in 
Trans. Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xiii, 159. 

® Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 173-4. The hall 
was called Physick Hall. There is an 
allusion to the estate in a letter from 
Richard Hitchmough ; Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Rec. 124. 

10 Under the Private Act 2 Geo. II, 
cap. 9. 

11 Abstract of W. Shawe’s title in the 
possession of the Knowles Trustees. 
The appointment of a gamekeeper by Sir 
Henry Hoghton as lord of the manor in 
1734 was printed in the Preston Guardian, 
24 Apr. 1875, 

For a pedigree showing the Shawe 
descent see Fishwick’s Preston, 343. 

1 Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), iii, 242. 
For an account of the Astleys see Fish- 
wick, op. cit. 308. 

13 Lancs. Ing, and Extents, i, 178-9, 
dated 1247~51, and showing the aliena- 
tions made, the rents due and the. por- 
tions of a knight’s fee for which service 
was to be rendered. The land amounted 
to 1 oxgang and 58 acres and the rents to 
15s. 2d., as follows :— 

Roger the Clerk of Fishwick, 1 oxgang 
of land and 3 acres, paying 6s. 8d., and 
being ordered to render the service due for 
the twentieth part of a fee. 

Baldwin de Preston, the moiety of mill 
and 20 acres of land and wood, 35. 2d. 
and one-fortieth. 

John son of John, 6 acres, 2s. and one- 
fiftieth. 

Heirs of Roger del Ridding, 22 acres, 
2s. 6d. and one-fiftieth. 

William Watchet, 4 acres ; 6d. 

William son of Richard, 3 acres ; 4d. 

Benedict Gernet gave an assart to 
Robert his clerk, son of Ralph de Preston, 
a rent of 6d. being payable ; Kuerden 
MSS. ii, fol. 2274. 

The above-named Baldwin de Preston 
died in 1251 holding in Fishwick an 
assart, called Dustescahe, of 18 acres each 
worth 4d. a year, also the moiety of a mill 
worth 3s.; he rendered 35. 2d. to the 
king. His heir was his son Henry, aged 
seventeen ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 
183, 192. 

The tenancies of 1346 (corrected by 
the sheriff’s compotus of 1348) were :— 

Messuage Acres Rent 


sd, 
Alandel Moor. . .1 22 7° 
William de Fishwick . 1 6 ° 8 
Adam son of Simon . I 6 20 
Geoffrey de Hackinsall 3 44 © 7% 
Beatrice del Ridding .— 44 © 74 
Thomas del Ridding . 1 9 13 
Adam de Bury . «© »+— 4 °9 
Lawrence Travers »- »— 14 25 


From him 


The summary in the record states that 
‘they hold 70 acres by being serjeants of the 
forests of Lonsdale.) Amounderness and 
[West] Derbyshire, rendering 1s, 4d. and 
oa 3 Survey of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 
48. 

Comparing the lists it seems that Alan 
del Moor represents Roger the Clerk and 
William son of Richard; William de Fish- 
wick, William Watchet (2 acres and 2d, 
rent being added) ; Adam son of Simon, 
John son of John ; Adam de Bury and 
Lawrence Travers, Baldwin de Preston ; 
and the other three the heirs of Roger del 
Ridding. 

In 1326 Adam de Bury granted mes- 
suages, &c., in Preston, Fishwick and 
Ashton to Peter de Risley and Maud his 
wife, with remainders to Maud’s sisters 
and to Richard the brother of Adam; 
Final Conc. ii, 63. William de Beconsaw 
in 1372 purchased a messuage and land 
in Preston and Fishwick from Robert son 
of Robert son of Richard de Bury ; ibid. 
ii, 184. 

Christiana del Ridding gave land in the 
Ridding to her son Adam; Kuerden MSS. 
ii, fol. 2264, In the time of Richard II 
and Henry IV these lands were sold to 
the Waltons of Preston ; ibid. From one 
of the deeds it appears that Ridding Field 
was near Fishwick Brook. 

M4 A charter of 1279 shows that Adam 
Woderowe and his wife Amabel (daughter 
of Roger de Fishwick) pledged land in 
Fishwick field in return for 15s. lent 
them in their need by Roger son of Roger 
son of Alan de Fishwick; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 398. Alexander Woderowe 
of Preston gave land of his mother’s 
in Fishwick to Adam Lussell, clerk ; 
Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 2275. 

Simon de Fishwick was in 1284 non- 
suited in a claim against Benedict Gernet 
concerning land in Fishwick ; Assize R. 
1268, m. 12d. Adam son of Simon de 
Fishwick in 1314-15 gave lands in Fish- 
wick and Brockholes to his son Simon, 
who had married Maud daughter of 
Thomas son of David de Kirkham ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 714. The same 
Adam in 1311-12 gave land in Westfield, 
next the demesne, to Robert son of Auger; 
Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 2265. In 1319-20 
Adam son of Robert son of Auger de 
Fishwick gave land in the Westfield, lying 
between lands of the lord of Fishwick, to 
Richard son of Dobin and Cecily his wife ; 
ibid. fol. 2274. This land seems after- 
wards (c. 1400) to have been the property 
of John Lussell of Preston ; ibid. 

By a charter dated ‘5 Edw.’ Roger 
son of Roger son of John de Fishwick 
granted a messuage and land in the vill of 
Fishwick to Richard son of Roger de 
Fishwick ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 95 (fol. 


116 


Forester of Myerscough.” 
chased by the above-named William Shawe. 

Lists of the free tenants in the 13th and 14th 
centuries have been preserved"; their holdings were 
no doubt the basis of the freehold estates of later 
times, but no detailed account of them can be given, 
= of the families took the surname of Fishwick." 
and other owners can be traced by the inquisitio, 
and other records." j i rae 

The principal resident family was that of Eyves, 
Robert del Eves of Fishwick in 1394 leased to Sir 
Richard Hoghton his ‘manor’ of Fishwick, from 
which there were due rents of £6 35. 4d. to Dacre 
and 115. to Langton." 


It was about 1760 pur- 


In 1617 the hall was leased 


257). William son of Richard de Fish- 
wick was a witness. 

Maud widow of Roger son of Roger 
son of John de Fishwick in 1312-13 gave 
Richard son of Roger de Fishwick all the 
land she held in dower; Kuerden, loc. 
cit. Roger son of John de Fishwick was 
a witness. 

An Adam Fishwick was tenant of the 
hall about 1550. After his death a claim 
to it was put forward (1565) by Grego 
Fishwick, the holders ie ae Ae 
Fishwick and Thurstan Southworth. The 
depositions are printed by Fishwick, op. 
cit. 299-306. Robert Fishwick claimed 
land in 1§51 ; Ducatus Lanc, (Rec. Com.), 
ii, 112. 

15 Settlements of land in Fishwick were 
made by Thomas Nixon and Joan his 
wife in 1406 and 1410; the remainder 
was to Sir James Harrington (apparently 
the owner), who granted turbary on 
Balderston Moss during the nonage of the 
heir of William Balderston ; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 967, 91 (fol. 256). Thomas 
Nixon made a further purchase in 1416 ; 
Final Cone. iii, 73. 

A later Sir James Harrington died in 
1497 holding lands in Fishwick by ser- 
vices unknown; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
p-m. iii, no. 40, They passed (by pur- 
chase or inheritance) to his son-in-law Sir 
Thomas Ashton of Ashton-under-Lyne, 
who died in 1514; ibid. iv, no, 80. His 
heir, Thomas Hoghton, held them in 
1580 by services unknown, but in 1630 
the lands in Fishwick were considered an 
appurtenance of the manor of Lea; ibid. 
xiv, no. 26 3 xxvii, no. 13. 

Sir Richard Hoghton was concerned in 
a plea regarding a messuage, &c., in Fish- 
wick in 15445 Ducatus Lanc. ii, 77. He 
complained that Robert Ainsworth and 
others had broken his close; Pal. of 
Lanc. Writs Proton. 36 Hen. VII. 

William Walton of Preston died in 
1559 holding 6 acres in Fishwick of Sir 
Richard Molyneux in socage, by fealty 
and suit of court ; ibid. xi, no, 27. 
Richard Walton in 1569 held 16 acres of 
the queen; ibid. xiii, no. 26. In later 
inquisitions the tenure is not stated. 

John Singleton in 1530 held lands in 
Fishwick of the heir of Lord Dacre; 
ibid. vi, no. 32. A like statement 1s 
made in other inquisitions of the 
family. 

Thomas Clayton in 1591 held land of 
Sir Richard Molyneux ; ibid. xv, 0. 3. 

The tenure of Richard Walmsley’s 
lands here in 1609 was unknown ; Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc, Lancs. and Ches.), 

149. 
16 Add. MS. 32106, no. 90 (fol. 255). 
Eyves—perhaps Ecs—was a place in 
township ; Ducatus Lane. i, 238. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


to Ralph Eyves and became the family dwelling.” 
The family being recusants and Royalists quickly felt 
the displeasure of the Parlia- 
ment on the outbreak of the 
Civil War, and Richard 
Eyves’s estate was in 1643 
sequestered for the combined 
offences.\® Richard Eyves 
died in 1644, but his father 
Ralph survived, and his estate 
was under sequestration for 
recusancy.”” ‘Thomas Eyves, 
another of the family, had 
two-thirds of his leasehold 
estate sequestered for the same 
reason ; he was eighty years 
of age.” Another Thomas 
Eyves, son of Richard, recorded a pedigree in 1665.” 

The estates of Richard Eyves, Richard Kellet and 
Richard Sudell were sold under the Act of 1652.” 
James Melling, a recusant, in 1654 requested to be 
allowed to compound for his sequestered estate.” In 
1717 Alexander Hudson, linen weaver, registered a 
small holding as a ‘ Papist.2** The estate called 
Frenchwood, formerly owned by Thomas Starkie 
(great-grandson of John Starkie of Huntroyde) and 
Nicholas his son, was carried by the latter’s daughter 
and co-heir in 1815 to Colonel Henry Bence 
Bence® of Thorington Hall, Suffolk, whose de- 
scendant, Mr. P. Bence Trower, is the present 
owner.”® 

Roger the Clerk alienated 4 acres in Fishwick to 
Sawley Abbey.” 

The tenants of the township had a right of turbary 
on Penwortham Moss.” 


Sable a 
cheveron between three 
crosslets argent. 


Eyves. 


BROUGHTON 


Broctun, Dom. Bk.; Brocton, 1200; Brecton, 
1256 ; Brochton, 1261 ; Broucton, 1262 ; Broghton, 
1292 ; Brogton, 1297. 

Blundel Brook, running west, forms at first the 
northern boundary of this township and then flows 
across it. On the north bank stand the church and 


PRESTON 


Broughton House. Most of the area lies to the 
south of the brook ; near the centre was the Tower, 
with the hamlet of Sharoe adjacent, Durton or Urton 
to the north-east and Fernyhalgh on the eastern 
boundary. Lightfoot Green and Ingolhead are on 
the west side. A small detached portion lay in 
Woodplumpton, to which it was added about 1882. 
The area measured 2,367 acres,' and in 1go1 there 
was a population of 616. ‘The surface is compara- 
tively flat, the heights above sea level ranging from 
100 to 180 ft. 

The principal road is that going north from 
Preston ; it crosses Blundel Brook by a bridge, from 
which a road gocs eastward to Haighton, with a 
branch turning south to Fulwood ; westward a road 
goes to Cottam and Lea. The London and North- 
Western Company’s railway runs north through the 
western end of the township. 

The land is pasture ; the soil clayey, with varying 
subsoil. 

There is a parish council. 

Remains of a number of ancient crosses are known— 
in the churchyard and elsewhere.? There are, or 
were, some reputed holy wells.? 

In 1066 BROUGHTON, assessed 
as one plough-land, formed part of 
Earl Tostig’s lordship of Preston or 
Amounderness.* After the Conquest it appears to have 
been held in thegnage, perhaps by the old lords and 
their descendants. Between 1153 and 1160 William 
Count of Boulogne, son of King Stephen, confirmed to 
Uctred son of Huck and his heirs 8 oxgangs of land 
in Broughton by the service due, viz. 8s. a year.° 
Uctred and his family took their surname from Little 
Singleton, which they held by serjeanty of the 
wapentake of Amounderness.® 

Richard son of Uctred succeeded, but was ejected 
by Theobald Walter, after whose forfeiture and death 
King John detained the manor and it remained in 
the hands of Henry III. The township during this 
time gave an increased revenue to the Crown.” In 
1261 Henry III, after inquiry, restored it asa matter 
of right to William de Singleton, grandson of Richard, 
who paid 3 marks of gold.* William had already in 


MANORS 


1 Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. other daughter of Nicholas Starkie 8 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 52. 
Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 280-1. For pedi- | married — Bacon. 7 Farrer, op. cit. 1313 ‘the increase 
gree see Fishwick, op. cit. 332. 27 Pal. of Lanc. Chan. Misc. 1, 12 of rent from Broughton for the whole 


18 Royalist Comp. Papers, ii, 285. The 
claim recorded was for an annuity of 
£10 from Over Hacking in Aughton 
(Aighton). 

'9 Ibid. ii, 279-84. Ralph Eyves was 
buried at Preston 30 Aug. 1653, aged 
ninety-five ; Reg. 

* Royalist Comp. Papers, ii, 286. 

"1 Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 105. 

® Index of Royalists (Index Soc.), 
41-3. 

Richard Kellet had lands also in Ribble- 
ton (Braggar’s tenement) and in Preston 
(Knowle Hey), the latter by grant of 
Richard Savage of Winnington, Staffs. 
The estate was sequestered for the ‘ popery 
and delinquency’ of Kellet, who died 
before 1652, when his daughter Mary 
Knight petitioned for restoration, she 
Hae ‘conformable to the Church of 

ngland’; Royalist Comp. Papers, iv, 39. 

3 Cal, ae as ee ce 
_ * Estcourt and Payne, Eng. Cath. Non- 
J#r0rs, 94. ; 

% Burke, Commoners, i, 651-3. 


°6 Information of Mr. Trower. The 


(1389 and 1395). The gift was probably 
void. 8 Fishwick, op. cit. 101. 

1 The Census Rep. 1901 gives 2,357 
acres ; the difference is probably accounted 
for by the detached portion within Wood- 
plumpton. 

3 Lancs. and Ches. Antig. Soc, xx, 174-6. 
Some have disappeared; those enumerated 
are the churchyard cross (steps remain), 
Daniel’s Cross and Duxen Dean Cross 
on the northern boundary (base of latter re- 
mains), Durton Lane (now destroyed) and 
Durton Green Crosses, and Fernyhalgh. 

8 Ibid. ; near Broughton Church and 
at Fernyhalgh, 

4 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 2882. 

5 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R.430. Uctred’s 
“antecessores’ had held Broughton, ap- 
parently by the same service. His father 
may be Huck the reeve, living 1160-70 ; 
Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 47. 

Uctred son of Huck also had land in 
Stainall; ibid. He is mentioned in the 
Pipe Rolls of 1171-7; Farrer, op. cit. 
24, &c. 


Ge 


year—S1s. 8d.’ 

8 The story is told Lancs. Ing. and Ex- 
tents, i, 192, 226-7. King Henry had 
given the manor for life to Master William 
the queen’s Sauser (Sa/sarius). The 
manor was not liable to tallage. 

In 1194-5 Theobald Walter sued 
Richard son of Uctred and Robert his 
brother for the whole town of Broughton, 
one plough-land, as part of his demesne, 
having been held by the king or his 
father in demesne. Richard said in reply 
that the moiety of the town was of his 
own demesne, held of the said Theobald 
by certain services which he was ready to 
perform. Robert had the other moiety ; 
Coram Rege R. 5, m, 2d. 

William the Sauser received Broughton 
from the king in 1244; he had 8 marks 
of silver ‘of his farm’ from William de 
Singleton in 1261; Dods. MSS. cxlix, 
fol. 50. 

Richard and Robert, sons of Uctred, 
seem to have succeeded their father as 
early as 1185; Farrer, op. cit. 56. In 
1205 Richard son of Uctred proffered 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


1256 acquired land in Broughton from Geoffrey the 
Cook, and in 1262 he warranted to Alan de Singleton 


a moiety of Broughton.” 


William and his son Alan died before 1292, when 
Alan’s son Thomas was in possession and engaged in 
Soon afterwards Broughton and 
the other estates of the family are found in the 
possession of Joan wife of Thomas Banastre of 
Bretherton, she being the sister and heir of Thomas 
Thomas died in 1299 or 1300, Joan 
claiming dower in the latter year.” 
1303 she made a settlement of the manor of Little 
Singleton and various lands in Thornton, Broughton, 
Dilworth and Bilsborrow, the remainders being 


various disputes.! 


de Singleton. 


5 marks for having his serjeanty (of 
Amounderness and Blackburn), which had 
been taken into the king’s hands ; ibid. 
204. In 1208 he proffered 10 marks for 
the restoration of the plough-land in 
Broughton ; dbbrev, Plac. (Rec. Com.), 
58. 
Richard died in or before 1211, when 
his son Alan proffered 20 marks for livery 
of his father’s estates in Singleton and 
Broughton, and for confirmation of his 
office of bailiff of Amounderness ; Farrer, 
op. cit. 237-8. In 1212 Alan is found 
in possession of his serjeanties of Amoun- 
derness and Blackburn; but Broughton 
was in the king’s hands, rendering 6 
marks yearly ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 
52, 134. He also held Bilsborrow in 
1226, and portions of Freckleton and 
Whittingham in 1242 ; ibid. i, 140, 152. 
He died in 1244 holding these offices and 
lands, and leaving a son William who 
was the heir ; ibid. i, 158, 160. 

In 1245 Alice widow of Alan de 
Singleton came to an agreement with 
William de Singleton as to dower; Final 
Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 92. 
She was marriageable in 124.6, and the 
king had granted her marriage to William 
de Lancaster; Assize R. 404, m. 22. 

Alan had perhaps a brother John, for 
John son of Richard de Singleton in 1261 
held 2 oxgangs of land ; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents, i, 228. Alan had a second son 
named Richard, who perhaps became a 
canon of Cockersand ; Final Conc. i, 103, 
150. The family were benefactors of 
this house ; see Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 225-8, 264-5. 

9 Final Conc. i, 1193 concerning 40 
acres of land. 

10 [bid. i, 141. Thirty acres were ex- 
cepted, and these William warranted to 
Thomas de Singleton at the same time. 
The plaintiff was Hugh son of Richard 
de Stapleford. From other sources it is 
known that Alan was the son and heir of 
William ; probably Thomas was another 
son. William son of Alan de Singleton, 
with the consent of Alan his heir, gave 
land in Bilsborrow to Cockersand Abbey; 
Cockersand Chartul. i, 268. 

In 1297 the vill of Broughton rendered 
8s. to the Earl of Lancaster, and the 
tenants paid a further ros. for having 
common in the forest of Fulwood ; Lancs. 
Ing. and Extents, i, 289. ¢ 

ti Katherine widow of Alan de Singleton 
was in 1292 the wife of Thomas de 
Clifton, and claimed dower in lands in 
Broughton. One parcel had been granted 
to Master Robert de Singleton by William 
the father of Alan, and Alan had added 
some land in Whittingham; it was 
ordered that Master Robert should hold 
his land in peace, while Katherine should 


to William Banastre and Adam his brother."* 
the account already given of Bretherton in the parish 


From 


of Croston it will be seen that William was the son 


As a widow in 


have an equivalent from the lands of 
Thomas the son of Alan 3 Assize R. 408, 
m. 23. A similar decision in her favour 
was given as to land held by Thomas son 
of Thomas de Singleton ; ibid. In two 
other claims also Thomas the son and 
heir of Alan warranted the defendants— 
Nicholas son of Alan de Singleton and 
William de Singleton—and rendered dower 
to Katherine from his own land ; ibid, 
m. 31d. 

At the same time William de Earlsgate 
was non-suited in claims against Thomas 
de Clifton and Katherine his wife, and 
against Nicholas son of Alan de Single- 
ton; ibid. m. 76. This Nicholas again 
appears in 1295; De Banco R. 109, 
m. 70. 

12 Compare De Banco R. 127, m. 
11g d.; 131, m. 106d. 

18 Final Conc. i, 201. The descent is 
thus recorded in pleadings of 1334: 
Alan -s, William -s. Alan -s, Thomas 
~sister Joan, who married Thomas Banastre 
-s. William -s, Adam ; Coram Rege R. 
297, m. 27. 

William son of Ellen de Broughton in 
1308-9 released all actions, &c., to Sir 
William Banastre; Dods. MSS. cxlix, 
fol. 45. 

4 Adam son of William Banastre in 
1324 held the manor of Broughton by 
the service of 8s., and had pasture in 
Fulwood for the cattle of his tenants 
(except in time of pannage) by paying 
tos.; Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 394. 

In 1334 it appeared that the king had 
demanded a payment of £4 a year from 
the men of Broughton ; Coram Rege R. 
297, Rex m.19d. This probably referred 
to the right of pasture in Fulwood, for 
which 10s. was paid. The men of 
Broughton appear to have exceeded their 
rights, and in 1336 were fined £13 65. 8d. 
for all transgressions; Whalley Couch. 
(Chet. Soc.), ti, 373-4. 

Thomas son of Adam Banastre held the 
town of Broughton, viz. one plough-land, 
in 1346, by the tenth part of a knight's 
fee anda rent of 105.3 Survey of 1346 
(Chet. Soc.), 50. ; 

Lands in Dilworth, Broughton, Whit- 
tingham, Preston and Goosnargh were 
held by Edward Banastre in 1382, and 
inherited by his daughter Constance ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 16. 

In 1445-6 Richard de Balderston held 
Broughton by the tenth part of a knight’s 
fee; Duchy of Lanc, Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, 
no. 20. 

15 Broughton was included in the for- 
feited Harrington lands given to Thomas 
Earl of Derby in 1489 ; Pat. 4 Hen. VII. 
In 1513 it was stated that Thomas, late 
Earl of Derby, William Knowles, clerk, 
and others (apparently trustees) held the 


118 


of Joan and Thomas. 
same way as Bretherton,"* and in the 16th century 
the Earl of Derby held the manor,'* though the 
other heirs of Balderston had estates in Broughton." 
This principal manor of Broughton then disappears 
from the records. 

What in later times was called the manor was 
the estate of BROUGHTON TOWER, held by a 
branch of the Singleton family. There are but 
fragmentary notices of them.” 
Broughton and Robert his son occur in a feoffment 


Broughton descended in the 


James Singleton of 


manor of Broughton of the king in socage 
by the rent of 8s, 3 Duchy of Lane. Ing. 
p.m. iii, no. 15. On the partition made 
in 1564 the manor of Broughton was 
assigned to Edward Earl of Derby ; Pal. 
of Lanc, Plea R. 216, m. 10. 

© See the inquisitions of Edmund 
Dudley (1509), Thomas Radclitfe of 
Winmarleigh (1521) and his successors, 
and Alexander Osbaldeston (1544). The 
Balderston manors, &c., are grouped 
together, without any statement of the 
separate tenures. 

7 Adam de Singleton occurs 1254 to 
1286; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 192, 264. 

Gilbert de Singleton died in or before 

1326 holding lands in Broughton of Adam 
son of Sir William Banastre by the service 
of a rose and 1d. yearly, There was a 
messuage there, 50 acres of arable land 
worth 8d. a year each, a horse-mill (fallen 
down) worth only ros. a year, a windmill 
(broken) worth the same, a little close 
called the Fernyhalgh worth 2s. Tenanta 
at will held 47 acres of arable land paying 
6d. an acre ; and 3 acres of meadow ren- 
dered 1s, each, Gilbert had lands also in 
Freckleton, Warton and Great Plumpton. 
His son and heir Thomas was twenty-six 
years old; Chan, Inq. p.m. 19 Edw. II, 
no. 67. Thomas in 1335 claimed the 
family manors against John son of Thomas 
Banastre as son and heir of Gilbert son of 
Alan de Singleton ; De Banco R. 301, 
m. 42. 

Thomas de Singleton was living in 
1346, when he was called to warrant John 
son of Gilbert de Singleton ; De Banco 
R. 346, m. 113 347, m. 148d. John 
seems to have had a son Thomas; ibid. 
348, m. 427. Thomas son of Gilbert 
de Singleton had licence for his oratory at 
Broughton in 13493; Gillow, Haydock 
Papers 57. The same Thomas was a 
plaintiff in 13513; Duchy of Lanc. Assize 
R. 1, m. iiiid. 

Adam de Singleton in 1348 granted to 
Robert his son and Joan his wife and 
their heirs all the lands which Alice widow 
of John de Singleton and mother of the 
grantor had allowed Robert and Joan and 
a part of Threpmeadow. The remainders 
were to Nicholas the brother of Robert, 
to Robert and Thomas, grantor’s brothers. 
Among the witnesses were Thomas son 
of Gilbert de Singleton and Richard de 
Singleton ; Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 387. 
The seal shows a cheveron between three 
roundels, with the legend -+ siGit. ADE DE 
sincLeTon. A Thomas son of Nicholas 
de Singleton occurs in 1396-7; ibid. 

fol. 191. Robert Singleton of Broughton 
occurs in 1422; ibid. fol. 383. 

Sir Thomas Banastre in 1372 granted 
Robert son of Adam de Singleton and 
Alice his wife the lands, mills, &c., which 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


of 1471.18 Robert Singleton died in August 1501 
holding the manor of Broughton with lands, &c., in 
Broughton, Sharoe, Durton and Fernyhalgh ; Joan 
his wife died in the following January, and Richard 
the son and heir succeeded, being twenty-five years 
of age.!9 He died in September 1504, leaving as 
heir a son John, aged seven.22 The manor of 
Broughton was in 1513 stated to be held of the Earl 
of Derby and others as of their manor of Balderston 
by the yearly rent of 12.21 John Singleton died in 
1522 and his uncle Thomas succeeded,” holding the 
manor till his death in or before 1535, when Robert 
his son was found to be his heir.2 In 1557 Robert 
was succeeded by his son Richard, the manor and 
lands in Broughton being held of the king and queen 


PRESTON 


by the tenth part ofa knight’s fee.24 Richard and 
Robert his son both died in the course of the same 
year 1557, and then Edward Singleton, brother of 
Robert the grandfather, inherited ; he was forty-six 
years of age.?> He died in 1567, leaving a son and 
heir Thomas, only seven years of age.”6 

Thomas Singleton adhering to the Roman Catholic 
religion was punished for his recusancy, and his son 
Edward likewise.” The father and son joined in a 
settlement of the manor in 1600,23 while Edward 
seems to have been in possession in 160429 and 
another Thomas Singleton, his son, in 1609.39 The 
manor was sold by Thomas Singleton and other 
members of the family to Roger Langton in 1615.3! 
It descended in this family till 1732, when William 


had been held for life by Robert de Single- 
ton the elder in Broughton and Whit- 
tingham, with the reversion of certain 
other lands held by Pernell the grantor’s 
mother in dower; Dods. MSS. cxlix, 
fol. 4.75. 

Nicholas de Singleton the younger in 
1377 secured lands in Broughton from 
John son of Adam Singleton of (Light)- 
workhouses ; Final Conc. iii, 1. 

Nicholas son of Gilbert de Singleton 
had restored to him in 1405 various lands 
in Dilworth, Bilsborrow, Whittingham, 
Broughton and Thornton and part of the 
manor of Little Singleton, formerly the 
possessions of Sir Alan de Singleton, 
Nicholas being his next of kin and heir ; 
Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 384, 39. Another 
Nicholas (son and heir of Thomas) appears 
in 1449, being described as ‘of Warton’ ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 12, m. 46. 
Nicholas Singleton of Broughton and 
Margaret his wife occur in 1454 ; Kuerden 
MSS. iv, B 34. 

The Preston Guild Rolls give many 
particulars of the families. Thus in 1397 
Thomas son of Nicholas de Singleton was 
admitted to the freedom, paying 40s.; and 
in 1459 Nicholas Singleton of Brockholes 
and Richard his brother were among those 
enrolled by hereditary right; Preston 
Guild R. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 6, 
11, In the latter year James Singleton 
of Broughton, William and Brian his 
sons and James the son of William were 
also enrolled ; ibid. 12. 

William Singleton of Broughton had 
land called Fernyhalgh in 14833; the 
Temainder was to Robert Singleton ; Add. 
MS. 32107, no. 765. William Singleton 
died in 1490, leaving a son and heir 
Robert, aged thirty-eight ; Towneley MS. 
CC (Chet. Lib.), no. 582. Robert and 
John Singleton were in the same year 
ordered to give reasonable dower to Agnes 
widow of William ; Pal. of Lanc. Writs 
Proton. file 5 Hen. VII; Plea R. 70, 
m. 9. John Singleton was also son of 
William, and founder of the Chingle Hall 
family ; see Whittingham. 

Agnes, the widow of William, died in 
or before 1519, when her lands were 
granted to Thomas Wrightington during 
the minority of John Singleton the heir ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Misc. Bks. xxii, 47d. 

There was another Singleton family 
holding lands in Chipping parish and also 
in Broughton Row and Ingol, which 
descended to Leyland and Tyldesley of 
Morleys in the parish of Leigh. In 1564 
Thomas Leyland was found to have held 
his lands in Broughton and Ingol of the 
heirs of Richard Balderston by 1d. rent, 
and in 1587 Edward Tyldesley held them 
by the same rent of Henry Earl of Derby ; 


Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xi, no. 20 5 
xiv, no. 10. 

18 Towneley MS. HH, no. 1524. 

19 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, no. 
59, 63. Lands in Broughton had been 
held for life by Margaret widow of Nicholas 
Singleton and Agnes widow of William 
Singleton. One Thomas Singleton had 
land in Fernyhalgh. Joan wife of Robert 
was one of the daughters of Edmund 
Lawrence ; William, Henry and Thomas, 
younger sons of Robert and Joan, are 
named. The tenure of the manor of 
Broughton was (erroneously) said to be 
by the twentieth part of a knight’s fee of 
the king as Earl of Lincoln, a rent of 
6s. 8d. being paid. There was probably 
a confusion with the tenure of 
Warton. 

See Dep. Keeper's Rep. xl, App. 542-3. 

20 Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. iv, no. 70. 
There was a younger son Richard. Jane 
the widow married Arthur Standish, who 
after her death (1513) continued to take 
the profits of the manor, &c. This led to 
disputes with the heir; see Fishwick, 
Preston, 251-3, where the depositions are 
printed. 

21 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, no. 15. 
This was a traverse of former inquisitions, 
and corrects the tenure previously recorded. 

In 1508 a certain Robert Singleton 
and Margaret his wife, widow of William 
Balderston, had an estate in Broughton ; 
ibid. iv, no. 13. 

22 Tbid. v, no. 45. The disposition of 
the estates made by John Singleton is 
recited in full, It provided for 80 marks 
to advance the marriage of his sister 
Elizabeth and {20 to be distributed in 
deeds of charity. The tenure of the 
manor was recorded as the tenth part of 
a knight’s fee. 

23 Tbid. xxvi, no. §6. Henry Singleton, 
brother of Thomas, was still living, hold- 
ing a messuage in Sharoe and land in 
Durton, given him for life by their father 
Robert. Elizabeth widow of Henry 
Singleton of Fernyhalgh is named in a 
lease of 1594, in which Richard son of 
William Singleton of Killinsough is also 
named ; Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xiv, 
68. 

24 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. x, no. 29. 
It recites the provision made for Richard 
the son and his wife Joan daughter of 
Thomas Cowell; also for Brian brother 
of Robert Singleton. 

% Tbid. x, no. 16. 

William Singleton had an estate in 
Broughton and Goosnargh in 1563 ; Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 25, m. 161. 
The will of Anne widow of William 
Singleton of Broughton (1565) is printed 
in Wills (Chet. Soc. new ser.), ili, 132. 


119. 


6 Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. xi, no. 17. 
Edward Singleton granted to Andrew, a 
younger son, three messuages in Broughton 
for life and one in Lightworkhouses in 
Broughton, and made provision for other 
sons—William, Richard and George. The 
place-name Durton is given ‘alias Urton 
alias Overtowne.’ 

It is possible that two of the sons 
became priests. Dr. William Singleton, 
educated at Douay, was sent on the 
English mission in 1590, but was arrested 
and banished in 1606. He died in 1620 
at Li¢ge. Richard Singleton entered the 
English College at Rome in 1583, being 
then seventeen years old; he became a 
Jesuit and died in 1602, having petitioned 
to be sent on the English mission. See 
Foley, Records S. J. v, 997, 1008. An 
undated return of the latter part of 
Elizabeth’s reign reports ‘Mr. Single- 
ton, a Jesuit, at Mr. Singleton’s of 
the Tower’; Gillow, Haydock Papers, 
59, quoting S. P. Dom. Eliz. clxxxv, 
85. 

Thomas Singleton made a settlement 
of the manor of Broughton and lands in 
Broughton, Preston and Warton in 1586 ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 48, m. 
295. 

27 Fishwick, Preston, 257-8. 

23 Piccope MSS. xiv, 68. A large 
number of deeds relating to the estate 
are given ibid. 67-75; they range from 
1583 to 1810. Thomas Singleton, 
Edward his son and Thomas son of 
Edward were burgesses of the Guild of 
1602 3 Preston Guild R. §5. 

29 Piccope MSS. xiv, 67; a lease by 
Edward Singleton of Broughton Tower 
to Henry Birches of Cadeley of 4 acres 
called Mowbank. From an agreement 
of 1598 it appears that Edward married 
Grace daughter of Thomas Bradley of 
Arnside. 

30 Named in Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 137. He was son 
of Edward ; see pedigree in Fishwick, op. 
cit. 254-5. 

31 Pal, of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 86, 
m. 46. The deforciants were Thomas 
Singleton, esq., Anne his wife, John 
Massye, esq., Thomas Singleton of Scales, 
Cuthbert, George and Thomas Singleton 
and Grace Singleton, widow. The estate 
was the manor of Broughton, with mes- 
suages, windmill, dovecote, lands, &c., in 
Broughton, Urton alias Durton, Ferny- 
halgh, Fulwood, Haighton and Cadeley, 
with certain small tithes. 

Among the Roman Catholics killed 
while fighting for the king in the Civil 
War were Captain George Singleton, 
Captain Thomas Singleton (Newbury) and 
Lieutenant William Singleton (Marston 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Langton bequeathed it to his sister Jane,?? who in 
1735 married Lawrence Rawstorne and it became her 
husband’s property,** descending by the issue of his 
second marriage to his grandson Lawrence Rawstorne,*4 
who sold the Broughton estate in 1810. 
Tower with part of the land was sold to James 
Rothwell and has descended like Hoole ; the rest of 
the land was purchased by the trustees of Kirkham 
The Tower was demolished 


Grammar School.*5 
about 1800. 


Moor) ; Challoner, quoting Castlemain, 
Cath. Apology. 

In 1666 William Singleton of St. Mar- 
tin’s-in-the-Fields, son and heir of John 
Singleton of York (will 1644), and others 
sold to John Farnworth of Euxton and 
Ralph Farnworth of Preston tenements 
called Church House in Broughton, 
Sharoe House, &c. ; Piccope, loc. cit. 69. 

32 For deeds see ibid. ; for pedigree, 
Fishwick, op. cit.258—9. Roger Langton 
died in 1644. Hisson William, Recorder 
of Liverpool, was a member of the Presby- 
terian Classis in 1646, and represented 
Preston in Parliament from 1645 to 
1653; Baines, Lancs. (ed. Harland), i, 
228; Pink and Beaven, Parl. Repre. of 
Lancs. 152. Dying in 1659 he was 
succeeded by his son William, who in 
1664 recorded a short pedigree ; Dugdale, 
Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 173. In 1678, in 
conjunction with Elizabeth his wife, 
William Langton made provision for his 
younger brothers, John, Richard, Roger, 
&c. Jane, the father’s widow, was living. 
A messuage in Sharoe was sold which had 
formerly been occupied by Henry Charn- 
ley and Elizabeth his wife ; Piccope MSS. 
xiv, 70. 

William the younger died in 1680 and 
his son Roger in 1714. This Roger, 
described as of Chester, bequeathed all his 
landsin Broughton and Durton tohis cousin 
William Langton of Liverpool, merchant. 
He names his uncles Richard and Thomas, 
also William Clayton, his partner in sugar 
works ; ibid. 74. In 1715 a settlement 
of the manor of Broughton, &c., was 
made by Richard Langton and William 
his son and heir-apparent ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 273. 

William Langton in 1732 bequeathed 
the manor to his sister Jane, and she in 
1733 made a new settlement of it, with 
lands also in Broughton and Cheetham near 
Manchester, at the same time petitioning 
the Lord Chancellor for protection from 
the schemes of her niece Mary daughter 
of Roger Langton and niece and heir-at- 
law of the said William. She stated that 
William Langton had in 1732 started for 
Scarborough for the benefit of his health, 
but died at Ripon, where he made his 
will. Mary Langton was waiting till 
Jane’s death to dispute the will on pre- 
text of unsound mind and defect of 
evidence for its validity and to claim the 
estate ; Piccope MSS. xiv, 71-2. In Mar. 
1735 Jane Langton, spinster, acquired a 
rent of £10 settled by William Langton 
on Mary wife of Stephen Butcher; Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 313, m. 35. 

83 It appears that she was seventy 
years of age at her marriage ; Fishwick, 
op. cit. 260. Lawrence Rawstorne aod 
Agnes his wife had the manor in 1742 5 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 326, 
He dap 

84 See the account of Hutton. 

33 Piccope MSS. xiv, 75. Broughton 
Tower and 102 acres of land were sold for 


Broughton 


INGOLHEAD gave a surname to a family dwelling 
there,*® whose estate seems to have been acquired by 
the Blundells of Preston.” 
sold to William Hoghton in 1490.55 There was 
also a family of Singleton of Ingolhead.39 

BANK HALL, at one time owned by the Singletons 
of Brockholes,*? had a more interesting history. In 
the 17th century it was held in moieties, one half 
being in trust for the Roman Catholic missionary 


Some of this land was 


priests of the district, for whom it served asa centre.4! 


£11,500 to James Rothwell, who also 
bought the small tithes, a private chapel 
belonging to the estate, and the timber. 
The rest of the estate was sold to the 
school trustees for £14,500. 

36 Thomas son of Thomas de Ingolhead 
granted to three of his childrean—Edmund, 
Helen and Joan—4o acres each in 
Broughton ; Harl. MS. 2042, fol. 171. 

Cecily widow of Thomas de Ingolhead 
in 1310-11 claimed dower in Broughton 
against Henry the Marler; De Banco R. 
184, m. 107. The heir was Richard son 
of Thomas ; ibid. 192, m. 89d. 

Thomas de Hale and Maud his wife in 
1352 claimed a messuage, &c., in 
Broughton against William de Bolron, 
Robert son of Adam de Singleton and 
others. Maud was daughter of Joan 
(daughter of Thomas) de Ingolhead by 
her second husband Matthew de Abram ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 2, m. vi. 

37 Richard Blundell of Preston made a 
feoffment of 40 acres in Broughton in 
1395-6 ; Harl. MS. 2042, fol. 171. 
The family continued to hold lands in 
the township, and in 1546 John son 
of Richard Blundell granted William 
Blundell a rent of 8s. 8d. from Ingolhead 
and Tulketh Bank; Harl. MS. 2112, 
fol. 100/141. 

88 Roger Blundell sold (as stated) his 
messuages and lands in Ingolhead occupied 
by Thomas Eccleston ; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 639. This was confirmed by John 
son of William Blundell and cousin and 
heir of Roger in 14923 ibid. no, 174. 
Lands in Broughton are named in later 
Hoghton inquisitions, but the tenure is 
not recorded ; Duchy of Lane. Inq. p.m. 
xiv, no. 26, &c. 

89 Richard Singleton of Ingolhead 
occurs in 13803 Final Conc. iii, 7. A 
later Richard was burgess in the Guild of 
1459, William Singleton and Thomas 
his son in that of 1542, Thomas 
Singleton and his sons John and Edward 
in 15623 Preston Guild R. 11, 19, 27, 
&c. 

John Singleton died in 1588 holding 
Ingolhead Hall, &c., of the Earl of Derby 
by the rent of a pair of white gloves and 
1d.; his heir was his son Thomas, aged 
thirteen. His will recited in the in- 
quisition names his wife Ellen (who 
survived him), sons Thomas, Robert, 
James and Henry ; brothers Edward and 
William, sister Anne, brother-in-law 
James Browne ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. 
p-m. xvi, no. 48. 

One Henry Singleton died in 1614 
holding lands in Broughton of the king, 
partly in socage and partly (Fernyhalgh, 
Sharoe and Durton) by the hundredth 
part of a knight's fee. John his son and 
heir was fourteen years old; Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
ii, Q-11. 

In the Guild Rolls of 1642 and later 
appears a family named Beesley of Ingol- 
head. See Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 


120 


xxviii, no. 623; the 
stated. 

“9See the account of this family. 
After the main portion of the Brockholes 
estate had been sold, Bank Hall in 
Broughton and some lands in Brockholes, 
&c.. were retained by the heir male 
William son of Thomas Singleton of 
Scale, which Thomas was brother of 
the Robert who died in 1525. Robert's 
estate in Broughton was held of the heir 
of Robert Banastre by a rent of 3u.; 
Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. vi, no. 64. 
In 1556 the Bank Hall estate was held by 
the same rent of Edward Earl of Derby, 
John Osbaldeston and William Radcliffe ; 
ibid. x, no. 1. 

William Singleton of Bank Hall died 
in Dec. 1573 holding the capital 
messuage and other lands, &c., in 
Broughton of the Earl of Derby by a 
rent of $s. His widow Ellen continued 
to reside there. The heir was his son 
Thomas, two years old. There are also 
mentioned Thomas the father of William, 
Ellen wife and Richard brother of Thomas 
the father. The other estates were in 
Brockholes (Littlewoodhey), Whitting- 

ham, Ribchester, Newsham, Wood- 
plumpton, Scale and Quernmore ; ibid. 
xii, no. 34. A later inquisition (xii, no. 
30) states the tenure of Bank Hall 
differently, viz. of the queen as of her 
Duchy of Lancaster by knight's service. 
William Singleton adhered to the Roman 
Catholic religion and was imprisoned at 
Chester under Queen Elizabeth. He 
was released in 1570, ordered to conform 
and to confine himself to his house at 
Brockholes ;  Fishwick, Preston, 287 
(quoting the Bishop of Chester's Liber 
Correct.). 

Thomas Singleton the son and heir 
came of age about 1593, when he in- 
herited land in Whittingham and 
Brockholes from a kinsman, Thomas 
Singleton ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
xvi, NO. 50. 

Bank Hall is said to have been sold 
about 1625 (Fishwick, op. cit. 318), but 
this branch of the Singleton family con- 
tinued to hold Scale. 

41 Gillow, Haydock Papers, 60. 

Richard Woodcock, who died in 1633, 
at Walton-le-Dale, held the moiety of 
the Bank Hall in Broughton and lands 
there ; his son James was twenty-five 
years old; Duchy of Lanc. Inq, p.m. 
xxix, no. 63. 

Edward French and Anne his wife in 
1651 asked for an examination of their 
title to Bank Hall, the estate being 
sequestered for the recusancy and 
delinquency of Woodcock and Crook. 
Anne was daughter of James eldest son 
of Richard Walton, who had married 
Elizabeth, eldest daughter of William 
Garstang of Broughton, which William 
had purchased the estate ; Cal, Com. for 
Cump. iv, 2909. If true this would carry the 
sale of Bank Hall into the 16th century. 


tenure is not 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


The other moiety was owned by a recusant family 
named Crook,’? whose representative sold to the late 


John William Richard Wilson of P 
The old house was abandoned 
and the present Broughton 


CHURCH 


reston in 1834.‘% 


PRESTON 


The church of ST. JOHN BAPTIST 
stands at the south end of the village 
on a slightly elevated site to the east of 


the high road close to the Blundel Brook, which 


House built asa residence. Mr. 


side. 


Wilson died in 1875 and was 


succeeded by his son the late 


Edward Wilson, and grandson 
Mr. Henry Francis Wilson, 
the present owner.“ 

The names of other land- 
owners occur in inquisitions.* 
Several of the people suffered 
sequestration under the Com- 
monwealth* and some 
‘Papists ’ registered estates in 
1717s" 

The Knights Hospitallers 
Broughton.“ 


had 


In 1654 Thomas Clayton of Chorley 
desired to prove his title to a house, &c., 
in Broughton settled by the late William 
Singleton on claimant, with reversion to 
William Daniel; two-thirds were still 
under sequestration for Singleton’s re- 
cusancy ; ibid. v, 3201. From the 
later history this appears to be Bank 
Hall. 

A report by Samuel Peploe, vicar of 
Preston in 1716, stated that at that time 
one moiety was held by the Crook 
family, with a charge upon it, so it was 
suspected, ‘only in trust. . . for Romish 
priests’ ; ‘the other part of Bank Hall 
estate is Mr. Thomas (or his son John) 
Clayton of Preston. This has been in 
lease many years. Mr. Smith, a Romish 
priest (whose true name is Edward 
Kitchen), lives in that part of the house 
at Bank Hall which belongs to this side 
of the estate and has occupied and let 
the ground from time to time.... 
I am told that Mr. John Clayton has 
entered on this tenement some days ago, 
pretending that he has bought Smith out 
of it,’ &c. ; Haydock Papers, 60, 61, quoting 
P.R.O. Forftd. Estates, P 134. See also 
Payne, Rec. of Engl. Cath. 155. 

The Claytons of Crook and Fulwood 
had lands, &c., in Broughton, Fulwood- 
shaw and Durton ; Duchy of Lane. Inq. 
p.m. xxviii, no. 79. 

# Hugh Crook was living at Bank 
Hall in 1632, paying his fines for 
recusancy. George Crook, a missionary 
priest, succeeded to this moiety, and 
served the mission till his death about 
1710; the estate then descended to his 
nephew John Crook, the succession being 
thus given: John ~s. George -s. John 
-s. John -s, John, M.D. (d. 1869); 
Haydock Papers, 60-2. 

George Crook of Broughton, who died 
in 1653 or 1654, had two-thirds of his 
tenement sequestered for recusancy. 
His widow Anne and sons George and 
John are named; Royalist Comp. Papers 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), ii, 87. 
Others of the family, John Crook of 
Preston and William Crook of Durton, 
also suffered for their religion ; ibid. 88—9. 

George Crook was of Bank Hall in 
Broughton in 1724.3 in 1732 he married 
Janet Blackburne of Westby, she being 
daughter and co-heir of Richard Black- 
burne of Upper Rawcliffe. Her son and 
heir in 1771 is named as George Crook ; 


7 


ton Tower. 
three cheverons gules and 
a canton vair. 


forms the boundary of the churchyard on the south 
The site is an ancient one, but the oldest part 
of the present church is the tower, which dates only 
from the 16th century, the rest being modern. 
old building, which was pulled down about 1823, 


The 


appears to have been an early 16th-century rebuild- 
ing of a 14th-century church, fragments of which 
have been discovered, and it is probable that at 
least two churches stood on the site previous to 


Lancron of Brough- 
Argent 


the reign of Henry VIII. 
church as it existed at the beginning of the last 
century © shows it to have consisted of a chancel with 
a large chapel on the north side separated from it 


A plan of the old 


by an arcade of two arches, and a smaller south chapel 


some land in 


vpen to the chancel by a single arch, nave of four 


pays with north and south aisles, south porch and 


Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), iti, 286, 246, 
390, from rolls at Preston. 

48 Fishwick, Preston, 318. 

44 Information of the late Mr. Wilson. 
Bank Hall is now a farm-house. The Wil- 
sons in making alterations in the old hall 
‘discovered a secret chamber adjoining 
the room formerly used as a chapel, in 
which were a tabernacle, chalice and 
other church furniture. These they 
handed over to Dr. Crook’; Haydock 
Papers, 62. 

45 Lawrence Starkie, who has occurred 
in the account of Chipping, held lands in 
Preston, Broughton and Haighton, and 
on his death in 1532 was succeeded by 
his daughters, Margaret wife of William 
Banastre and Etheldreda wife of Humphrey 
Newton ; the former died in 1542, leav- 
ing a son Wilfrid, under age; Duchy of 
Lance. Inq. p.m. ix, no.21. The Newtons 
appear to have sold their estate in 
Broughton, Sharoe and Urton at various 
times; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdles. 12, 
m. 123; 20, m.443 24, m. 40. See 
also Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), ii, 353. 

Peter Mason of Lathom in 1612 held 
land in Broughton of the king by the 
hundredth part of a knight’s fee; Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 
214-15. Robert Blundell of Ince in 1615 
held land by the two-hundredth part of a 
knight’s fee; ibid. ii, 28. Richard 
Ayrie in 1616 held by a like service ; 
ibid. 43. George Rogerson of Preston 
in 1620 held lands in Sharoe and Ingol- 
head of Roger Langton as of his manor 
of Broughton; ibid. 189. Thomas 
Gregory of Woodplumpton in 1622 held 
of the king by knight’s service ; ibid. iii, 


03. 

The following had lands in Durton or 
Urton, but the tenure is not recorded: 
Richard Dilworth, 1627 (John, son and 
heir) ; John Robinson of Whittle, 1628 ; 
and Thomas Slater, 1633 (William, son 
and heir); Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
xxviii, no. 11 3 xxvi, M0. 203 xxvii, no. 
47. William Slater was dead in 1654, 
and two-thirds of his lands being under 
sequestration for his recusancy, the 
guardian of his son and heir Thomas 
petitioned for leave to prove title; Cal. 
Com, for Comp. Vv, 3200. 

Thomas Shireburne of Heysham held 
his land in Broughton of Sir Gilbert 
Hoghton ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. 
Lib.), 1083. 


12] 


46 In addition to cases already given are 
the following : 

Robert Adamson’s lands were seques- 
tered for recusancy and delinquency. He 
held under a lease for three lives from 
Thomas Singleton of Broughton Tower, 
and the lives having expired in 1651 
William Langton claimed possession, as 
son and heir of Roger Langton, who 
had purchased from Singleton ; Royalist 
Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 10. 

Edward Daniel of Durton, recusant, in 
1653 petitioned to be allowed to contract 
for his sequestered estate ; Cal. Com. for 
Comp. iv, 3175. 

James Hollinhead and George Wilkin- 
son, sequestered recusants, made similar 
petitions ; ibid. v, 3186, 3179. 

Thomas Glave’s estate had been 
sequestered for a like reason, and in 1651 
Margaret and Anne Glave, widows, with 
another widow and three fatherless children, 
all ‘conformable,’ in their poverty desired 
restoration ; ibid. iv, 2910. 

John Taylor’s estate was also under 
sequestration for recusancy. He was 
dead, and the leaseholders under his son 
Christopher desired to show their title. 
The claim was allowed, but ‘the debts 
due to delinquents and two-thirds of those 
due to recusants’ were to be paid to the 
use of the State ; ibid. v, 3207. 

47 Their names were John Arkwright, 
Robert Arkwright, William Arkwright, 
William Blakey, Richard Boys of Sharoe, 
Richard Cardwell, James Carter of Durton, 
John and Thomas Daniell of the same, 
Edward Daniell of Catterall, Elizabeth 
Gradwell of Fernyhalgh, widow, Thomas 
Greenalls, Edward Harrison, Richard 
Parkinson and Ellen Walmesley, widow ; 
Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. Nonjurors, 
95-6, 104, 105, 136-8. 

For the Daniel family, already men- 
tioned several times, see Gillow, Bibl. 
Dict. of Engl. Cath. ii, 11. 

48 The prior claimed 4 acres, &c., in 
1333 against Richard de Myerscough ; 
De Banco R, 293, m. 322. 

49 Some early 14th-century fragments 
found when the present chancel was erected 
are now in the churchyard on the west side 
of the tower. This probably indicates a 
rebuilding of or alteration to the original 
12th-century church. 

50 The plan is on the faculty to re- 
build. See next page. 


16 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


west tower. Both chapels projected beyond the line 
of the aisle walls north and south, and were separated 
from the chancel by oak screens.5! The chancel 
was of the same width as the nave, there being 
apparently no structural division. No illustration of 
the building remains, though it is said to have been 
of a plain late type of Gothic, with low overhanging 
eaves and dormer windows.®? From remains still exist- 
ing in the east wall of the tower the old nave seems to 
have been 15 ft. 6 in. wide,®® with aisles 8 ft. wide, 
the total length of the nave and chancel being 79 ft. 
During the 17th and 18th centuries little or nothing 
seems to have been done to keep the structure in 
adequate repair, and shortly before its demolition 
Dr. Whitaker wrote that he had seldom seen ‘ greater 
appearances of squalid neglect and approaching decay.’ *® 
The rebuilding consisted of the present wide aisleless 
nave, 69 ft. by 45 ft., in the Gothic style of the 
period, and was finished in 1826. To this a chancel, 
36 ft. by 22 ft., with north vestries and south organ- 
chamber occupying to some extent the position of 


Gebers’ 


Gothic work,®* contrasting sharply with the nave, 
the windows of which are tall, narrow single lights, 
The nave roof is of one span, covered with slate, and 
has a flat plaster-panelled ceiling. 

The tower, which is 13 ft. 3 in. square inside and 
built of gritstone, has diagonal buttresses of seven 
stages, a projecting vice in the south-east corner and 
an embattled parapet with the stumps of angle 
pinnacles. On the string course below the parapet on 
the south side area four-leafed lower and the date 1533, 
which probably gives the year of the building of the 
tower, and on the vice the string bears the initials 
B.G. The stages are unmarked externally by string 
courses, and on the north and south sides the walls 
are quite plain except for the belfry windows, which 
are of three lights under a pointed head without 
tracery, but with external hood mould. The west 
doorway, which has moulded jambs and head, was 
opened out in 1905-6, and the window above, which 
is of three lights with traceried head and hood mould, 
was likewise restored, the lower part, which had before 


tt 


Pian oF Broucuton Cuurcu Berore 1823 


the two original chapels, was added in 1905-6, at 
which time also the whole of the building was 
restored, the tower arch opened out, and benches 
substituted for the old square pews. 

The chancel and nave being modern are without 
antiquarian interest, except that six sculptured stones 
from the old church are built into the external wall 
of the organ-chamber on the south side.5® These 
consist of (1) a boar’s head with the initials T.B. ; 
(2) arms of Redmayne and initials G.R. ; (3) I.H.C. ; 
(4) arms of Singleton and the initials R.S. ; (5) arms 
of Barton and initials T.B. ; and (6) clawed foot and 
ivy leaf.’ The chancel is a good example of modern 


been built up, being opened out. There isa clock ou 
the west side, and on the north buttress facing east 
are the initials T.B. on either side of a shield,” and 
in a similar position on the south buttress a shield 
with the Singleton arms. The tower arch is of two 
chamfered orders dying into the wall at the springing, 
and above it the lower part of the weathering of the 
old pointed roof is visible under the modern ceiling. 
Until 1905-6 the tower was separated from the nave 
by a wall 5 ft. thick, the removal of which revealed 
on the south side the half-octagonal respond of the 
old nave arcade. In the rebuilding of 1826 the floor 
of the church seems to have been considerably raised, 


51 The inscriptions and arms in these 
screens are given in Fishwick, Preston, 
134-5. 

5? Information from old inhabitants to 
present vicar. It is described as having 
been similar to Goosnargh Church, only 
lower at the eaves. : 

*3 On the plan it scales less, but the 
plan does not appear to be quite accurate, 
the dimensions of the tower not strictly 
agreeing with those of the actual building. 


oot 


54 These measurements are taken from 
the plan. 

5° Whitaker, Richmondshire, ii, 433-4. 
He says ‘a few remnants of a more 
ancient fabric appear in the walls of the 
present fabric, which is evidently a work 
of the time of Henry VIII, since when 
very little attention seems to have 
been paid it, excepting to secure the 
handsome tower from falling by strong 
iron bars.’ This was in 1822. On the 


122 


oak roof of the chancel was the date 
1537. 

52 tn the 1826 rebuilding they were 
placed in the east gable. . 

57 Four of these are illustrated in Fish- 
wick, Preston, 136. 

58 The architects were Austin & 
Paley of Lancaster. i 

59°The shield is difficult to decipher, 
but probably bore the Barton arms. 


Broucuton CuurcH FRoM THE NorTH-weEsT 


Barton Cross (Resrorep) 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


the floor of the present nave being 2 ft. 4 in. above 
that of the tower, from which there is an ascent of 
five steps. 

The font, which stands in the north-west corner 
of the nave, is a massive circular Norman bowl 
2 ft. 84 in. in diameter and 18 in. high, hewn out 
of a sandstone boulder, with a half-round moulding 
at the bottom. The font was turned out of the 
church in 1826 to make way for one of alabaster, but 
was discovered at a cottage in Barton in 1889 and 
restored to the church. The bowl is supported by 
a modern shaft. 

There are preserved in the church an old stoup,® an 
octagonal stone mortar, a piece of oak 6 ft. long 
carved with the vine pattern belonging to one of the 
screens in the old church, a mediaeval chest and a 
Jacobean oak communion table, while in the vestry 
is a smaller chest dated 1666 with various initials 
and fleurs de lis hinges. The organ has a good 18th- 
century case, and there is a brass chandelier dated 
1817. Against the west wall of the nave north of 
the tower is a fragment of a memorial stone to Roger 
Langton of Broughton Tower, who died at Chester 
in 1714, and was buried in the now demolished 
church of St. Bridget in that city. 

There is a ring of six bells, cast in 1884 by Mears & 
Stainbank.® 

The silver plate consists of two chalices inscribed 
‘Capellae de Broughton Sacrum 1782’, and on the 
foot ‘The gift of the Reverend Samuel Peploe Arch 
Deacon of Richmond & Vic. of Preston’, but with- 
out other marks than Fj thrice repeated; a set of 
two chalices, two patens and a flagon of 1851, pur- 
chased by subscription in that year, and a bread-box 
of 1906. There are also two pewter flagons given 
by Archdeacon Peploe in 1732. 

The registers begin in 1653-4. 

On the south side of the churchyard are the steps 
of the churchyard cross, now surmounted by a modern 
sundial, the plate of which is dated 1816 and bears 
the names of the vicar and churchwardens. The 
steps, which are three in number and square on plan, 
are of coarse gritstone and are carried on a solid 


PRESTON 


rubble foundation going down a considerable depth. 
The stocks, which stand outside the churchyard wall 
near the west entrance, were restored in 1902, one 
of the old stone posts being replaced. They are not, 
however, in their original position. 

Though the building, as stated, 
existed from an early time, there 
are few records of it.4 In the 
16th century it was often called a church, its status 
being that of parochial chapel. Its ornaments and 
bells were sold at the Reformation," but the building 
seems to have been retained in use for service.*° The 
patronage descended like that of the vicarage of 
Preston until 1867, when Sir Henry de Hoghton 
sold it to John Bretherton of Leyland ; the purchaser 
gave it to his brother William, who became vicar in 
1872, and whose representatives are now the patrons.®7 
In 1650 the stipend was £40, paid out of sequestra- 
tions,®8 and therefore ceasing at the Restoration. The 
Langtons endowed it with £20, and in 1717 the 
income was £34.°° In 1774 an augmentation was 
obtained from Queen Anne’s Bounty.”” The present 
value is given as {250.71 A parish was assigned to 
it in 1878.7? The chapelry was formerly reputed 
to include the three townships of Broughton, Barton 
and Haighton. The following have been curates 
and vicars 73 :— 


oc. 1368-96 William de Erlesgate 


ADVOWSON 


1441 Henry Broughton 
1515 Evan Wall 7% 
1530 Henry Helme 76 
1548-65 Roger Charnock 7” 
oc. 1597 John Marton 78 
oc. 1610 — Witton 7 
oc. 1622 — Lomax °° 
1626 Peter Addison, B.A.® 
1628 Roger Farrand *? 
1650 James Knott 88 
1661 John Winckley 


oc. 1674-1714 William Wood * 


1721 William Charnley, B.A.® (St. John’s 
Coll., Camb.) 
1727 John Starkie 


6 Found in 1893 ina ditch near the 
church. 

61 The stone was cast aside when 
St. Bridget’s was pulled down, but was 
recovered in 1888 and placed in Broughton 
Church by the late Mr. William Langton 
of Manchester. 

2 Two of the former bells, which were 
used in the casting of the present ring, 
bore the dates 1632, and another 1681. 
The treble was inscribed ‘Sce. Petre 
OPN’. The other bells had ‘ Jesus be 
our spede, 1632; ‘G.w. w.w. 1c. 16817 5 
*Gloria in excelsis Deo, 1632’ ; Fishwick, 
op. cit. 135, but his description is not 
very clear. 

684 Geoffrey, chaplain of the hermitage 
of Broughton, is named in a deed of 1377, 
but he may then have been dead; 
Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 256. 

‘In 1441 the priest at Broughton was 
witness to a local charter; Fishwick, 
Preston, 129, In 1460 a sentence of 
divorce was read in the church; ibid. 
The chapel of Broughton is named in the 
1520 lease of Preston tithes quoted in 
the account of the church. 

- Raines, Chantries (Chet. Soc.), 277, 
280, 


6 The same curate was there from 


1548 to 1565 at least. Nothing is known 
of the next thirty years. 

6 Fishwick, op. cit. 140. 

68 Commonw. Ch. Surv. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), 146. In 1651, how- 
ever, the minister’s ‘maintenance’ did 
not exceed 20s. a year, and £50 was 
allowed from the tithes of Leyland, 
sequestered from James Anderton, ‘ papist 
and delinquent’; Plund. Mins. Accts. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), i, 103, 111. 

69 Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 467. Richard Cross had given £100, 
and the vicar of Preston had usually paid 
£4 a year, but this had been refused by 
Vicar Birch. It is now paid by the vicar 
of Preston, 

70 Fishwick, op. cit. 143. 

™ Manch, Dioc. Dir. 

7 Lond. Gaz. 5 Apr. 1878. 

78 This list is taken mainly from Fish- 
wick, op. cit. 140-4, where many details 
of the incumbents will be found. 

74 Towneley MS. DD, no. 1776, 1786. 

75 In depositions of 1515-16 he is called 
‘parish priest’ of Broughton ; ibid. 253. 

76 Named in a Subsidy Roll, c. 15303 
T. C. Smith, Preston Ch. 20. 

77 Occurs in the Chester visitation lists 
of 1548 and 1562, and in 1565 is named 


123 


in the will of Anne Singleton; Wills 
(Chet. Soc. new ser.), iii, 133. 

78 The will of a John Marton, ‘curate 
of Broughton,’ was proved in 15973 
Fishwick, Preston, 141. 

79 He was ‘stipendiary minister,’ but 
‘no preacher’; Hist. MSS. Com, Rep. 
xiv, App. iv, 9. 

80 Visitation lists at Chester. 

81 Act Bk. at Chester. 

82¢Commonly called Sir Roger’; 
Fishwick, op. cit. 141. This is a late use 
of the clerical ‘sir.”, His name heads the 
list of ‘Protesters’ at Broughton in 1641. 

88 Named in the CA. Surv., &c., in 
1650-1. 

84 His initials are on the bells of 1681. 
His name is in the Bishop of Chester’s 
visitation list in 1691, as curate and 
schoolmaster, showing letters of orders 
‘ut in 1674.’ He is also named in the 
will of Roger Langton, 1714; Piccope 
MSS. xiv, 74. According to Fishwick 
(op. cit. 142) he was deprived of his 
curacy in 1678 but reinstated. 

85 He and his two successors were 
nominated by the vicar of Preston. 
Charnley had spent some time at Trinity 
College, Dublin, before he entered St. 
John’s, Cambridge, in 1718, being then 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Joseph Cowper, M.A. (T.C.D.) 


ary 

tot John Hunter * ss 

1774 Randal Andrews, M.A.* (Worcester 
Coll., Oxf.) 

1801 George Charnley ® 

1810 Hugh Hodg:on 

1817 William Dixon 

1872 William Bretherton 

1886 Samuel Edward Collinson, L.Th. 


(Durh.) 


There was in the 15th century an oratory, St. 
Mary’s, at Fernyhalgh,® but this fell into decay, and 
was not used after the Reformation.% 

A school was founded in 1527 by Lawrence 
Stodagh.*! 

As a large proportion of the people adhered to 
the old reiigion at the Reformation the Roman 
Catholic worship survived during the time of 
proscription. Bank Hall, as above stated, was a 
missionary centre for a long time,* and our Lady’s 
Well at Fernyhalgh is said to have remained a place of 
pilgrimage.** In 1685 Hugh Charnley gave the site 
of the well in trust for the mission there and a house- 
chapel was built. ‘This remained in use till 1793, 
when the present church of St. Mary was built a 
quarter of a mile away. The Rev. John Daniel, 
last president of the seminary at Douay, was born at 
Durton.% 

It appears that a school was secretly kept up in 
connexion with this mission from about 1650; 


The township gives its name to the Broughton 
Charitable Society, the annual meeting being held 
there.%8 


HAIGHTON 


Halctun, Dom. Bk.1; Aulton, 1200; Halicton, 
1212 3 Halghton, 1278 and usually ; Alghton, 1292 ; 
Halghton, Haughton, Haghton, Haighton, 1560~ 
1600. 

This township, a continuation of Broughton east- 
ward, is somewhat more elevated, as most of the 
surface is above the 200-ft. level. Blundel Brook 
forms the northern boundary, while Savock Brook, 
flowing through a little valley, cuts off the south- 
eastern portion, in which is Cow Hill. The area is 
1,078 acres,? and in 1901 the population num. 
bered 273. 

The principal road is that going through the 
centre of the township, leading eastward from 
Broughton through Haighton Green, and then turn- 
ing south and east again towards Longridge. There 
was formerly a cross on the green.’ To the north of 
the road are New Chingle Hall and Haighton Hall, 
while Haighton House lies to the south. There is 
neither railway nor canal. The township is governed 
by a parish council. 

The land is almost entirely in pasture. 

One plough-land in H.4]GHTON was 
in 1066 included in Earl Tostig’s fee of 
Preston.* After the Conquest it appears 
to have been included in the royal demesne,5 but in 


MANOR 


it was known later as Schola Sancte Marie ad 
Fatem 7 


twenty-one years of age. He was after- 
wards vicar of Brayton and Selby, 1727— 
48; R. F. Scott, Admissions, iii, 14, 318. 

In 1726 the Sacrament was adminis- 
tered four times a year by the vicar of 
Preston ; Visit. returns. With Charnley 
begin the nominations recorded at the 
Chester Diocesan Registry. 

86 He became curate of Pilling. He 
and his successors were nominated by the 
Hoghton family. 

87 Vicar of Ormskirk 1780-1800 ; re- 
tained Broughton. 

8 Master of Broughton School, 1771. 

58 Mr. Collinson has afforded con- 
siderable assistance to the editors. 

89JIn 1454 Nicholas Singleton of 
Broughton and Margaret his wife had 
licence for achaplain to celebrate divine 
service in the chapel of Fernyhalgh and 
in the oratory in their manor-house ; 
Kuerden MSS. iv, B 34. 

There is evidence for its use for mass 
in the time of Henry VII, but the roof 
is stated to have fallen in by 1515; 
Fishwick, op. cit. quoting Duchy of Lanc. 
Plead. Edw. VI, Ixi, R23; Depositions 
Hen. VIII, x S5. The chapel had land 
at Warton, 

On the meaning of the word see N, 
and Q. (Ser. 4), x, 260. 

9 Raines, Chantries, 259, &¢. The 
chapel had one bell, seized by Edward 
VI. William Kenyon, who had a grant 
of the lands belonging to it in 1553, made 
complaints about various tenants ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Plead. Edw. VI, xxxii, K 2. 

$1 Gastrell, Notitia, ii, 468 ; End. Char. 
Rep. (Preston, 1905), 18. 

82 William Cowell of Preston about 
1590 found Edmond Haworth, priest, 
‘saying mass after the popish manner in 


1212 Gillemichael de Haighton held 2 oxgangs of 


a loft at the east end of the house of one 
Dilworth, a widow, in the village of 
Broughton, about 10 o'clock in the morn- 
ing, attired in massing apparel, wearing a 
vestment, alb and stole, and with a mass 
book, a super altar, chalice containing 
wine and a paten, with other massing 
furniture.” The widow, her sons and 
daughters and one or two more were 
present. The informant, terrified with 
cries of ‘Strike, strike ! kill, kill! now 
or never!’ and bribed by a gift of seven 
nobles promised to keep silence, restored 
the paten and chalice he had ‘ partly 
taken,’ but immediately gave informa- 
tion to the mayor of Preston and others ; 
T. C. Smith, Preston Ch. 21, from Raines 
MSS. xxii, 156-8. 

$3 In 1718 John Crook ‘had heard 
George Crook, a reputed Romish priest, 
say prayers after the Romish way’ at 
Bank Hall; Payne, Engl. Cath. Rec. 155. 

%4 Christopher Tootell, the priest in 
charge about 1700 and later, in an account 
written in 1723 gives the legend of the 
well. A merchant in distress in a storm 
in the Irish Sea promised to do some 
work of piety if he escaped, and heard a 
voice telling him to seek a place called 
Fernyhzlgh and build a chapel by the 
spring ; which, after long search for the 
place, he performed. Tootell states: 
©The ancient devotion of neighbouring 
Catholics did not fail with the old chapel, 
but... continued in their constant 
assembling and praying together at the 
well on Sundays and Holy Days and 
especially on the feasts of Our Lady, even 
in the severest times of persecution.’ 
This was interrupted at the futile Jacobite 
rising of 171§ and the severities which 
followed it, the chapel being plundered ; 


124 


but prayers were resumed in1717,. There 
is a notice of Chr. Tootell in Gillow, 
Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. v, 548. 

95 Gillow, Haydock Papers, 58. There 
is preserved there an ancient chalice in- 
scribed ‘ Dosus Maguir Rex Fermanne me 
fi. fe. MCCCCC xxix,’ supposed to have 
belonged to the pre-Reformation chapel. 

95 When the college was destroyed in 
the French Revolution the president was 
imprisoned for some time, He returned 
to England and was made president of the 
new college at Crook Hall, Durham, in 
1795, but resigned in order to protect the 
interests of the college at Douay, and died 
in Parise in 1823. He wrote a short 
work on Church history. There are 
notices of him in Dict, Nat. Bisg. and 
Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath, ii, 13-15 

7 Ibid. iii, 145-8. In the first half of 
the 18th century it had a noteworthy 
teacher—Alice Harrison of Fulwood. 

98 It was founded in 1787, and large 
numbers of Lancashire Roman Catholic 
are members. Masses are said for them 
at death, and a distribution of the surplus 
funds is made each year, each member 
giving his share to some poor person. 

1 It is difficult to distinguish the town- 
ships of Haighton, Aighton and Hoghton 
in mediaeval deeds, but the firet is com- 
monly Halghton and the second Aghton. 

2 1,077 acres, including 2 of inland 
water; Census Rep. 1901. 

3 Lanes. and Ches. Antiz. Sot. I, 178. 

4 V7.C.H. Lancs. i, 2882. As will be 
seen from the text Haighton was in later 
times regarded as 2 oxgangs of land oF 
else half a plough-land. 

6 Parsee Laaei Pipe R. 1303 ‘12d. of 
the increment of Aulton’ for the bali- 
year. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


land there in drengage, rendering 25. yearly.® 
appears to have been the whole service due from the 
township, though the land is only a fourth part of the 
old assessment, for in 1297 the vill of Haighton was 
found to pay 2s. yearly to the Earl of Lancaster.” In 
1324 a portion was held by John de Bolton, who paid 
1s. and the rest by Adam son of William Banastre, 
In 1346 the whole was held by 
Thomas Banastre, as half a plough-land, by the rent of 


who also paid 15.8 


6 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lance. and Ches.), i, 51. Richard de 
Haighton held the same land by the same 
service in 12263; ibid. i, 140. He was 
living in 1248, but Walter son of Richard 
de Haighton appears in 1251 and 1261 ; 
ibid. i, 176, 183, 228. Robert son of 
William son of Walter de Haighton was 
plaintiff in 1334 against Paulin son of 
William son of Walter and Gilbert son of 
Walter de Haighton, also against William 


son of Amry de Haighton: Assize 
R. 1417, m. 7d, 
7 Lancs, Ing. and Extents, i, 289. The 


Banastre estate may have been derived 
in part from Robert son of Walter de 
Haighton, who gave all his wood in 
Haighton (within certain bounds) to 
Thomas Banastre of Bretherton ; Kuer- 
den MSS. iv, H 5. 

8 Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 39 3 John de 
Bolton held a messuage and 40 acres, and 
Adam Banastre the whole remainder of 
the hamlet of Haighton. 

In 1326 it was found that William son 
of Ellen de Haighton had held 1 acre 
(worth 6d. a year) in the vill of Haighton 
of Adam son and heir of William Banastre, 
a minor, by 1d. rent; a messuage and 
g acres of Richard de Haighton by 3d. 
rent ; 12 acres of John de Haighton by 
zd, rent; and 8 acres of Walter de 
Haighton by 3d. rent, the annual value 
of these 29 acres was 8d. each. The 
heir was William’s son Richard, aged 
twenty-four ; Ing. p.m. 19 Edw. II, no. 51. 

John de Bolton is stated to have 
received lands in Haighton, with acquit- 
tance of multure in the mill, from John 
de Coppull, the remainder being to Robert 
son of John de Belton and his heirs by 
Joan daughter of Thomas le Waleys ; 
the grant was made in 1318. After- 
wards Robert sold to Roger de Elston, 
living in 1363, and he died without issue 
by Joan ; Memo. R. (L.T.R.) 128, m. xxi. 
Margaret (then wife of William de 
Childers) widow of Robert son of John 
de Bolton claimed dower in 1366; De 
Banco R. 425, m. 234. The surname 
Bolton long continued in the township. 

® Surv. of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 50. Sir 
Thomas Banastre held in 1379 3 Lancs. 
Ing. p.m, (Chet. Soc.), i, 15. 

10 Duchy of Lanc. Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, 
no. 20, In 1456 Richard Balderston held 
the manor of Haighton by Goosnargh of 
the king as of his duchy in socage by a 
Tent of 25.3; its clear value was 4 marke 
ayear ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soo.), ii, 
63. This is one of the rare instances in 
which it is called a manor. 

Portions of the Balderston estate are 
named later in the possessions of Edmund 
Dudley (1§07), Thomas Radcliffe of 
Winmarleigh (1521), Thomas Earl of 
Derby (1523) and Sir Alexander Osbal- 
deston (1544) ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
Iv, No. 133 v, no. 3, &c.3 v, no. 68 5 
Vill, no. 1. No particulars of tenure are 
given for Haighton. 

1 The wardens of Broughton Chapel 


This 


258 


in 1539 demised to William Singleton of 
Chingle Hall a messuage in Haighton in 
Broughton at a rent of 10s. 10d.3 
Towneley MS. HH, no. 1575. This 
may only mean ‘in the chapelry of 
Broughton.’ 

1 One branch has been named in pre- 
ceding notes. 

John de Haighton occurs in 12443 
Lancs, Ing. and Evxtents, i, 159, 160. 
Alice daughter of Adam de Blackburn 
in 1276-8 complained that John de 
Haighton, Ellen his wife and Katherine, 
Maud and Joan his daughters had dis- 
seised her of her free tenement in the 
place, and recovered; De Banco R. 17, 
m. 27; Assize R, 1238, m. 323 1239, 
m. 37. In 1292 Katherine daughter of 
John de Haighton withdrew her claim 
against John de Haighton; Assize 
R. 408, m. 69d. Much of the land of 
this family appears to have been acquired 
by Hoghton of Hoghton, as below. 

Godith de Elston and Roger son of 
William de Elston agreed with Joan 
widow of John de Haighton for a lease 
of their lands to her; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 783. 

John de Haighton gave his daughters 
Joan, Katherine, Maud and Margery his 
house of Brunden, lands held by Roger 
and Paulin, sons of William de Elston, 
and homages and services in the vill of 
Ha'ghton, at a rent of 12d.; Kuerden 
MSS. iii, H2. John son of John de 
Haighton granted Robert de Whittingham 
certain lands, the bounds at one point 
following Brunden to the east; the rent 
was a pair of gloves or 1d.; ibid. In 
1293-4 Katherine and Joan, daughters 
of John de Haighton, made claims 
against John son of Robert de Singleton 
and Alice his wife, and against Master 
Richard de Hoghton, in respect of tene- 
ments in Haighton; De Banco R. 1o1, 
m. 100d,5 104, m. 81d. 

In 1332 Richard de Haighton granted 
some of his land upon Highfield; Kuerden 
fol. MS. fol. 175. Richard made a grant 
in 13583 ibid. fol. 189. In 1377 Maud 
and Margaret, daughters of Richard de 
Haighton and Euphemia his wife, had 
hereditary lands delivered to them ; ibid. 
fol. 256. 

Robert Greenacre and others, probably 
trustees, in 1416 gave a tenement in 
Haighton to Thomas Haighton and his 
heirs ; ibid. fol. 87. Ughtred Hothersall 
in 1441-2 became bound to William son 
and heir of Thomas Haighton for the 
fulfilment of contracts ; ibid. fol. 189. 
William WHaighton was defendant in 
14423 Pal. of Lance. Plea R. 4, m. 1. 
William occurs again in 1459 and 14.64 ; 
Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 88, 63. 

13 A fine respecting ‘Halghton’ in 
1311 may refer to some other place of 
the name; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 8. In 1317-18 John de 
Brockholes claimed land in Haighton 
against Richard son of Richard de Fish- 
wick and Cecily his wife; De Banco 


ie 


PRESTON 


It descended like Balderston, being held by 
Richard Balderston in 1445-6 for the twentieth part 
of a knight’s fee, the land being half a plough-land.1 
Haighton does not seem to have been usually regarded 
as a separate manor, and in a document of the 16th 
century is described as ‘in Broughton’. 

A family which took a surname from it can be 
traced for some time’; but the land seems to have 
been very much divided,!* the Elstans,}** Singletons,13» 


R. 221, m. 210d. Eve widow of Henry 
de Blackburn in 1336 claimed a mes- 
suage there against John de Blackburn ; 
ibid. 306, m. 128, Land in Haighton 
was among the Clitheroe estates in 134.2 ; 
Final Conc. ii, 114. In 1347 Simon 
Breton and Joan his wife claimed an 
acre of land against William del Hall and 
Robert son of Robert del Moor ; the last 
named seems to have been the owner ; 
Assize R. 1435, m.16. Isolda widow of 
William del Hall had lands in 1372; 
Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 87. John de 
Cottam of Haighton made a feoftment 
of his lands in 1389; ibid. fol. 88. A 
John son of William de Cottam was 
defendant to a claim by Adam son of 
Richard de Holmes in 1337; De Banco 
R. 311, m. 156d. Henry Cottam of 
Haighton died in 1592 holding a capital 
messuage, &c., of Richard Hoghton by 
6d. rent. George his son and heir was 
seventeen years old; Duchy of Lance. 
Ing. p.m. xvi, no. 49. 

18a In 1329 Roger and Paulin sons of 
William de Elston claimed a tenement 
in Haighton against Henry de Herrys 
and Cecily his wife ; Assize R. 427, m. 
3d. (Henry de Hericy had land in 
Wheatcroft from John de Haighton in 
1287; Add, MS. 32106, no. 649.) 
John son of William son of Robert de 
Elston in 134§ claimed 40 acres of land 
against Robert and Adam sons of Ellis de 
Knoll ; De Banco R. 341, m. 226. 

Roger de Elston already named and 
Anabel his wife had lands in Haighton, 
and part of two mills, which were in 
1348 settled on Roger son of John de 
Elston, Ralph and Thomas his brothers, 
and the heirs of Roger de Elston of 
Killanshagh ; Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 291. 
Robert de Bolton was a_ witness. 
William son of Roger de Elston in 1350 
gave his brother Roger land called the 
Moss and rents from the tenements of 
William son of Paulin de Elston, Roger 
son of Ellis de Knoll and Henry son of 
William Amricson in Haighton; ibid. 
fol. 111. 

The feoffees in 14£4 granted Margaret 
widow of John Elston various lands in 
Haighton, with remainders to Thomas 
Elston and Nicholas his brother; Harl. 
MS. 2112, fol. roo/141. In 1429-30 
Roger Elston gave lands, formerly 
Reginald Elston’s, to trustees for Ellen 
daughter of Thomas Haighton; Add. 
MS. 32107, no. 2991-2. Some of the 
Elston lands probably went to the 
Blundells of Preston, for in 1452-3 John 
Blundell and Agnes widow of Hugh 
Longton granted land in Haighton to 
William son of John Blundell; Harl. 
MS. 2112, fol. 100/141. 

13b Nicholas son of Gilbert de Singleton 
in 1384 had lands in Haighton within 
these bounds: Beginning at Falsnape 
Cloughhead on the west, following the 
Moss Dyke east to Christopher de Whit- 
tingham’s land, then north to Brunden, 
following thie westward to Falsnape 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


and neighbouring owners, as appears from the in- 


quisitions and other records, 
having estates therein.1# The 
Hoghtons of Hoghton in 
Leyland held lands here from 
the time of Edward I}; 
the estate was once called a 
manor.!4® Cockersand Abbey 
had a little land.® In the 
17th century one residence 
was called the Hall, and its 
owners, named Wadsworth, 


recorded a pedigree in 1664.18 


Cloughfield and so south to the starting- 
point ; Duchy of Lanc. Anct. D. L 1061. 
The same piece of land apparently (in 
Falsnape Wray) had been given (temp. 
Henry III) by Richard de Haighton to 
Richard son of Roger de Broughton ; 
ibid. L 1074. 

Nicholas son of William Singleton had 
land here in 14713 Kuerden fol. MS. 
fol. 396. John son of William Singleton 
in 1488-9 had land in Haighton, in- 
cluding Stubbings, formerly belonging to 
Henry Haighton; Towneley MS. DD, 
no. 1289. John Singleton of Shingle 
Hall in 1571 granted Thomas Hoghton 
of Lea an annuity out of a messuage, &c., 
in Haighton by Fulwood; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 804. Jane daughter of John 
Singleton was in 1587 wife of Christopher 
Harris, and had land in Haighton and 
West Stubbings ; Pal. of Lanc, Feet of F. 
bdle. 49, m. 267. 

John Singleton of Shingle Hall was in 
1530 said to hold his messuage, &c., in 
Haighton in socage of Sir Richard 
Hoghton by a rent of 11d. and a pair of 
gloves, and a similar return was made 
after the death of his son William in 
1§41 3; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. vi, no. 
323 vili, no. 9. Later, however, the 
tenure was said to be of the queen by 
knight’s service ; ibid. xiii, no. 16 ; xiv, 
no. 67. 

14 Robert Hesketh in 14.90 held lands in 
Haighton of Nicholas Harrington by the 
rent of a grain of pepper; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, no. 723 v, no. 16. 
Sir Thomas Ashton had part of the 
Harrington land in Haighton in 1514; 
ibid. iv, no. 80. Thomas Bradley in 
15$6 purchased lands in Haighton and 
Hothersall from Sir Thomas Hesketh 
and Alice his wife ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F. bdle. 16, m. 12. John Bradley 
held in 1597, but the tenure is not 
stated ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvii, 
no. 28. The tenement descended tc 
Osbaldeston ; Lancs. Ing. pom. (Rec. Soe, 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 179- : 

Lawrence Starkie had lands in 
Haighton as well as in Broughton, and 
they descended in the same way ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Inq. p.m. ix, no. 21. 

Thomas Dixon in 1597 purchased a 
messuage, &c., in Haighton and Whit: 
tingham from James Anderton of 
Lostock, who seems to have purchased in 
191 from Gabriel Pennington ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 58, m. 815 53s 
m. 136. Christopher Dixon died in 1605 
holding his lands (in the townships 
named) of the king by the hundredth and 
the thousandth parts of a knight's fee ; 
Lanes. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 40. 

esd Hoghton in 1606 sold to 
George Lorimer a messuage, &c.. in 
Haighton; Add. MS. 32106, no. 770 


WapsworTH of 


Haighton. 
Jleurs de lis argent, 


£10 each.*! 
Gules three 


George died in 1638, holding it of ‘ the 
lord of Haighton’ in socage, and leaving 
a son John, aged thirty-seven ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxx, no. 57. 

Thomas Preston had lands in 
Haighton and Warton in 15913; Pal. of 
Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 53, m. 178. 
George Preston died in 1602 holding 
lands in Haighton and Whittingham of 
the king by the two-hundredth part of a 
knight's fee ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), 
i, 103. 

John Robinson purchased lands from 
Bolton and from Singleton in 1596-7; 
Pal. of Lance. Feet of F. bdle. 58, m. 46 3 
59, m. 97. Edward Robinson died in 
1608 holding lands of the king by the 
three-hundredth part of a knight's fee ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), i, 114, 
John Robinson of Whittle died in 1628 
holding land, tenure unstated ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvi, no. 20. 

John Taylor in 1586 acquired a 
messuage from Roger Taylor and Ellen 
his wife; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 
48, m. 257. Christopher Taylor died in 
1634 holding a messuage, &c., of ‘the 
lord of Haighton,’ and leaving as heir his 
son John, over forty years of age; 
Towneley MS. C8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 
1190. 

Anthony Wall and Margaret his wife 
had a messuage, &c., in 15963; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 59, m. 181. 
Anthony died at Preston in 1601 holding 
three messuages and three-eighths of a 
windmill in Whittingham and Haighton, 
also messuages, &c., in Preston. His son 
and heir William was eight years old; 
Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. xviii, no. 6. 
William Wall died in 1626 at Whitting- 
ham holding the same estate and leaving 
as heir his son William, aged eight ; ibid. 
xxvi, NO. 50. 

In the following cases the tenure is 
not stated: Sir Richard Shireburne, 
Henry Brown, Thomas Beesley and 
Thomas Clarkson; ibid. xvi, no. 33 
xviii, no. 233; Xxvili, no. 625 xxx, 20. 
2. 

Ma The estate has been mentioned in 
previous notes, John son of John 
de Haighton in the time of Edward I 
made a number of grants and quitclaims 
to Master Richard de Hoghton; Add. 
MS. 32106, 10. 355 653, 662, &e. 
Joan daughter of John de Haighton and 
Maud her sister released to Master 
Richard their right in the lands he had 
acquired from their father ; ibid. no. 624. 
Joan widow of John released her dower 
right ; ibid. no. 650. Joan, Maud and 
Margery daughters of John de Haighton 
afterwards released their claim to 
Richard son of Richard de Hoghton ; 
ibid. no. 654. Robert son of Warine de 
Elston and Ellen his wife, daughter of 
Roger Mustard (about 1280), granted all 


126 


In consequence of their taking the Jacobite side in 
1715 the estate was forfeited.!” 
held by Edward Pedder, Blacklidge of Wheelton and 
Anderton of Euxton.}8 
was that of Gerard}; 
James Francis Anderton, and is now held by his son 
Mr. Wilfrid Francis Anderton of Haighton House. 
George Charnley, Richard Whittingham and Law- 
rence Wilkinson, described as of Haighton, in 1631 
compounded for refusing knighthood by payments ot 


It was afterwards 


Another noteworthy family 
their estate was sold to 


Two or three estates were sequestered by the Com- 
monwealth authorities for delinquency or recusancy,” 


their lands in Haighton to Master 
Richard de Hoghton, excepting a rood 
held of the heirs of Richard le Boteler ; 
ibid. no. 656. In 1315 Richard son of 
Richard de Hoghton granted land to 
Paulin de Elston and Christiana his wife 
at a rent of 135. 4d. yearly; ibid. no, 
714. 

Sir Richard Hoghton was in 1422 
found to hold a messuage and land in 
Haighton of the king as Duke of 
Lancaster in socage; Lancs. Ing, p.m 
(Chet. Soc.), i, 146. Anilla daughter 
and heir of Robert Singleton (formerly 
of Chipping) in her widowhood gave her 
hereditary lands in Haighton to Henry 
and Ralph sons of Sir Richard Hoghton ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 663. John son of 
William Blundell and cousin and heir of 
Roger Blundell in 1491-2 granted to 
William Hoghton the lands in Haighton 
which had formerly belonged to Alexander 
Blundell; Dods. MSS. cxlii, fol. 554. 
Lands in Haighton are mentioned in 
later Hoghton inquisitions, &c., but the 
tenure is not stated. In 1566 Thomas 
Hoghton purchased lands, &c., in 
Haighton and Dilworth from John 
Osbaldeston and Jane his wife; Pal. of 
Lance. Feet of F. bdle, 28, m. 186. 
Richard Hoghton in 1577 purchased a 
messuage, &c., from Henry Earl of 
Derby ; ibid. bdle. 39, m. 93. 

Mb See note 22 below. 

% Adam son of Uctred gave all his 
lande in Haighton bounded by Moorsyke, 
Thorny Clough, Savock and Cabber Clough 
and across the moor to the starting- 
point 5 Cockersand Chartul. i, 228. 

16 Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 322. 
The Wadsworths had also the ‘manors’ 
of Fulwood and Cadley ; Exch. Dep. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), go. 

17 Gillow and Hewitson, Tyldesley 
Diary, 623; Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 171. See also 
Cal. Exch. Pleas, W 2. 

18 Fishwick, Preston, 359- 

9 John Gerard died in 1635 holding 
lands in Warton, Livesey, Whitton, 
Withnell and Haighton. His messuage 
in the last-named township was called 
Rogerson House. The heir was his son 
Evan, aged forty ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. 
pm. xxvii, no, 20. An Evan Gerard 
‘of Brindle,’ skinner, was a burgess at 
the Guild of 1622 ; Preston Guild R. 89, 93- 

20 Fishwick, op. cit. 357, where a pedi- 
gree is given. 

41 Misc. (Rec. Soc; 
i, 222. 3 

2 Richard Charnley died in 1623 hold- 
ing messuages and lands in Haighton of 
the heirs of Balderston by the reat of # 
rose; his heir was his nephew George 
(son of Lawrence) Charnley, aged twenty- 
four ; Lancs. Ing. pom. (Rec. Sociy Nh 
367. Henry Chamley died in 1637 


Lancs, and Chet.) 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


and some small tenements were registered by 
‘Papists’ in 1717.” 


BARTON 


Bartun, Dom. Bk.; Barton, 1212 and usually ; 
Berton, 1226. 

The surface is for the most part level or slightly 
undulating, but rises a little more sharply in the 
north-east corner, a height of about 230 ft. being 
attained. Barton Brook, formed by Westfield Brook 
and Sparling Brook from east and north-east respec- 
tively, runs diagonally across the area from north- 
east to south-west, the Old Hall being to the north 
of it and a water corn-mill upon it; Barton Lodge 
and ‘Tunsteads lie to the south of it. ‘The township 
contains 2,7074 acres and had a population of 315 
in 1901.’ The hamlet of Newsham in Goosnargh 
was included in the township of Barton in 1894.? 

The principal road is that from Preston to Lan- 
caster, running along the western boundary ; upon 
it, near the centre, is the church. The London and 
North-Western Company’s main line to the north 
crosses the north-west corner. 

The land is chiefly meadow and pasture ; the soil 
is clayey. 

A parish council administers the affairs of the 
township. 


PRESTON 


There are remains of ancient crosses near the 
eastern border.® 
In 1066 the manor of BARTON, 


MANOR assessed as four plough-lands, was a member 
of the lordship of Preston held by Earl 
Tostig.* It was no doubt larger than the present 


township, which in 1212 is found assessed as only 
two plough-lands, being then part of ten held of the 
king in thegnage by Walter son of Osbert, ancestor 
of the Cliftons of Westby, by the service of £2 
annually.® 

The Cliftons and their heirs retained the mesne 
lordship of Barton,® which in 1212 was held imme- 
diately by the heirs of Gilbert de Barton.’ Of this 
family very little is known®; their rent was 85., 
being the proportion due for two plough-lands. A 
mortgage or settlement of the manor of Barton, with 
lands in Goosnargh, was made by John de Barton in 
1323,’ and another settlement by a later John de 
Barton and Denise his wife in 1381. 

Gilbert Barton was in 14.96 an outlaw for trespass," 
and was succeeded by another Gilbert, who died in 
1516, leaving a son and heir Thomas, only four years 
old.? The manor was held of Sir William Molyneux 
and Elizabeth his wife, in her right, by a rent of 85. 
She was the daughter and heir of Cuthbert Clifton. 

Thomas Barton died in 1554 holding the manor 
by a like tenure, the mesne lord being Henry Halsall 


holding a messuage in Haighton, with 
common of pasture for all cattle, of 
Gilbert Hoghton, ‘as of his manor of 
Haighton,’ in socage. Hugh, his son and 
heir, was seven years of age; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxx, no.62. Henry son 
of Hugh Charnley in 1653 desired to be 
admitted to compound for the two-thirds 
of his father’s estate sequestered ‘for 
recusancy only’ in 1643 ; Hugh had died 
about 1650 ; Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 20~2. 

Thomas Beesley of Haighton forfeited 
his lands for some delinquency, but on 
the petition of his son John in 1653 the 
sentence seems to have been reversed ; 
Index of Royalists (Index Soc.), 413 
Royalist Comp. Papers, iy 171-2. 

John Hunt was found to have been 
convicted of recusancy and to have com- 
pounded for his estate in 16343 Cal. 
Com. for Comp. iv, 3144. 

3 Evan (son of John) Gerard of 
Haighton and Brindle, Thomas Rogerson, 
James Chester, Anne Sudall, Henry 
Sudall, Roger Livesey, John Bolton (or 
Bilton), Lawrence Simpson and John 
Slater ; Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurors, 105, 137-8. 

1The Census Rep. of 1901 gives an 
area of 3,055 acres, including 13 of inland 
water, and a population of 423 ; but in 
these figures Newsham in Goosnargh is 
included, 

3 Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 32199. 

3 These are called Barton Cross and 
Oak Bank Farm Cross; Lancs. and Ches. 
Antiq. Soc. xx, 179, 180. In the former 
case a new cross has been placed on the 
old pedestal, 

* VCH. Lancs. i, 2882. 

5 Lancs, Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 46, 139. 

®So in the inquest of 1324; Dods. 
MSS, cxxxi, i, fol. 395. 

7 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 46. 

8 Walter de Barton occurs in 1244 and 
Grimbald de Barton in 1253, both in 
Amounderness ; ibid. i, 158, 192. Walter 


de Barton and William his son attested a 
charter copied in Towneley MS. DD 
(no. 1835). 

Ralph de Catterall in 1292 claimed 
certain land in Barton against John de 
Barton, but afterwards said it was in 
Goosnargh; Assize R. 408, m. 34d. 
John de Barton appears again in 1297 
and 1307 ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 289 ; 
De Banco R. 163, m. 253. 

9 Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), ii, 56. John Travers the plaintiff 
(? trustee) received two-thirds of the 
manor, with the reversion of the re- 
mainder, then in the possession of Alice 
wife of Richard de Bury as her dower. 
In 1334 Iseult widow of William son of 
John de Barton (and afterwards wife of 
Adam the Spinner) claimed dower in 
Goosnargh against William son of Richard 
de Bury and against Sir Richard de 
Hoghton, the latter holding by demise of 
John son of John de Barton, to whom her 
second husband had granted the messuage, 
&c., claimed; De Banco R. 297, m. 
230d.3 300, m. 143d. Alice widow of 
John de Barton made a claim in 1342 
against Adam de Waley and Iseult his 
wife ; ibid. 309, m. 289. 

John de Barton was described as a 
knight in charters of 1335 and 1348 ; 
MS. C 8, 5 (Chet. Lib.), Edw. III, no. 17; 
Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 387. 

Sir John de Barton and John his son 
were witnesses in 1340; DD, no. 1879. 

Katherine daughter of William de 
Barton in 1370 claimed the manors of 
Barton and Bilsborrow against Richard 
de Catterall; De Banco R. 438, m. 
253. 
5H Final Cone. iii, 10. The remainder 
was to Thomas son of John and Denise. 

In 1443 lands of Thomas Barton of 
Barton in Amounderness were taken for 
debt; Pal. of Lanc. Chan. Misc. 1/7, 
no. 31. 

Christopher Barton, son and heir of 
Gilbert, was in 1485 to wed Margaret 
daughter of William Singleton and widow 


127 


of — Elston ; Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 59. 
Christopher Barton was living in 1500; 
ibid. fol. 63. 

U Duchy Plead. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 10. 

He was no doubt the Gilbert Barton 
the elder who in 1493 made several 
grants to his sons and daughters— 
Anthony, Lawrence, Richard, Hugh, 
Gilbert, Etheldreda and Isabel; Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R. 76, m. 4, 4d. 5d., 8. 
Holmes, Kirks Place and Stokkolhede in 
Barton are named. 

This Gilbert died in or before 1508, 
for William Ireland, who had married his 
widow Clemency, was then claiming her 
dower in certain messuages, &c.,in Barton, 
held by Lawrence Barton; ibid. 1o4, 
m. 4. 
12 There are three inquisitions taken 
in this order—Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
Vv, no. 33, iii, no. 7 (both 1520), v, no. 6 
(1521). (1) The first of them relates 
particularly to lands held by Gilbert’s 
wife Margaret, who survived her husband 
for over two years. It mentions the above- 
named Lawrence, Gilbert, Anthony, Hugh, 
Constance, Etheldreda, and Isabel Barton 
as still living in 1520; also William, 
Thomas and Christopher Barton, younger 
sons of Christopher Barton, and Gilbert 
son of the Gilbert of the inquisition. 
Thomas Barton the heir had been in 
the custody of Sir John Warren, and 
then of his son Lawrence Warren. See 
Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), ii, 24. (2) 
The second document relates to the 
claim to wardship made shortly after- 
wards by Sir William Molyneux and 
Elizabeth his wife, they alleging that 
Barton was held of them by knight's 
service, viz. by the tenth part of a 
knight’s fee and the rent of 8s. (3) The 
third inquisition reaffirms the socage 
tenure of the manor of Barton. It gives 
field-names in the demesne, including 
Ovall, Tonstedes, Akame, Flethycrokes 
and Alpham, and a number of tenants’ 
names. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


in right of Anne his wife.!8 Richard Barton, the son 
and heir, then twenty-two years of age, recorded a 
pedigree in 1567,!4 and died 
in 1572, leaving as heir a son 
Thomas, aged sixteen.1® This 
son lived till 1603, and his 
son Richard having died in 
1600, Thomas’s heir was 
Richard’s daughter Fleetwood, 
born in 1595. The manor 
was held of Sir Cuthbert 
Halsall in socage by a rent of 
85.18 


When four years old Fleet- Pee — 


wood Barton was married to — heads couped sable armed 
Richard son and heir of Sir = or. 

Richard Molyneux!7; but 

this union was afterwards annulled, and she then 
married Richard Shuttleworth of Gawthorpe in 
Habergham Eaves near Burnley.!® Barton descended 
like Gawthorpe till the death of Robert Shuttleworth 
in 1816, when—he having divided his estates—Barton 
was inherited by the elder son James, the younger, 
Robert, having Gawthorpe. James Shuttleworth in 
1833 sold the manor to George Jacson of Preston, 
a member of the firm of Horrocks, Jacson & Co., 
whose son Charles Roger Jacson succeeded to it.1® 
Having no issue he directed the manor and lands to 
be sold at his death, which took place on 3 October 


1893, for the benefit of his nephews and nieces. 
Portions have been sold, but the lordship of the 
manor is said to be vested in his trustees. Barton 
Lodge is the manor-house.”” 

The Charnley family held an estate in Barton in 
1415.2 A few other families holding land are known 
through the inquisitions.” 

Richard Shuttleworth of Barton being a zealous 
Parliamentarian and Presbyterian, the township seems 
to have escaped the attention of the Commonwealth 
authorities ; but William Cardwell, tanner, and some 
others registered estates as ‘ Papists’ in 1717.23 

There was probably a chapel at the 

CHURCH hall from an early time, but there are no 
records of it.4 In 1650 St. Lawrence's 

chapel had neither minister nor maintenance,?> In 
1723 Richard Shuttleworth, retaining the right of 
presentation, made it a semi-public chapel and gave 
some endowment, a grant from Queen Anne’s Bounty 
being apparently obtained.?° It was_ made parochial 
in 1850, and was pulled down and rebuilt in 1896.27 
The patronage is vested in the Bishop of Manchester 
and the representatives of the late Col. Marton 


alternately. The following have been incum- 
bents :— 
1832 Thomas Duell 


1870 John Denby Harrison, Ph.D. (Rostock) 
1905 Herbert James Bardsley, M.A. (Worcester 
Coll., Oxf.) 


Margaret the widow of Gilbert after- 
wards married Francis Morley, and was 
claiming dower in Barton in 15183; Pal. 
of Lanc. Plea R. 123, m. 4. 

In 1518, i.e. before the above inquisi- 
tions, Thomas Barton had summoned 
Lawrence Barton to answer for the 
waste, sale and destruction of houses and 
woods which Gilbert Barton (grandfather 
of Thomas, whose heir he was) had 
granted to Lawrence for life; Pal. of 
Lanc. Writs Proton. 10 Hen. VIII. 

The above statements as to the descent 
are difficult to harmonize. According to 
the recorded pedigree Gilbert was great- 
grandfather of Thomas, which would clear 
the matter. 

13 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. x, no. 50. 
He held the manor, also twelve messu- 
ages, a water mill, a windmill, &c., in 
Barton, and lands in Goosnargh, Bils- 
borrow and Chipping. 

14 Visit, of 1567 (Chet. Soc.), 57. 
This gives the descent thus: Thomas 
Barton -s. Gilbert -s. Christopher -s. 
Gilbert -s. Thomas -s. Richard -s. 
Thomas. 

For a settlement by Thomas Barton in 
1599 see Pal. of Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 
61, no. 198. 

15 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiii, no. 8 ; 
the tenure was unchanged. The inquisi- 
tion names Richard’s uncle Gilbert, 
mother Maud, sister Elizabeth, wife 

Anne, and children John, Andrew and 
Maud. His will is recited in it; his 
wife was to hold Barton Hall, the de- 
mesne lands, &c., till his son should 
attain full age. 

For a recovery of the manor in 1573 
see Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 233, m. 134. 
For a claim to the manor of ‘ Barton 
Row’ in 1575 see Ducatus Lane. (Rec. 
Com.), iii, 35. 

16 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec, Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 7-I1- 

17 Thid. 


18 See the account of Gawthorpe. The 
outline of the descent is: Richard Shuttle- 
worth, d. 1669 —s. Richard, d. 1648 -s. 
Sir Richard, d. 1687 -s. Richard, d. 1748 
-s. James, d. 1773 -8. Robert, d. 1816 
-8. James. 

A local story relates that ‘there was a 
large forest hereabouts and it contained a 
wild boar, which played such havoc in 
the neighbourhood that Barton the elder 
offered in marriage his daughter, a rich 
heiress, to the man who would kill it. A 
great hunt followed, and on St. Lawrence’s 
Day one of the Shuttleworths slew the 
animal near the house now known as 
the Boar’s Head’ ; Hewitson, Our Country 
Churches, 65. 

A settlement of the manor of Barton 
was made by Richard Shuttleworth and 
Fleetwood his wife in 1617-18 ; Pal. of 
Lance. Feet of F. bdle. 92, m. 9. There 
weve others in 1709 by Richard Shuttle- 
worth, and in 1742 by the same Richard 
and James his eldest son and heir; Pal. 
of Lanc. Plea R. 490, m. 63; 557, m. 7. 

19 There is a pedigree in Foster's 
Lanes. Ped. 

20 Fishwick, Preston, 91, 315. Barton 
Hall was sold to Alderman William Smith 
of Newsham. 

21 Final Conc. iii, 73. William Charn- 
ley was plaintiff and his parents, John 
Charnley of Erlesgate and Amery his 
wife, were deforciants. 

22 Robert Singleton of Brockholes 
(1525) held land in Barton of the heirs 
of Gilbert Barton by the rent of a rose ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. vi, no. 64. 

George Medgeall (Midgehalgh) held 
messuages in Barton in 1557 of Richard 
Barton by a rent of 2s.; Robert his son 
and heir was aged thirty-three ; ibid. x, 
no. 22. Robert had a son George who 
married Ellen Parkinson in 1577 and had 
ason Robert; and this Robert left a son 
and heir George, a minor, who died in 
the king’s custody without issue in 1626. 


128 


His heir was his uncle Edward Mighall, 
brother of Robert; ibid. xxvi, no. 39. 

The tenure of Sir Gilbert Gerard’s land 
in 1593 is not stated separately. 

Thomas Cardwell died in 1633 holding 
two messuages, &c., of Richard Shuttle- 
worth and Fleetwood his wife in socage 
by a rent of 115. 9¢. William his son 
and heir was sixteen years of age ; ibid. 
XXX, 10. 59. 

Nicholas Cross had land in 1484; Pal. 
of Lanc. Plea R. 61, m. 7. 

% Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurors, 139, 95. William Cardwell 
was a son of Thomas. The other names 
are—George Calvert, Richard Arrowsmith 
and George Turner. 

Among the convicted recusants of the 
time of Charles II was a goldsmith, Thomas 
Kitchin ; Misc. (Cath. Rec. Soc.), v, 165. 

241t is said to be named in 1577; 
Raines in Notitia Cestr. ii, 469. 

John de Barton in 1348 received 
licence from the Archbishop of York to 
have services in his oratories within the 
deanery of Amounderness ; note by Mr. 
Earwaker citing Raines MSS. 

2 Commonw. Ch, Surv. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), 146. The inhabi- 
tants desired it to be made a parochial 
chapel to Broughton. It is not named in 
the Plund. Mins. Accts. : 

2 Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. loc. cite; 
‘this chapel was built and has been con- 
stantly repaired by the family who enjoyed 
the estate and lived in the manor-house, 
to which this seems to have been 3 
domestic chapel.’ oer 

An advertisement for a chaplain in 
1795 shows that he was to be master also 
of Bilsborrow School; Preston Guard. 
Sketches, no. 1526. 

% Fishwick, Preston, 145-7+ 
of the old building is given. 
Hewitson, op. cit. 64-70. : 

28 The Bishop of Manchester's right 
was formerly that of the Jacsons. 


A view 
See also 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


LEA, ASHTON, INGOL AND COTTAM 


Lea, Dom. Bk.; Le, 1212; Lee, 1297; Eng- 
leshel[e], 1200; Englisle, 1292; Inglisle, 1301 ; 
Frenkyssele, 1277 ; Franckesleye, 1292 ; Frensshele, 
1352. 

rhe Dom. Bk. ; Eston, 1168; Estone, 1201 ; 
Assheton, 1292. 

Ingole, Ingool, c. 1200. 

Cotun, 1227; Cottun, 1258; Cotum, 1261; 
Coton, 1280 ; Cotom, xv cent. 

This composite township lies to the west of Preston. 
It is divided into two nearly equal parts by the Savock 
or Savick Brook, flowing west to the border, and 
then turning south to become itself the boundary at 
that point. The Ribble’s old course is the boundary 
on the south. ‘The river is tidal here, and the land 
by it is level, but the surface rises to about 60 or 70 ft. 
above the ordnance datum, and then falls again to the 
Savock. North of this stream the ground again rises 
and over 100 ft. is attained on the border of Wood- 
plumpton. 

Lea forms the western part of the township. It 
was formerly divided by the Savock into French Lea 
on the south and English Lea, now Lea Town, on 
the north, but the old names have long been forgotten. 
On the northern border is Cottam or Cotham, while 
Ingol lies in the north-east corner, on the border of 
Broughton. Sidgreaves is or was on the boundary 
of English Lea and Cottam. South of the Savock 
the eastern part of the township is called Ashton, or 
Ashton-upon-Ribble, having Tulketh to the north- 
easton the border of Preston, and Ashton Bank on 
the south-west by the Ribble. Greaves lies between 
Ashton and (French) Lea. A large part of Ashton 
has now become urban; the dock of the Preston 
Corporation’s Ribble navigation scheme is situated 
there in what was formerly the bed of the Ribble,' 
the course of which stream has been straightened. 
The township boundaries also have been altered so as 
to include about half of Ashton within the township 
of Preston.” 

The areas of the several parts are as follows: Lea, 
1,776 acres; Ashton, 8284; Ingol, 365; Cottam, 
5184 ; in all 3,488 acres.2 The population in 1901 
was 6,586.4 

The principal roads are those from Preston, west 


PRESTON 


through Ashton, Greaves and Lea towards Lytham, 
and north through Ingol to Woodplumpton. From 
Greaves on the former road another important one 
goes north to Inskip and the Wyre district ; cross- 
roads connect it with Cottam, Lea Town and 
Clifton. The Preston and Wyre Railway, owned by 
the Lancashire and Yorkshire and London and North- 
Western companies, runs north-west and west through 
the township, with a station called Lea Road. The 
Lancaster Canal crosses the Savock from Preston and 
then goes west through the township. The Preston 
tramway system extends into Ashton, and there are 
branch railways to serve the dock. 

There are brick and tile works at Ashton and 
Cottam. In the other parts of the township agri- 
culture remains the only industry. 

The present reduced township is governed by a 
parish council. 

There was formerly a holy well® in Ingol, <a 
walled-in structure reached by a flight of steps.’ In 
French Lea was St. Catherine’s Well. 

‘Danes Pad’ goes west through Ingol and Cottam ; 
it is supposed to mark the line of a Roman road. 

In 1066 LEA, assessed as one plough- 
land, and ASHTON as two, were mem- 
bers of the fee of Preston or Amoun- 
derness held by Earl Tostig.® After the Conquest 
they appear to have been included in the royal 
demesne, and were held in thegnage by a number of 
tenants, the hamlets being French Lea, English Lea, 
Ashton, Tulketh, Ingol, Cottam, Sidgreaves, and per- 
haps others. French Lea, as above stated, lay between 
the Savock Brook and the Ribble; in this part the 
hall was built; while English Lea was to the north 
of the Savock.’ 

Henry II granted FRENCH LEA among other 
manors to Warine de Lancaster to hold by the 
service of falconer,® and this was confirmed between 
1190 and 1194 by John Count of Mortain to 
Warine’s son Henry de Lea.® A further confirma- 
tion or renewal was granted in 1199 after John had 
become king.” In 1207 the king obtained Henry’s 
manors of Liverpool and Uplitherland in exchange 
for ENGLISH LEA," and the service thenceforward 
to be rendered was a payment of 20s. yearly instead 
of falconry." The two Leas were thus united 
under one lordship and have so remained. In 1212 


MANORS 


1 The work of altering and deepening 
the course of the Ribble and making the 
dock was begun in 1884, and the dock 
was opened in 1892 as the!Albert Edward 
Dock. The entrance is through a dock 
basin and two locks, Vessels of 18-ft. 
draught can come up to the dock, Ware- 
houses have been built at the side of it. 

3 Part of Ashton was included within 
the municipal borough in 1880 and a 
further part in 1888; in 1894 these 
parts were included also in the township of 
Preston by Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 31607. 

* The Census Rep. of rgo1 gives 3,098 
acres, including 18 of inland water, as the 
area of the present reduced township— 
the old name being retained—and 357 
acres, including 2 of inland water, as the 
area of the part taken into Preston, In 
addition there are 22 acres of tidal water 
and 13 of foreshore in the reduced town- 
ship ; while the alteration of the Ribble 
course and the boundary have made further 
changes at the expense of Penwortham, 
perhaps 100 acres, 


7 


4 Eight-ninths (viz. 5,872 persons) were 
within the borough (and new township) 
of Preston. 

5 Lancs. and Ches. Antig, Soc. xx, 


173. 

6 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 2884. 

7 The positions of the two parts of the 
township are shown by various charters. 
Thus about 1290 Amphelicia widow of 
Richard le Scrivain (scrivener) released 
to William de Lea her lord her right to 
dower in her husband’s lands beyond 
Wadebridgegate towards the west in 
French Lea, between Ribble and Savock, 
and also all the land her son William 
had granted in Sidgreaves; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 460. The same William son 
of Richard le Scrivain of French Lea 
released to William son of Sir Henry de 
Lea land within bounds which began 
at Wadebridge, followed Wadebridgegate 
across to the Ribble, along Ribble to 
Savock, and along Savock to Wade- 
bridge ; ibid. no. 457. It may be added 
that Richard son of Robert Scriptorius of 


129 


French Lea occurs in another deed; 
ibid. no. 419. 

The two Leas, English and French, 
seem also to have been known as Great 
and Little Lea. 

8 This grant is known only by the 
confirmations. Warine the Falconer is 
named in the Pipe Roll of 1185-6; 
Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 60. As Warine 
de Lancaster he gave the fourth part of 
an oxgang of land in Lea to the abbey of 
Cockersand for the soul of King Henry, 
&c. 3 Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 
207. Warine probably died about 1191. 

9 Farrer, op. cit. 432 3 it mentions a 
confirmation previously granted by John 
to Warine de Lancaster. Henry son of 
Warine gave 20 marks for the charter ; 
ibid. 116. 

10 Chart, R. (Rec. Com.), 26. 

11 In the Pipe Roll of 1200-1 English 
Lea appears as paying an increment of 
4s. for the half-year; Farrer, op. cit. 
130. 

12 Cal, Rot. Chart. (Rec. Com.), 171. 


17 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


accordingly Henry de Lea was recorded as holding in 
all six plough-lands by the king’s charter and rendering 
The two Leas seem then to have been con- 
sidered as one plough-land, as in 1066, and 35. 4¢. 
was the portion of the rent charged on them; but 
in the 14th century they are called two plough- 


205,18 


lands.15 


Henry de Lea !® was succeeded by his son Sir 
John de Lea, of whom little is known.!” 
in 1265,!° leaving two sons Sir Henry and Baldwin, 


13 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 21. The grant to 
Cockersand made by Henry’s father 
Warine is recorded, as also a further gift 
by Henry himself. 

The six plough-lands seem to have 
been made up thus : Ainsdale 2, Ravens- 
meols 3, Lea 1. 

44 The vill of Lea rendered 40d. yearly 
to the Earl of Lancaster in 1297 ; ibid. 
i, 289. Richard de Hoghton in 1324 
held the manor by the service of 35. 4d. 
at Michaelmas; Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 39. 

15 In 1346 Adam de Hoghton held 
both Leas as two plough-lands by the 
service of the third part of a knight’s fee, 
giving relief, and paying 3s. 4d. yearly 
for castle ward; Surv. of 1346 (Chet. 
Soc.), §4. The two Leas are again called 
two plough-lands in 1445-6 ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, no. 20. They 
were then held by the third part of a fee. 

16 He confirmed his father’s gift to 
Cockersand ; Chartul. i, 209. He also 
allowed Walter son of Simon to give part 
of his land in Lea, by Fulford at the 
Savock ; ibid. i, 208. He gave land in 
English Lea near the Outlane and Mere- 
lich (the boundary between English Lea 
and Ashton) to Richard son of Owen; 
Anct. D. (P.R.O.), C 2146. To Uctred 
son of Edith he gave a toft and croft in 
Lea, with two nets free in the Ribble, 
for a rent of 12d.; Add. MS. 32106, no. 
50. To Peter son of Geoffrey he gave 
land within bounds which name Blake- 
mon Syke and Katelaw Syke; ibid. no. 
53- To his son Richard he gave land in 
the Spitalfield ; ibid. no. 69. 

In English Lea he granted 1 oxgang 
of land to Roger son of Levenot, which 
the said Levenot had held ; ibid. no. 55. 
A more important grant was made by 
him as Henry de Lea son of Warine de 
Lancaster about 1230, giving his daughter 
Amice the moiety of the whole vill of 
English Lea with all its appurtenances 
at a rent of 35.3 ibid. no. 379. 

There is a charter of William son of 
Henry son of Warine de Lancaster 
respecting Sidgreaves, ibid. no. 380. 

‘Henry de Lancaster son of Warine’ 
gave a plot of land in Forton to the 
monks of Furness in exchange for another 
piece for the souls of William de Lan- 
caster, Warine de Lancaster and Mabel 
his wife, Richard Fitton father of his own 
wife Margaret, &c. ; Harl. Chart. (B.M.) 
s21, 1. The round seal has a bird with 
the inscription + stcitt 4+ HENRICI DE 
tanca --. William de Lancaster (either 
I or IL) is called the uncle of Warine ; 
Cockersand Chartul. ii, 366. For the 
Fittons see the account of Harwood. 

17 Heattested various charters. William 
de Scales son of Gilbert granted Sir John 
de Lea a selion in English Lea, lying 
between land of Henry son of Roger and 
land of Herbert the Clerk, in exchange 
for a messuage in the same vill; Add. 
MS. 32106, no. 411. Sir John occurs 
several times between 1244 and 12613 


the former being his successor. 
prominent man in the county !° and was at ore time 
sheriff. He died in 1288, leaving as heir his son 
William de Lea,?! who acquired the manor of Molling- 
ton Banastre near Chester by his marriage with 
Clemency Banastre.?? 


Sir Henry was a 


Their son Henry,” taking 


part with Adam Banastre in his rebellion in October- 


He died 


Lanes. ne and Extent, i, 158, 184, 
227. 8 Ibid. 234. 

19 He gave land in the Millfield in 
French Lea to Cockersand Abbey ; 
Chartul. i, 210. The seal to this grant 
is drawn by Dodsworth (cxlii, fol. 17) ; 
it shows a bend lozengy, with the legend 
+s. HENRICI DE LeE. A number of 
grants to and by him are contained among 
the Hoghton deeds in Add. MS. 32106. 
Among them may be cited the following : 
Henry son of Uctred of English Lea gave 
Henry son of John de Lea all his land in 
English Lea, about 1230, Henry de Lea 
(i-e. the grandfather) being a witness; 
no. 80. Henry son of Adam de Leahead 
gave all his land in Leahead to Henry 
son of John de Lea, a rent of 12d, 
to be paid to St. Saviour’s in Ribbledale 
(ie. Stidd) ; no. 58. The same grantor 
also gave land in the field called Westley 
in French Lea; no. 458. Robert son of 
Henry of French Lea gave Henry son of 
John de Lea five selions in Leferirley ; 
no. 401. Adam son of William Edwin 
made an exchange of land in the field 
called the Mekes with Sir Henry de Lea ; 
no. 433. In 1281 an exchange in the 
Crofts and Geoffreyfield was made 
between John son of Alan of French Lea 
and Sir Henry de Lea; no. 65. William 
the reeve of Lea was a witness. 

Henry de Lea appears as the king’s 
bailiff in 1256; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, 
i, 205-6. He became tenant of the 
Cockersand land in Lea in 1262; Final 
Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), i, 
141. He was defendant to a claim for a 
tenement in French Lea made by Alice 
daughter of Robert de Staining in 1278; 
Assize R. 1238, m. 315 1239, m. 39. 

® P.R.O. List of Sheriffs, 72. 

?1 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 273. In 
addition to Lea Sir Henry held Charnock, 
part of Wheelton and Ravensmeols. He 
held Lea of Edmund Earl of Lancaster 
by the service of 40d., having 2 oxgangs 
of land in demesne there, each worth 
gs. a year, and 6 oxgangs in service, each 
worth 2s. a year; also a water-mill, 
worth half a mark yearly. William the 
son and heir was thirty years old. 

22 Dods. MSS. cxlii, fol. 325. Clemency 
was daughter of Robert Banastre. 

As William son of Sir Henry de Lea 
he made an exchange of land on the east 
side of Baddebridgegate for land on the 
west side thereof with William son of 
Roger of French Lea; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 39. John son of Alan de Lea granted 
his lord William de Lea certain land in 
French Lea, lying in Merclie, in Gild- 
homefield, in Overthemarketgate field, 
also selions called Staniggefethir and 
Crauthornland ; ibid. no. 44. Roger son 
of Mille of English Lea in 1284 gave 
William de Lea, his lord, an acre in 
English Lea, a candle having to be given 
yearly to God and St. Mary; ibid. no. 
47. Richard the Miller of Lea con- 
firmed to William his lord two butts of 
land in English Lea, lying in the Merst- 


130 


November 1315, was executed *4 ; but his sister Sibyl 
was able to secure the inheritance, which she carried 
by marriage to Sir Richard de Hoghton of Hoghton,* 


holme between the Scalebanks and the 
new bridge ; no. 308, 

In 1292 William de Lea was sum- 
moned to prove his title to the manor, 
which he did by showing the grants 
above cited; Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. 
Com.), 380. In 1296 Margery widow 
of Alan de Ingol released to her lord 
William de Lea all right in lands which she 
and Alan had sold to him, which lands 
were in the fields called Becanesfurlong 
and Eastgreaves in English Lea in Syke 
Meadow, in Wadebridgeholme, Wade- 
bridge Meadow and Mill Carr ; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 388. In 1301 an agreement 
was made between William de Lea and 
Robert de Haydock ; Dods. MSS. Ixx, fol. 
1545, William de Lea appears to have 
died in April 1302, leaving his son and 
heir Henry, a minor; Mins, Accts. 771, 
no. I. 

3 In 1311 Sir Henry de Lea granted 
to Thomas son of David de Sidgreaves and 
Alice his wife 3 acres in the field called 
Williamcroft in the vill of Sidgreaves at 
a rent of ros, ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 436. 
In 1312 William son and heir of Gilbert 
de Ashton released his right in Brookheld 
(?in Ashton) to Sir Henry de Lea ; ibid. 
no. 485. Roger son of Roger son of 
Emma de Sidgreaves in 1313 gave all his 
land in Lea to Sir Henry; ibid. no. 347. 

24 The insurgents were defeated on 4 
Nov. 1315, and Henry de Lea for a week 
or more remained hiding in the moors and 
woods, being captured by William de 
Holland, and afterwards beheaded by order 
of the Earl of Lancaster; Coram Rege 
R. 254, m. 52. 

35 Dods, MSS. cxlii, fol. 324. Henry 
de Lea had two brothers (or half brothers), 
William and Thomas, mentioned in 1301; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 889. Sir William 
de Lea, son of William de Lea, in 1337 
released to Sir Richard de Hoghton, 
Agnes widow of Sir Henry de Lea, Sir 
Adam de Hoghton and others all right in 
the manors of English Lea, French Lea, 
Ashton by Preston, &c.; ibid. no. 891. 
For Sir William see the account of 
Croston, 

In 1320 Thomas son of Roger son of 
Emma of English Lea released to Sir 
Richard de Hoghton and Sibyl his wife 
all that land which Sir Henry de Lea, 
brother of Sibyl, had had by the gift of 
Thomas’s brother Roger in English Lea; 
ibid. no. 735. Sir Richard in 1323 
acquired from Henry son of John de 
Lea land given him by William son of 
Sir Henry de Lea; ibid. no. 52. Later, 
in 1327, Avice widow of Richard de 
Claughton granted Sir Richard two butts 
of her land in the vill of English Lea, 
near the tithe barn of Lea and adjoining 
the king’s way from Preston to Kirkham ; 
ibid. no. 43 

Adam de Hoghton in 1341 granted 
common of pasture in Lea Marsh to 
certain tenants of John son of William de 
Lea ; ibid. no. 765. Wittizm de Dutton, 
clerk, apparently the trustee of Thomas 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


From that time Lea has descended in the same way as 
Hoghton.”® 

The family seem to have found Lea a desirable 
residence, and were often known as Hoghton of 
Lea.2”. The most prominent incident of their tenure 
was the tragedy of 1589, when a feud between the 
Langton and Hoghton families resulted in a night 
attack on Lea Hall and the death of Thomas 
Hoghton, the lord. The story is thus told? :— 

Thomasine widow of John Singleton of Staining 
in right of herself and her daughters claimed certain 
oxen feeding in an inclosed pasture adjoining Thomas 
Hoghton’s manor-house called the Lea on 21 Novem- 
ber 1589; these cattle had been removed from 
Staining by George Singleton the brother of John. 
William Anderton of Anderton Ford, a kinsman of 
the widow’s, she being a daughter of Roger Anderton, 
asked Thomas Langton of Walton-le-Dale to take the 
cattle away from the Lea, arguing that it might law- 
fully be done. Langton accordingly on 20 Novem- 
ber warned a number of his tenants to be ready to 
accompany him with their weapons, and asked the 
help of Thomas Singleton of Broughton. About 
eleven o’clock at night Langton, Anderton, the 
Singletons and their aiders, about eighty in all, armed 
with pikes, guns, long staves, Welsh hooks on staves, 
swords, daggers, bows, arrows, and bills, assembled on 
Preston Marsh for the purpose of seizing the cattle, 
their watchword being ‘The crow is white!” They 
reached the Lea about an hour after midnight, 
dividing themselves into two companies, of which one 


PRESTON 


had several hours’ warning and had made prepara- 
tions to resist. He and a company of friends and 
tenants, including William Hulton and his two sons, 
to the number of thirty, armed themselves with staves, 
a pike, a gun charged with hail shot, two pistols, a 
bow and arrows, swords and daggers, and placed 
themselves near the inclosure to guard the cattle. 
Their cry was ‘ Black, black!’ The two companies 
met and ‘a great affray began between them within 
60 yards of the said mansion house.’ The first attack 
having been repulsed a fresh one was made in which 
Thomas Hoghton was killed and one man on the 
other side. After this the assailants appear to have 
withdrawn. 

Complaint was made and an inquiry immediately 
ordered, which was held at the beginning of January, 
the Earl of Derby and Sir Richard Shireburne stating 
that they had taken steps to quell the disturbance 
and arrest the offenders as suon as they heard of the 
matter. Thomas Langton, sore wounded, was arrested 
as he lay in bed at Broughton Tower; Thomasine 
Singleton and others were sent to Lancaster Castle. 

Anne the widow of the Thomas Hoghton thus 
slain had Lea Hall for her life ; she afterwards married 
Richard Shireburne of Stonyhurst.?9 

A record of the arms displayed at Lea Hall, 1591 
to 1636, has been preserved? 

No courts have been held for the manor for many 
years, but rolls extending from 1622 to 1774 are 
preserved at Walton-le-Dale.*! 

Several minor families occur taking a surname 


passed through the outer court of the manor-house to 
Thomas Hoghton had 


reach the cattle inclosure. 


the Priestsknave of Preston, gave Sir 
Adam de Hoghton in 1371 all Thomas’s 
lands in English Lea; ibid. no. 355. 
This charter was dated at French Lea. 
Maud widow of William de Freckleton in 
1388 granted all her lands in English Lea 
to Sir Richard de Hoghton ; ibid. no. 75. 
In 1393 John de Whitley and Ellen his 
wife granted Sir Richard a messuage and 
land in the vill of Lea which Adam son 
of William had received from his brother 
John ; ibid. no. 464. 

Thomas Whiteside of Burscough in 
141g granted to Sir Richard Hoghton all 
those lands in French Lea which he had 
by his wife Alice daughter of John the 
Spenser, and Richard Whiteside, the son, 
agreed ; ibid. no. 549, 299. 

. 38 A number of the Hoghton tenants 
in French Lea and Ashton are named in 
an agreement of 1334 ; Final Conc. ii, 94. 
_ The manor of Lea is constantly named 
in the Hoghton inquisitions, &c. Sir 
Richard Hoghton was in 1422 found to 
have held the manor of French Lea of the 
king as of his duchy by knight’s service 
and a rent of 20d., and English Lea by 
the same tenure, the two being the third 
part of a knight’s fee and worth 5 marks 
a year; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 
145. So in 1580 the manor of Lea and 
lands, &c., there were held of the queen 
as of her duchy by the third part of a 
knight’s fee; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
xiv, no. 26, Sir Henry Hoghton and 
Dame Susanna his wife were vouchees in 
a recovery of the manors of Lea and 
Ashton in 17425 Pal, of Lanc. Plea R. 
554, m. 12, 

_ 7 Sir Adam de Hoghton in 1348 had 
licence for oratories in his manors of 
Alston, Lea and Thornton; Canon 
Raines’ note from York records, 


General pardons were in 1469 granted 
to Alexander Hoghton of French Lea, esq., 
and to Henry Hoghton of French Lea 
(otherwise of Hoghton), esq.; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 366-7. 

A number of tenants of pasture in Lea 
are named in 1582; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F. bdle. 46, m. 39. 

38 Add. MS. 32106, fol. 205d, 

29 Ibid. no. 776. 

30 Trans. Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xiv, 
216. 

81 Information of Mr. J. H. Lumby. 
The customs of the manor were in dispute 
in 1691-2; Exch, Dep. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), 78, 81. 

82 Some of them have occurred in pre- 
ceding notes. The following particulars 
may be added : 

Henry son of Uctred of English Lea 
granted Adam son of Gillomichael his 
kinsman 6% acres in English Lea. Four 
of the acres were in Berifurlong, two lay 
between Alan’s Dyke and Russilache, and 
the half acre was next to Adam the Stud- 
herd’s acre ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 409. 
Henry de Lea and John his son were 
witnesses. 

The following witnesses to a charter 
show that the users of the surname were 
numerous about 1270: Henry de Lea 
son of Alan; Robert son of Henry de 
Lea, Robert son of Roger de Lea, Uctred 
de Lea, Alan son of Alan de Lea Gallica ; 
ibid. no. 416. 

In 1292 Alice widow of John son of 
Adam de Lea claimed dower in Lea against 
Adam son of Henry de Lea, who called 
Baldwin son of John de Lea to warrant 
him; Assize R. 408, m. 33. At the 
same time Maud daughter of Robert de 
Lea claimed a tenement in French Lea 
against Thomas Uttingesone ; ibid. m. 58. 


131 


from the Leas.®? 
held by Baldwin de Lea, above-named,* and it also 


SIDGREAVES was at one time 


William son of Robert Backman in 1301 
made a claim against Henry son of Emma 
de ‘Inglisle’ respecting a tenement in 
English Lea, but did not prosecute it 5 
Assize R. 419, m. 7. The claim was 
renewed or continued in 1324-5, the 
plaintiff's name being given as William 
son of Robert son of Robert de Lea; 
Assize R. 426, m.2. A settlement by 
Thomas Johnson Amotson and Ellen his 
wife in 1385 may refer to the same 
family ; Final Conc. iii, 25. 

James son of Richard Lea and cousin 
and heir of John Lea in 1532 granted 
lands, &c., in French Lea to Sir Richard 
Hoghton; Add. MS, 32106, no. 73. 
The said James and John his son were 
‘of English Lea’ in 15643 ibid. fol. 18g. 
John Lea made a feoffment of lands in 
English Lea in 1574 for the benefit of 
his son Alexander and Janett his wife, 
daughter of John Bayne; ibid. no. 786. 
In 1587 Thomas Hoghton purchased a 
messuage, &c.. in Lea from Alexander 
(son and heir of John) Lea and Janett his 
wife ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 49, 
m, 250. 

38 Thomas son of Uctred de Lea released 
to Baldwin de Lea his claim to service for 
a tenement in Sidgreaves; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 42. William son of Henry 
son of Warine de Lancaster released the 
service of Robert Spendlow in Sidgreaves, 
viz. 16d., to Baldwin son of John de Lea ; 
ibid. no. 380. Robert Spendlow released 
to Baldwin de Lea the service ot Roger 
Spendlow his brother for a tenement in 
Sidgreaves in the fee of English Lea and 
also of Robert White ; ibid. no. 416, 420. 
Baldwin also obtained a ‘land’ in the 
Astewaldis in Sidgreaves, extending east 
to west from the road to the moor to a 
syke of Remisgrene ; ibid. no. 395. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


occurs as a surname.4 GREAVES in French Lea 
The Knights Hospitallers *8 and 
Cockersand Abbey ** had land in Lea. 
of Robert son of Auger of French Lea gave land 
there, with his body, to St. Cuthbert of Durham in 


occurs in 1277.% 


connexion with Lytham Priory.*® 


One plough-land in ASHTON was granted by 
John when Count of Mortain to Arthur de Ashton, 


Robert son of Geoffrey de Lea in 1334 
acquired an estate in Great Lea from 
Richard son of Baldwin; Final Cone. ii, 

2. 

, 4 Adam son of Ajiam de Sidgreaves 
gave his son-in-law Gilbert a half-acre on 
the west side of the out-lane in Sid- 
greaves, with common of pasture in 
English Lea; Add. MS. 32106, no. 45. 
Robert Spendlow (son of Richard) gave 
an acre in Sidgreaves to Uctred son of 
Eda de Sidgreaves at a rent of 2d. sterling ; 
ibid. no. yor. 

In 1292 Roger son of Roger Spendlow 
of Sidgreaves was non-suited in a claim 
for a tenement in the place made against 
Robert son of Ralph de Sidgreaves and 
Ellen his wite ; Assize R. 408, m. 76. 

Soon afterwards (1294-5) the last- 
named Ellen stated that her husband, who 
had been hanze! for felony, had held a 
messuage and lands in Lea of her patri- 
mony ; Inq. p.m. 22 Edw. I, no. 86; 23 
Edw. I, no. 110. 

85 Margery widow of Alexander son of 
Warine in 1277 claimed dower against 
Richard son of John del Greaves in 
respect of two messuages and 2 oxgangs 
of land in French Lea; De Banco R. 21, 
m. 27d., 94d. The hamlet of Greaves 
was said to be in the vill of French Lea 
in 14043 Add. MS. 32106, no. 513. 

86 Part or all was in Sidgreaves; 
Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 132. Roger son 
of Levenot of English Lea in making to 
his son Uctred a grant of the eighth part 
of an oxgang in English Lea, next to 
Swingi:car, excepted half an acre given to 
the Hospitallers ; ibid. iv, L 5-9. 

Jean son of Adam de Lea granted to 
the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem 
half a ‘land in Longfield in English Lea 
and half a land on Old Bruches next Sir 
John de Lea’s land, beginning at the 
Spitalfield ani extending as far as the 
moor; Kuerden fol. MS. fol. 234. 

George Atkinson died in 1639 holding 
a messuage and lands in Lea which had 
belonged to the Hospitallers. His heir 
was his sister Anne Hodgson, widow, aged 
fifty-eight ; Towneley MS. C8, 13 (Chet. 
Lib.), 1. James Harrison died in 1610 
holding a messuage in English Lea of 
Richard Shireburne (as of the Hospital of 
Jerusalem) ; John his son and heir was 
aged twenty-eight in 1633; ibid. 498. 

37 In addition to grants already recited 
the canons had land in Mill Furlong, 
with easements of the vill of French Lea, 
from Richard the Clerk of Lea; Cocker- 
sand Chartul, i, 209. 

88 Lytham D. at Durham, 21, 2ae, 4ae 
Ebor, no. 42-3 3 4 acres were in W.tes- 
stanes Furlong, &c. 

39 Chart. R. (Rec. Com.), 26. The 
township is named in 1168—g as contri- 
buting to the aid together with Preston ; 
Farrer, Laces. Pipe R. 12. Arthur de 
Ashton gave 20 marks for the confirma- 
tion of his charter; ibid. 116. Theoda‘d 
Walter in 1200-1 appeared against Arthur 
de Ashton in a plea of half a plough-land 
anda mill in Ashton; Coram Rege R. 
22, mad, 


Robert son in 1199.3? 


Peverel forfeited about 1153.1” 
died in 1201, when his son Richard succeeded," but 


to be held in free thegnage by the service of tos, 
yearly, and this was confirmed when he became king 
It had formed part of the honour of 


Arthur de Ashton 


in 1212 it was recorded merely that ‘the heir of 


service named.*? 


40 Farrer, op. cit. 5, 36; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 120. 
It is possible that the second plough-land 
in Ashton remained in the king's hands 
after the grant to Arthur de Ashton, and 
was transferred to the Earl of Ferrers, 
who is said to have held them in 1216-22; 
ibid. It was probably divided among the 
other tenants of Lea and Ashton, and 
that may account for the increase in the 
assessment of Lea from one plough-land 
to two. There was, however, no increase 
in the rent paid. 

In charters already given Sidgreaves is 
described as being in English Lea, but in 
a grant to Cockersand by Richard Spend- 
low it is said to be in Ashton, the bounds 
being fully described: From Fulesyke 
where the Plumpton road crossed it to 
the boundary to Cottam and Sidgreaves, 
south to the Savock, &c. ; with appurte- 
nant easements in Ashton, and the 
sixteenth part of a fishery in the Ribble ; 
Cockersand Chartul. i, 213. 

The vill of Ashton paid ros. to the 
Earl of Lancaster in 12973 Lancs. Ing. 
and Extents, i, 289. 

“ Ror, de Oblatis et Fin. (Rec. Com.), 
116. Richard paid roos. as relief; Farrer, 
op. cit. 130. 

4 Lancs. Ing. and Extent, i, 50. The 
‘heir’ is again unnamed in 1226, when 
the tenure was called drengage; ibid. 
140. The same uncertainty as to the 
succession is shown in the Pipe Rolls of 
1295-6, when the heir of Arthur de 
Ashton paid 1os. scutage ; Farrer, op. cit. 
205. Again in 1210-11, the heir owed 
100s, for relief; ibid. 242. 

“ Robert son of Arthur de Ashton 
gave half an acre in Geoffrey's assart on 
the east side of the vill of Ashton to the 
canons of Cockersand; Chartul. i, 214. 
The record of the payment of relief cited 
above (Rot. de Otlatis, 115) states that 
Richard and William sons of Arthur 
paid it, but William's name is cancelled. 
About 1230 Adam son of Waltheof the 
White of Ashton granted his brother 
Henry lands in Ashton held of William 
son of Richard de Ashton, and in Lea 
held of Sir Henry de Lancaster; Add. 
MS. 3210, mo. 505. William Breton 
was then Sheriff of Kent; Dep. Keeper's 
Rep. xxxi, App. 297. William and Robert 
de Ashton were living in 1242; Lancs, 
Inj. and Extents, i, 151. 

The division of the inheritance was 
probably due to Arthur de Ashton him- 
self, for he gave his son Robert ‘the 
whole moiety of all his tenement in 
Ashton with all its appurtenances and 
with his messuazge and garden and the 
whole moiety of all his demesnes,’ the 
rent being a spur; Add. MS. 32106, no. 
381. The seal shcwed a bird with out- 
spread wings and had the legend + sicitt. 
ARTUR DE EsTUN. To his 607n Richard 
he gave ail the land on the north side of 
Savock, from Gamel’s bridge to the boun- 
dary of English Lea, and so round to the 
road (via) from Plumpton and the street 
(strata) which came down to the bridge 
named ; ibid. no. 375. Another charter 


ec 


Arthur de Ashton’ held the plough-land by the 


The inheritance became divided," 


by Arthur to the same Richard was given 
into the safe keeping of Adam son of Sir 
William Banastre in 1330; Dods. MSS. 
lxx, fol. 1544. 

The descent of the various portions 
cannot be traced clearly. Adam son of 
Warine de Lancaster and his wife Alice 
released to Robert son of Arthur all that 
Arthur had given his son, except a grant 
made by Robert to the said Adam; Add. 
MS. 32106, no. 378. About the same 
time Eva de Ashton, widow, released to 
Robert de Ashton some land ; ibid. no. 
433. Susan widow of one Robert de 
Ashton was plaintiff in 1277; De Banco 
Re 2%, Mie 29a. 

Mabot, the widowed daughter of Robert 
de Ashton (then dead), gave her brother 
Robert all the land in Ashton given in 
free marriage when she espoused William 
son of Walter de Penwortham ; Add. 
MS. 32106, no. 455. A similar grant 
in 1282 seems to carry the descent a step 
further ; by it Maud daughter of Robert 
de Ashton released to her brother William 
de Ashton a toft and croft formerly be- 
longing to her uncle Ralph de Ashton ; 
ibid. no. 511. The same Maud, as 
widow of Robert de Newton, released to 
William son of Robert de Ashton all 
right to land which her father Robert had 
given on her marriage ; ibid. no. 489. In 
or about 1298 William son of Robert de 
Ashton gave to William de Lea, his lord, 
an acre in Ashton and all his part of the 
water of the Ribble; ibid. no. 894. In 
1301 Henry son of William de Lea gave 
William son of Robert de Ashton all his 
lands, &c., in Ashton, reserving homages 
and services; Dods. MSS, cxlii, fol. 27. 
Ten years later William son of Robert 
de Ashton gave Sir Henry de Lea his 
manor and all his lands in the vill of 
Ashton; Add. MS. 32106, no. 888. 
From the names of the attesting wit- 
nesses this was evidently a grant of special 
importance. 

Alice daughter of William son of 
Arthur, a widow, gave to Cockersand 
Abbey a moiety of her wood in Ashton 
and the carr of Tulketh; Dods. MSS. 
cxlii, fol. 346, The wardship of the heir 
of William de Ashton—no doubt a later 
William —was in 1291 given by Edmund 
(Earl of Lancaster) to Thomas le Sureys ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 494. 

Roger de Ashton seems to have in- 
herited the manor of Ashton, for it 
descended to Richard son of Roger, who 
in or about 1298 gave it to Henry son of 
William de Lea in exchange for land 
in English Lea and a sum of money. 
The remainders were to William and 
Thomas, brothers of Henry; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 890. In1301 the said Henry 
granted his manor of Ashton to William 
his father, and William deputed his 
brother Henry de Lea to receive it 
accordingly ; ibid. no. 897, 58> Another 
agreement dee ribes the estate transferred 
by Richard de Ashton to Henry de Lea 
as two parts and the third of a third part, 
with the reversion of a third of two parts 
held in dower by Adam de ‘Hoyton’ 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


and one moiety or share was obtained by Lea and 
The Lea portion descended 
like that manor to the Hoghtons,* and ceased to 
have any distinct history. Of the Haydock portion 
a part was given to a younger son, ancestor of the 
Haydocks of Cottam, and the remainder came to 
Alice and Aline, daughters and co-heirs of John 
de Haydock, and thus was divided between the 


the other by Haydock. 


(Hoghton) and Avice his wife; Dods. 
MS. cxlii, fol. 30d. It appears that Avice 
was the widow of Roger de Ashton; De 
Banco R. 316, m. 466. 

44 The Hoghton charters have been 
given in the preceding note. The pro- 
portions held by the different lords seem 
to have varied. In 1324 Richard de 
Hoghton held a moiety of Ashton by the 
service of §s., while Lawrence Travers 
and William Lawrence (in right of their 
wives) held the other moiety by §s. also ; 
Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 394 

In 1346, however, some readjustment 
had taken place, and while Sir Adam de 
Hoghton held a moiety of the manor (by 
the twelfth part of a knight’s fee) he paid 
only 3s. gd.; Edmund de Haydock, 
Thomas Travers and William Lawrence 
held a plough-land in socage by rents of 
2s, 6d. 35. 4d. and §d. respectively ; 
Surv. of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 46-8. Thus 
the 10s. rent was contributed by four 
partners, three of whom held the ‘ plough- 
land’ in socage while the other held a 
‘moiety of the manor’ by knight’s ser- 
vice. At the same time Lea was stated 
to be two plough-lands instead of one. 
Cottam seems to have been regarded as 
held of the lords of Ashton, so that Hay- 
dock contributed 1s. 3d. for the Hoghton 
moiety and 1s. 3d. for that held of 
Lawrence and Travers. In1354 William 
Lawrence held a fourth part of the 
manor 5 Final Cone. ii, 14.1. 

In 1356 Sir Adam de Hoghton claimed 
his part of the manor, alleging that John 
son of Thomas Travers of Tulketh, Alice 
widow of William Lawrence and Thomas 
son of Geoffrey de Hackinsall had occupied 
parts of it; Assize R. 441, m. 4d. 

The extent made in 1445-6 shows a 
distribution of the lordship like that of 
1346; Duchy of Lanc. Knights’ Fees, 
bdle.2,no. 20. Roger Travers of Nateby 
had the fourth part of the manor in 1403 ; 
Kuerden MSS. iv, G 26. 

In 1301 various agreements were 
made by the partners in the vill. Robert 
de Haydock released to William de Lea, 
Henry his son and Richard de Ashton all 
right to their homage and services ; Add. 
MS. 32106, no. 474. William de Lea 
conceded a moiety of the manor to 
Robert de Haydock, viz. that moiety 
which Richard son of Roger de Ashton 
had given to Henry son of William de 
Lea; ibid. no. 509. A partition of the 
manor-house seems to have accompanied 
these agreements ; the chamber to the 
east was given to Richard de Ashton, the 
whole of the hall to Robert de Haydock 
and the chamber to the west to William 
de Lea; ibid. no. 507. Robert de Hay- 
dock was probably acting as trustee for 
his nieces, 

In 1324 an agreement was made be- 
tween Sir Richard de Hoghton, William 
Lawrence and Alice his wife on one side 
and Lawrence Travers and Aline his wife 
on the other; ibid. no. 759, Another 
agreement was made in 1330 between 
Sir Richard de Hoghton on the one side 
and Lawrence Travers and William Law- 


rence on the other as to the partition of 
certain meadows previously held by Avice 
de Howick ; Dods. MSS. cxlii, fol. 30. 

48 The Hoghton family continued to 
acquire fresh portions of Ashton. In 
1329 William son of Richard del Greaves 
released all title in his father’s lands to 
Sir Richard de Hoghton; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 450. Robert the Graveson 
of Ashton in 1348 transferred his lands 
(formerly Ralph the Tailor’s) to Sir Adam 
de Hoghton ; ibid. no. 479. Four years 
later Cecily widow of Thomas de Ham- 
bleton and Thomas son of Henry son of 
John de Sidgreaves sold to Sir Adam lands 
which had belonged to Cecily’s father ; 
ibid. no. 480-1. She was daughter of 
Henry del Greaves, and ‘her land lay in 
Dawfield in the hamlet of Greaves in the 
vill of Ashton ; ibid. no. 484, 61. 

John son of Gilbert son of Adam de 
Ashton in 1370 released to Sir Adam de 
Hoghton all claim on the inheritance of 
Roger de Ashton ; ibid. no. 477. 

Sir Richard Hoghton in 1422 held a 
moiety of the manor of Ashton by the 
twelfth part of a knight’s fee and 3s. gd. 
rent ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 
145. In 1580 Thomas Hoghton’s tene- 
ment in Ashton next Preston and Greaves 
was said to be held of the queen as of her 
Duchy of Lancaster by the third part of a 
fourth part of a knight’s fee; Duchy of 
Lance, Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 26. 

The remainder of the manor of Ashton 
seems to have been acquired by 1595, 
when ‘the manor’ is named among the 
Hoghton estates; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F, bdle. §7,m.178. Sir Richard Hoghton 
died in 1630 holding the manors of Lea 
and Ashton of the king by the third 
part of a knight’s fee; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. xxvii, no. 13. The manors of 
Lea and Ashton appear together in later 
Hoghton settlements, e.g. Pal. of Lanc. 
Plea R. 554, m. 12. 

46 The origin of the Haydock interest 
isnot known. In 1285 Joan widow of 
John son of Henry de Haydock claimed 
dower in various lands against Henry de 
Haydock in Stainall and against Henry 
son of Henry de Haydock in Cottam, 
Ingol and Ashton; De Banco R. 59, 
m. 33 64,m.122. In 1292 inquiry was 
made as to whether Robert and Henry 
sons of Henry de Haydock had disseised 
Paulin de Preston of land, aldergrove and 
marsh in Ashton, but plaintiff was non- 
suited ; Assize R. 408, m. 49 d. 

It thus appears that Henry de Haydock 
the father had part of Ashton, and that 
he had three sons, John, Robert and 
Henry, of whom John died before him. 
Henry was dead in 1290, when his widow 
Alice claimed dower in Ribbleton, Stainall, 
Haydock (against Hugh son of Richard 
de Haydock) and Ravensmeols; De 
Banco R. 86, m. 174. 

In 1338 Adam son of Richard de 
Hoghton claimed a third part of the 
manor of Ashton as heir of Henry son of 
William de Lea. The holders were 
William Lawrence, Alice his wife, Law- 
rence Travers and Aline his wife, Alice 


ES 


PRESTON 


families of Travers of Nateby and Lawrence of 
Ribbleton.4® The Travers manor was in 1625 sold 
to Hugh Rigby.” 

share is unknown.‘8 
seem to have had part of the manor.*9 
in Ashton, where the monks of Savigny resided before 
they settled in Furness,5° became a seat of the Travers 
family till the 17th century.5! Afterwards it passed 


The history of the Lawrence 
The Waltons of Preston also 
TULKETH 


and Aline being daughters of John 
brother of Robert de Haydock, whose 
right, it was alleged, was derived from a 
grant by William de Lea; De Banco 
R. 316, m. 466 ; 333, m. 374d. 

Two years later Alan de Marhalgh, in 
right of his wife Isabel, claimed a fourth 
part of the manor of Ashton against 
Lawrence and Travers; ibid. 321, m. 
199d. The suit was continued in 1345, 
Isabel being described as daughter of 
Adam son of Roger de Ashton; ibid. 
342, mM. 250; 345, m. 213 350, m. 
20. An agreement of 1339 represents 
Sir Richard and Sir Adam de Hoghton 
as recovering three parts of the manor 
from Alan de Marhalgh and Isabel his 
wife, while claims were put in by Law- 
rence, Travers and Haydock ; Final Conc. 
ii, 112. 

47 William Travers’ messuages, &c., in 
Ashton were in 1524 held of the king as 
of his Duchy of Lancaster in socage by a 
rent of 3s. 8d. yearly; Duchy of Lanc, 
Ing. p.m. v, no. 62. In 1559 the service 
was said to be 8d. only; ibid. xi, no. 68. 

In 1625 the manor of Ashton, with 
lands in Ashton, Ingol, Clayton and Ley- 
land, and a free fishery in the Ribble, were 
sold to Hugh Rigby by William Travers, 
Richard Travers and William Werden ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 107, no. 32. 

48 The fourth part of the manor of 
Ashton was held by William Lawrence in 
1354 3 Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 331. 
As shown above, it appears again in 
1445-6 ; but Robert Lawrence of Ribble- 
ton, who died in 1524, had no lands in 
Ashton. 

49 Mabel daughter of Adam de Ashton 
gave her sister Avice a messuage, &c., in 
Ashton in 1351. In 1404 a third part 
of the manor was claimed by John de 
Walton and Agnes his wife (for her life) 
against Henry de Preston, Maud his 
wife, Robert Paslew and Alice his wife. 
Later the Waltons are found holding in 
Ashton ; Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 224-7. 
Richard Walton held lands in Ashton of 
Queen Elizabeth; the tenure of his suc- 
cessors is not recorded; Duchy of Lanc, 
Ing. p.m. xiii, no. 26, &c. 

Henry Walton was vouchee of the 
manor of Ashton in 17213; Pal. of Lane, 
Plea R, 515, m. 7. 

50 Stephen Count of Boulogne, after- 
wards king, in 1123 gave Tulketh to the 
Abbot of Savigny to found an abbey of his 
order there ; Simeon of Dur. Opera (Rolls 
Ser.), ii, 267. The monks resigned it in 
1127 on going to Furness. 

51 It became the manor-house of the 
Travers family for their part of the manor 
of Ashton; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
xi, no. 68 ; xii, no, 22. 

Thomas Preston in 1577 demised the 
capital messuage called Tulketh in Ash- 
ton, lately in the tenure of Richard 
Travers, deceased ; Kuerden MSS, ii, fol. 
239d. 

It is stated thar Tulketh was subse- 
quently held by Werden, Rawstorne, 
Hesketh (1687 to 1836), Bray, Johnson, 
and Thompson (1876) ; Fishwick, Preston, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


through many hands, and the hall is now part of a 
boys’ industrial choo’, managed by the Brothers of 
Charity.? Cockersand Abbey had land in Tulketh.*3 
The Hospitallers had some in Ashton.*# 

Of JNGOL there is little to be said. Land was 
given to the endowment of St. Mary Magdalene’s 
Ho:p.tal by Walter son of Gamel de Ingol about 
1209.58 Richard de Lea gave to Edmund Earl of 
Lancaster lands in Inzol in Christ’s Croft, White- 
field, &c.,°’ and William son of William de Ingol 
gave the carl land in Oldfield. In 1567 it was 
alleged that the queen was seised of the manor, to 
which appertained a pasture or moss ground in which 
all her inhabitants, tenants and farmers in Ingol, had 
common of pasture and turbary.*® Fulshaw Moor 
was in Ashton and Ingol.'? 


COTTAM, assessed as 2 oxgangs of land, may be 
identified with a grant of the land by Fulesyke*! made 
by Arthur de Ashton to Richard son of Uctred ; 
for this Richard afterwards gave it to Roger his son 
under the name Cottam, while Roger son of Richard 
son of Uctred de Singleton granted an oxgany of land 
in Cottam to Richard son of Robert son of Uctred.@ 
This last grant seems to have been made in 1204.™ 
Towards the end of the same century Henry de 
Haydock was in possession,® and gave it toa younger 
son Henry," whose descendants continued to hold it 
till the carly part of the 18th century. The early 
history of the family is obscure.&’ Cottam in the 
earlier surveys is stated to be held of the Earl of 
Lancaster by the service of 25. 6d. yearly, but at the 
death of Eleanor Haydock in 1525 the estate in 


266. It appears that in 1750 there was 
a sale or mortgage of Tulkcth Hall by 
Stanley Werden of Tulketh Hall and 
Ashton Werden of Accrington, clerk, his 
son and heir; Piccope MSS. (Cret. Lib.), 
iit, 365, from R. 23 of Geo. If at Preston. 

4 Roger son of William son of Master 
Wiivam de Preston in 324 § claimed 
zacres in Tulket: against John son of 
Ellis de Entwistle; De Banco R. 256, 
m. yi. 

* Adam de Lea gave the canons 8 acres 
in ‘the vill of Tulcheth,’ adjoining the 
Preston boundary, with all liberties, &c., 


of the vill appurtenant ;  Cockersand 
Cusrtud, 1, 21%. 
Alice darchter of William son of 


Arthur [de Ashton] in her widowhood 
cave land in Tulketh, with a moicty of 
her wood in Ashton; ibid. From the 
bounds reeste! it appears that Lulketh 
touched the Rib le; other fonts named 
are the six Ashheys, the Foxholegreave 
and Ciakerkelde. 

* Robert son of Bernard's gifts to the 
hospital inc!ded an oxgang in Ashton ; 
Kuerden Ms. v, fol. 82. 

* The extent of 1346 merely says that 
divers tenants had lands there, paying 
21d, ; Adam de Preston held 30 acres for 
life at arent of gos; Add. MS. 42103, 
fol. 148%. 

In 1246 Avice de Ingol and her hus- 
band Faldwin de Preston held certain 
lands during the minority of John son of 
William de Yealand, and Gilbert de 
Ingol was sued ty John de la Lea; Assize 
R. 404, m. 4 ., <, to. 

Aldred de Ingol gave Adam de H-ghton 
his ;.:t of Sperict within the buucds of 
[ec 0, Add. MS. 3212", no. 387. Henry 
Mis a purchased a messuage from Thomas 
Hoghton and Anne his wife in 138. ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 50, m. 64. 
Robert France of Fulwood in 1632 held 
land in Ingol as of the manor of Lea of Sir 
Gilbert Hoghton ; Duchy of Lane. Ing. 
p-m. xxix, no. 51. 

Leyland of Morieys held land in Ingol 
as part of the Broughton estate ; ibid. xi, 
no. 20. 

© Farrer, Lacs. Pipe R. 334. The 
land seems to have been within Ingol, 
but one plat touched the old Kirkgate (of 
Preston). The seal of the charter bore 
the lezen? ‘s:cittv. WALTERI. DE. INGOOL.’ 

* Duchy of Lane, Anct. D. (P.R.O.), 
Lzgt1; Great Coucher, i, fol. 61, 
no. 11. 

“Ibid. ii, fol. 388, no. 5. Leases of 
land in Ingol by the Dukes of Lancaster 
are recorded in 13*0 and later; Dep. 
Keeser's Rep, xxxii, App. 3425 xl, Ajp. 
£25, 528. 


5% Duchy of Lanc. Plead. Eliz, Ixxii, 
He; 

A claim by Edward Tyldesley to land 
called Wilcock Acre was investigated in 
1679. Charters by Maud widow of 
Thomas de Hutton, Geoffrey de Cottam 
to John his son, and John Cottam (1464) 
to Wiliam Leyland were produced ; 
Duchy «of Lanc. Special Com. 279. 

®*' Pal. of Lanc. Pica R. 205, m. 4. 
There is a reference to it in the time of 
Elizabeth (Lancs, aed Ches. Ree. [ Ree. 
Soc.*, 1, 254, 272), and in 1624-5 land 
in Ingol, Fulshaw Moor and Cottam 
Moss was granted out by the Crown; 
Pat. 22 Jas 7, pe avi. 

©) Two ex-ange of land in Ashton, viz. 
the land by Fulesykr, and a fourth part 
of the service of Ingol; Add. Ms, 
32106, no. 383. A rent of 6d. was to 
be paid. 

®? ‘Two oxganz- of land in Ashton, viz. 
Cottam and the ‘ind by Fulesyke, and a 
fourth fart of the service of Ingol, as 
before, tor which 7 pair of gluves was to 
Seton deeds (Kove toa MSS, iv, C26, 

© Dods, MSS. calix, fol. 506. The 
rent was to be half a pound of cummin. 

© Wiolham de Vernon, ‘then sherill,’ 
attested it; PLR.O. List, 72. 

The same Roger son of Richard de 
Singleton enfeoffed Herbert the White, 
whe had married Avice daughter of Henry 
ie Lea, of the fourth part of an oxgang of 
land in Cottam (being the eighth part of 
the vill of Cottam which Roger held in 
demesne), and an eighth part of an 
oxgang in the same place, at a rent of 
yt+3 Kuerden, loc. cit. A mill on the 
Saveck and a fishery in the Ribble are 
named, 

Alice widow of Alan de Singleton in 
1246 sued Robert the Tailor for dower in 
haif an oxgang of land in Cottam, while 
Robert claimed turbary against John de 
"ea and others; Assive R.gog, m. 14 d., 
14. 

~ The estate may have been acquired 
ty purchase. Michael son of Herbert 
(perhaps the Herbert named above) re- 
leased his lands in Cottam to Henry de 
Haydock; Geoffrey son of Richard de 
Cottam, Robert son of Robert the Cor- 
v.ser and Alice daughter of re de 
Dewsbury granted lands to the same 
Henry ; while Adam son of Alan the 
Miller granted land to Henry son of 
Henry de Hayds.k. See Kuerden, loc. 
cit. 

% Ibid. ; the date may be about 1277. 
Fur the land in Cottam the younger Henry 
was to render 2s. 64., for that in Inzol 
11. 6d, and 14. for the light of St. Cuthbert 
of Cli:ton (sic), for that in Ashton 7u. 


134 


In 1284 Henry son of Henry de Hay- 
dock recovered against his tather a mes- 
suage and t oxgang of land in Cottam, 
tq acres in Ashton and a messuage and 
30 acres in Ingol; Assize R. 1265, m. 
4d, In t2y2 Alice and Aline daughters 
of John (elder) son of Henry de Haydock 
claimed messuages and land in Cottam 
against Henry son of Henry de Haydock 
and others. The plaintiffs were under age. 
The jury found that Henry the father 
enfeoffed Henry the son of the tenement 
in dispute and put him in full seisin. 
Afterwards his father disseised him, but 
he recovered the tenements by assize of 
novel disscisin (viz, the suit above referred 
to) and demised them to his father for a 
term of five years; the father, five years 
betore his deuth, rendered them to Henry 
his son. ‘There was therefore a verdict 
for Henry ; Assize R. 408, m. 20d. 

Henry son of Henry de Haydock in 
1295 granted land in Ashton to Richard 
son of Roger de Ashton ; Kuerden MSS, 
iv, AG. 

An inquiry into the character of Richard 
de Cottam, clerk, who had been arrested 
for the death of William le Paumere, was 
made in 1293. He proved his innocence 
and was reported to be ‘ot honest and 
good conversation’; Lancs, Ing. and Ex- 
tents, i, 280. 

% In 1308-9 William son of Gilbert 
de Ashton claimed a tenement in Cottam 
against Ellen widow of Henry de Hay- 
dock ; Assize R. 423, m. 2d. Edmund 
de Haydock succeeded, but his parentage 
does not appear; he occurs as attesting 
deeds, &c., from 1317 to 1352. He 
secured recognition as a partner in the 
manor of Ashton, as appears by the extent 
of 1346 (note 44 above). Robert son of 
Robert de Cottam granted a to!t to Robert 
his son, who married Edith daughter of 
Gilbert de Ashton ; and in 1317-18 Eduea 
widow of Robert son of Robert the 
Corviser released to Edmund de Haydock 
all right in certain land; Kuerden MSS, 
iv, C25. In 1348 Edmund obtained a 
licence for his oratory in the manor of 
Cottam from the Archdeacon of Rich- 
mond ; ibid. 

Richard de Haydock attested a charter 
in 1359; Add. MS. 32106, no. 461. 

Sir Richard de Hoghton in 1388 ac- 
quired land in English Lea from John de 
Haydock of Cottam and Margaret his 
wife ; Final Conc. iii, 32. John de Hay- 
dock was a burgess at the guilds of 1397 
and 1415; Preston Guild R. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), 5, 8. Edmund son of 
Jvhn de Haydock also appeared in 13973 
ibid. 3. Jolin was living in 1419; Add 

MS. 32106, no. §49. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Ingol, Ashton and Cottam was said to be held by a 
rent of 25.68 A pedigree was recorded in 1613,°° and 
William Haydock died on 4 
August 1624 seised of the 
manor of Cottam, a water- 
mill, three messuages, lands, 
&c., in Cottam, Ingol, 
Ashton, French Lea and 
Freckleton, held of the king 
as of his duchy, and in Wood- 
plumpton, held of Sir Robert 
Banastre.”° 

The interest of the family 
is mainly religious. © William 
Haydock, said to be a brother 
of the Gilbert of 1529-42, 
was a monk of Whalley, and executed there on 
12 March 1536-7 for complicity in the Pilgrimage 
of Grace. = Ewan Haydock, left a widower in 
1557, was strengthened in his constancy to Roman 
Catholicism by the company of William (afterwards 
Cardinal) Allen, a relative by marriage, and in 1573 


Haypock, 


Argent 
three sparrow-hawks 
close gules. 


PRESTON 


and in 1575 was ordained priest and sent on the 
English mission, dying at Mowbreck in 1581.7? His 
son George, educated at Douay and the English 
College, Rome, was ordained priest, and in 1582 
returned to England. He was almost immediately 
betrayed to the government, and after two years’ 
imprisonment was executed asa traitor at Tyburn, 
12 February 1583-4." Richard Haydock, an elder 
brother of George, was ordained priest at Douay in 
1577. In 1582 it was reported that he was with 
his brother at Cottam Hall or else at Mowbreck. 
After ten years of missionary labour, during which he 
is said to have been imprisoned, he returned to Rome, 
and had the titular dignity of Dean of Dublin. He 
died at Rome in 1605.74 William Haydock, the 
eldest brother, was punished for his recusancy in 
various ways.’> The family appear to have escaped 
molestation during the Commonwealth period,”® but 
William Haydock of Cottam is traditionally said to 
have taken part in the Jacobite rising of 1715; he 
died soon afterwards.’7 The manor of Cottam, how- 
ever, passed to a relative, and eventually became the 


went over to Douay with one or 


In 1422 Martin V granted a dispensa- 
tion for the marriage of Gilbert Haydock 
with Isabel daughter of William Hoghton, 
they being related in the fourth degree ; 
Towneley MS. HH, no. 938. Gilbert 
was living in 1459, when he and his sons, 
Richard, William and Henry, were in the 
guild; Preston Guild R. 12. Géilbert’s 
widow (here called Elizabeth) took the 
mantle and ring on 10 Feb. 1466-7; 
HH, no. 977. His son Richard was dead 
in 1475, when Isabel Haydock, widow, 
was distrained to answer to William Hay- 
dock for waste, &c., in lands in Cottam 
and Ingol assigned to her for life by 
Richard Haydock, father of William ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Writs Proton. 15 Edw. IV. 

William Haydock died in 14.94, leaving 
a son and heir Gilbert, about fifteen years 
of age; his tenement in Cottam and 
Ingol was stated to be held of the king as 
duke by the seventh part of a knight’s 
fee ; Duchy Plead. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 8. The heir’s wardship was 
granted to Cuthbert Clifton; Kuerden 
MSS. iv, € 42, 

In the latter part of the 15th century 
the family of Haydock of Heysandforth 
in Burnley branched off from that seated 
at Cottam. 

§§ Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, no. 56. 
Eleanor was widow of Richard Haydock, 
and the heir was Gilbert son of William 
son of the said Richard. 

In 1529 William Clifton of Westby 
granted Gilbert Haydock of Cottam and 
his son Richard two-thirds of the tithe 
corn of Warton in Kirkham ; Huntroyde 
D.,C1. In 1542 Gilbert Haydock and 
his sons Henry, Cuthbert, Richard and 
Edmund were in the Preston guild; also 
Ewan and Richard sons of William Hay- 
dock, which William was (according to 
the pedigree of 1613) the son of Gilbert ; 
Preston Guild R. 18. In 1562 Ewan 
Haydock and his sons William, Richard, 
Ewan and George entered, as also John 
son of Ewan’s uncle Henry ; ibid. 26-7. 
_ ® Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 108. The descent 
is thus given: Gilbert -s, Richard —s. 
William -s. Gilbert -s. William —s, Ewan 
~§. William (living 1613) -s. Ewan (aged 
thirty) ; there were two other sons and 
five daughters, 

™ Towneley MS. C8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 


two of his sons, 


529. The heirs were William’s four 
daughters — Elizabeth Cartmel, Bridget 
Hothersall, Mary Hayhurst and Katherine 
Wall—all of full age, and his grandson 
Robert Adamson son of another daughter 
Ellen. The inquisition recites a settle- 
ment made shortly before William’s death, 
by which Robert Haydock of Whitting- 
ham, elder son of Cuthbert Haydock, was 
made heir, but a portion was assigned to 
the Adamsons. 

There were several Cuthberts, as appears 
by the Preston Guild R. The father of the 
new owner of Cottam seems to have been 
a son of Henry, one of the younger sons 
of Gilbert Haydock (1529-42) ; informa- 
tion of Mr. J. Gillow. 

71 Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. iii, 
230-1. ‘His body, for some unknown 
reason, was allowed to continue suspended 
on the gibbet entire, and ultimately was 
secured and secretly removed by his nephew 
and namesake to Cottam Hall. In Lanca- 
shire he was generally looked upon as a 
martyr, and his remains were treated with 
the greatest veneration by the Haydock 
family.” 

72 Tbid. iii, 202-4. The government 
had tried to arrest him, but he had 
managed to keep free. There is a refer- 
ence to him as a fugitive beyond the seas 
without licence in Lancs. and Ches. Rec. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), ii, 342. 

73 Gillow, op. cit. iii, 205-11. He was 
executed for being ordained priest beyond 
the seas and for conspiring to effect the 
queen’s death. There was no evidence of 
the latter part of the charge, of which 
Haydock asserted his innocence. The 
judge who condemned him was Sir William 
Fleetwood, the Recorder of London. 

See also Challoner, Missionary Priests, 
no. 23; Foley, Rec. S. Jy vi, 136. The 
cause of his beatification was allowed to 
be introduced at Rome in 1886; Pollen, 
Acts of Martyrs, 379. 

74 Gillow, op. cit. ili, 221-5. See 
Foley, op. cit. vi, 130, 518 (will), 739 5 
Misc. (Cath. Rec. Soc.), ii, 1325 Dict. 
Nat. Biog. : 

75 Gillow, op. cit. ili, 223. A sister 
Aloysia suffered imprisonment for religion. 
In 1600 a licence was granted to William 
Haydock, ‘ popish recusant,’ allowing him 
to go to London ; Huntroyde D., C 2. In 


135 


property of the Crosses of Red Scar in Grimsargh.’8 


1604 Sir Richard Hoghton referred to a 
dispute with his uncle William Haydock 
of Cottam (son of Ewan); ibid.C3. A 
grant of the sequestered lands of William 
Haydock of Cottam, recusant, was made 
by the Crown in 1607; Pat. § Jas. I, 
ti. 

a In 1648 Robert Haydock and Cuth- 
bert his second son and _ heir-apparent 
made a settlement of Cottam Hall and 
lands in Cottam, Ingol, Ashton, French 
Lea, &c. ; and at the same time William 
Haydock of Eaves, in Woodplumpton, 
granted that messuage to Cuthbert Hay- 
dock of Cottam ; Huntroyde D., C5, 4. 
Robert Haydock had a brother Richard 
of Fulwood ; ibid. C6. Cuthbert Hay- 
dock seems to have succeeded by 1660 
and William Haydock by 1676 ; ibid. C9, 
11, 12. In 1673, however, William 
Haydock secured the third part of the 
manor of Cottam, water-mill, malting- 
mill, &c., from Christopher Harris and 
Margery his wife ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F. bdle. 190, m. 99. In 1698 William 
Haydock of Cottam, the elder, and William 
his son and heir mortgaged the estate to 
Nicholas Starkie ; Huntroyde D., C15. 

7 Gillow, Haydock Papers, 45-6. 

78 Ibid.; it is stated that the last William 
Haydock, whose brothers were priests, had 
settled the manor on his sister Dorothy, 
who married George son of John Shuttle- 
worth of Hodsock Park, Notts. George 
Haydock, cousin of William, in 1730 
conveyed his interest in the manor to 
George Farington of Worden, in trust 
for Henry son of Valentine Farington of 
Preston. The Faringtons sold the manor, 
or their part of it, about the end of the 
18th century. There is a reference to 
William Haydock in Lancs. and Ches. 
Rec. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), i, 171. 

By his will of 1713 William Haydock 
of Cottam gave the manor to trustees for 
the use of his three sisters—Mary wife 
of Thomas Finch, Dorothy wife of George 
Shuttleworth and Elizabeth wife of Hugh 
Barton. In a fine regarding the manor 
of Cottam in 1717 the following were 
concerned: John Shuttleworth, Robert 
Hudson, Mary his wife, George Shuttle- 
worth, William Haydock, William Raw- 
storne and Valentine Farington ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R. 504, m. 8. The deed by 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


A branch of the Haydocks’? settled on a small 
estate known as The Tagg in Cottam, the old dower 
house of the family, and there were born Thomas 
Haydock, a publisher,® and George Leo Haydock, a 
priest noteworthy for his edition of the Bible ; he 
This family is now represented by 
Mr. Joseph Gillow, whose works have been quoted 


died in 1849.*! 


frequently in these pages. 


A family surnamed Cottam is found in this and 


neighbouring townships.” 


Cockersand Abbey *? and the Knights Hospitallers ™ 
had land in this part of the township. 

The inquisitions show that in general the land was 
held by the Hoghton family. Under the Common- 


George Haydock in 1730 recites that 
Wiliam Haydock had agreed to sell the 
manor of Cottam, and that in 1716 
Valentine Farington agreed to purchase ; 
Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lit.), iii, 258, from 
R. 7 of Geo. II at Preston. Later still 
(1756-7) in a fine regarding the manor 
the deforciants were William Gardner, 
Elizabeth his wif:, Nicholas Starkie and 
Sarah his wife ; Pai. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 356, m. 34. Elizabeth and Sarah 
were the daughters and heirs of Valentine 
Farington. From deeds at Huntros de it 
appears that Le Gendre Starkie sel { his 
moiety between 1769 and 1791 3 infor- 
mation of Mr. H. Ince Anderton. 

™ Por pedigrees sce Chron, of St. 
Mionna's, Lewvatn, ii (end); Fishwick, 
Preston, 272-4}. 

© Gillow, BrAl. Dict. iii, 226-30. He 
was born ia 1772 and died in Preston in 
1859. 

SUTbid. tii, 2rr—215 Dict, Nas. Bing. 
Another brother, James Haydock, priest, 
served the mission at Lea, and died of a 
fever caught while attending the sick in 
1809; Gillow, op. cit. 221. The same 
editor's Haydock Papers is mainly occupied 
with this family. 

"8 Geoffrey de Cottam was bound to 
Henry de Haydock to pay half a pound 
cf cummin and 15d. to the chief lords in 
Henry's place ; Kuerden MSS. iv, C 26. 
as son of Grettrey de Cottam, Avice 
nis wife and John son of Richard de 
Cottam were in 1323-4 engaged in dis- 
pates with the lords «of Ashton; Ansize 
R. 425, m.2. A little later the same 
John son cf Geottrey claimed land in 
Ashton against Wiliam de Incolhead, 
Christiana his wife and Thomis his son ; 
ibid. R. 426, m. 8d. Sce also De Banco 
R. 323, m. 32. One John de Cottam 
had hid a dispute as to his inheritance 
with Richard de Cottam in 1306 ; Assize 
R. 429, m. 8. Murzery widow of Henry 
de Cottam was plaintit? in 1348; De 
Banco R. 355, m. 222. 

In 1446 John Cottam claimed the 
manor against Gilbert Haydock, alleging 
that Geoffrey de Cottam had given it to 
his son Richard and his heirs by Marzaret 
his wife, the pedzg-ee being: Geotrey 
-s. Richard -s, John -s. Robert 8. 
Edmund -s. John (plaintiff); Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R. 9, m. 104, John son of 
Richard de Cottam was claiming a mes- 
suage, &c., in Ashton in 1344; De 
Baneo R. 345, m..499 5 927, me rgd. 

8 Rozer son of Richard son of Uctred 
de Singleton was the benefactor, granting 
a half acre in Briary Furlong in his 
demesne and other parceis, Sandibutts 
being named ; Cockersand Charru!. i, 225. 

™ Roger de Sinzleton was the grantor ; 
Lincs, Chart. (Bod!. Lib.i, Ar, no. 6%, 


men. 


wealth some holdings were sequestered for religious 
‘delinquency,’ % and some ‘ Papists’ registered estates 
in 1717-87 Disputes as to the fishery in 1691-2 
are of interest as showing the custorns of the fisher- 


A pedigree case of much interest concerned the 
estates of Richard Harrison of Warrington, who died 


in 1863, a descendant of John Harrison of Lea, who 


®& This was the case in Lea for lands 
held by Jchn Singleton (Duchy of Lane. 
Ing. p.m. vi, no. 32 3 viii, no. 9) ; George 
Browne (ibid. xi, mo. 43 xiv, no. 423 
xviii, no. 23); James Holme, who also 
held in Chipping (Townelcy MS. C 8, 
13 (Chet. Lib.], 507) ; William Helme 
(Lanes. Ing. p.m. [Rec. Soc. ], i, 213); and 
in Ashton by James Stopford of Ulnes 
Walton (ibid. i, 169 3 ii, 72). 

George Buller of Singleton held a 
tenement in Lea of Sir Richard Hoghton 
by a rent of 5s. 8d. and by suit at the 
baron’s court of the manor of Lea; he 
died in 1595, leaving a son William, 
about seven years old ; ibid. iii, 317. 

Henry Catterall in 1610, in right of 
his late wife Elizabeth Lubley, held a 
messuage and lands in Lea and Cottam 
of Sir Richard Hoghton bv a rent of gf. 
Thomas, hie son and heir, was aged 
thirty-f.urs abid. i, 212. 

Walam Critchlow died in 1637 hold- 
ing a messuage and land in Lea of Sir 
Gilbert Hegheon, and other lands, &c., 
in Whittingham and Preston. He leit a 
widow named Grace and a son and heir 
William, about ten yeare«f age ; Towne- 
ley MS. C 3, 13 (Chet. Lit.), 252. 

Henry Gregson died in 1631 holding 
Jand in English Lea and Whittingham of 
Sir Gilbert Hoghton, and Icaving a son 
Robert, who came of age in Dec. 1633; 
ibid. 465. 

James Wharlesdicd in 1626 also hold- 
ing land in Envlith Lea of Sir Gilbert. 
His son Alexander was thirty years old ; 
ibid. 1295. 

Evan Browne held land in French Lea 
of Henry WII]; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. 
p-m. vii,no. 24. John Fleetwood of Pen- 
wortham held land in Ashton of Queen 
Elizabeth ; ibid. 211, no. 265 xv, no. 34 
(St. Mary Magdalene’s lands). 

In other cases—Clifton, Hesketh, &c. 
—the tenure is not stated. 

The following suits may be mentioned : 
Alice widow of William Pickard claimed 
land in English Lea in 1309-10 against 
John son of William de Charnock ; De 
Banco R. 175. m. 164d. In 1331 Alice 
widow of Wiliam de Charnock gave an 
acre in Eastley Field and the Foles to 
Henry son of William Charnock of Lea; 
Harl. MS. 2042, fol. 171. Thomas son 
of Robert the Mercer of Sidgreaves v. 
Robert son of Robert Franceys, as to 
tenements in French Lea and Ashton ; 
Duchy of Lance. Assize R. 2, m. ii. 
Adam de Catterall of Longton v. John 
de Cottam, &c., in Ashton; ibid. 3, 
m. viid. John del Milne of Cottam v. 
Thomas son of Walter del Hall of Ash- 
ton; ibid. 5, m. 26. Nicholas son 
of Adam de Singleton and Cecily his wite 
(daughter of Edmund de Horwich) ia 


136 


died in 1667. ® 

In connexion with the Church of England St. 
Andrew’s, Ashton, was built in 1836, and a parish 
was formed for it in the following year. 
ease, St. Michael and All Angels’, was built in 1884. 
The patronage is vested in trustecs. 


AA chapel of 


1371 claimed dower in burgages, lands 
and horse mill in Ashton and Preston 
against William de Singleton ; De Banco 
R. 443, m. 91. Roger Elston v, William 
Denby alias Cardmaker and Margaret tus 
wife, daughter of William Sopersen, in 
French Lea and Ashton ; Final Conc. iii, 
113. 

baward Blackburne in 1450-1 had 
lands in English Lea, French Lea and 
Preston, which seven years later he gave 
to the mayor and burgesses of Preston ; 
Kuerden MSS. iv, P 120. 

“6 The following were recusants: 
Margery Melling of Lea, widow ; Eliza- 
beth Wharles, widow, of Ashton ; Cal. 
Com. for Comp. v, 3185-7. Gabriel 
Short of Lea, suspected, was summoned 
before the committee and refusing to 
abjure his religion had two-thirds of his 
tenement sequestered ; ibid. i, 656. 

John Bispham of Ashton had had two- 
thirds of his estate sequestered for recu- 
sancy ; after his death his daughter Eliza- 
beth Bispham in 1664 prayed to be 
allowed to contract for it ; Royalist Comp, 
Papers (Rec, Soc, Lance. and Ches.), i, 
183, Richard Gregson and John Harri- 
son, recusants, made similar petitions in 
reapect of the two-thirds of their estates 
in Ashton ; ibid. iii, 128, 164. William 
Hollinhead of Ingol and John Hodgkin- 
son of Cottam did likewise ; ibid. iii, 251, 
231. 

87 At Lea: Lawrence and William 
Johnson, Thomas Hankinson (Mason 
House), Thomas Hankinson the younger 
(Lea Town), William and Thomas Helme, 
and Wiliam Fidler ; Estcourt and Payne, 
Eng. Cath, Nonjurors, 93, 106, 139. At 
Ashton: William Bolton, Elizabeth 
widow of Oswald Eaves, Margaret Porter, 
John and William Browne, Joseph Miller y 
ibid. 92, 101, 102, 138. At Cottams 
Roger Higginson, James Holme and Jobo 
Simpson ; ibid. 93, 138-9. 

58 An abstract of the pleadings is given 
in Fishwick, Preston, 87. ‘It appears 
that from time immemorial “stakes and 
piles’ were placed in the bed of the river 
for the fishermen to hang their nets upon, 
and it was customary before the com- 
mencement of the fishing season for the 
fishermen of Penwortham and { those of 
Ashton and Lea to draw !1ts for priority, 
and having settled this the river was 
fished “ right across” from bank to bank 
by the men from the two manors al‘er- 
nately from sunrise to sunset. The season 
began about Candlemas and closed about 
Michaelmas.’ 

*4 J. P. Earwaker, Lancs. Pedigree Can, 
1887. The landed estates lay in War- 
rington, Lea, Wh ttle, Brindle, Clayton, 
&c.; there was personal estate of about 
£100,000 value. The evidence at the 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


A school was founded in Lea in 1784 by Samuel 
Neeld.” 

The Wesleyans had a chapel in Ashton in 1883 ; 
the present church was built in 1893. There is a 
Baptist church in Ashton, founded about 1880. 

From the accounts of the manors it will have been 
gathered that Roman Catholic worship was maintained 


PART OF 
LANCASTER 


with more or less constancy during the long period of 
proscription.” When owing to sale Cottam Hall 
was not available, the mission appears to have been 
removed to the adjoining township.” In 1800 the 
old mission at Salwick Hall was transferred to Lea, 
St. Mary’s Church being built there. In Ashton the 
Church of the Sacred Heart was built in 1903-4. 


PART OF LANCASTER 


FULWOOD 
1199 ; 


Fulewde, Fulewude, 


1297. 

This township, formerly a woodland area and now 
to a great extent a residential suburb of Preston, lies 
to the north of Preston and Ribbleton. ‘The Savock 
(or Savick) Brook crosses the centre, flowing west- 
south-west to the Ribble. ‘The western end is called 
Cadley or Cadeley ; Killinsough is in the north-east. 
The surface, slightly undulating according to the 
watercourses, rises on the whole from west to east, 
attaining over 200 ft. above sea level. "The township 
has an area of 2,11641 acres, and in 1901 contained 
a population of 5,238, including 1,101 in the barracks, 
784 in the workhouse, and others in charitable insti- 
tutions. 

Garstang Road, the main road from Preston to the 
north, crosses its western end, but a more noteworthy 
one is that which runs east and west near the 
southern border ; it is called Watling Street, and is 
supposed to be on the track of an old Roman road 
from Ribchester to the sea. The Preston and Long- 
tidge railway passes through the south-eastern corner 
of the township, where there is a station called 
Ribbleton. To the north of it is the hamlet called 
Fulwood Row. The London and North-Western 
Company’s main line to the north crosses the western 


1228; Fulwode, 


end of the township. 
Preston serve Fulwood. 

The township contains the Preston Union Work- 
house, built in 1865-8, and a large barracks, 1848, 
the depdt of the 30th and 47th Regimental Dis- 
tricts, including the Loyal North Lancashire Regi- 
ment, the old 47th and 81st Foot. On Garstang 
Road, on an estate formerly known as Crow Trees, is 
the Harris Orphanage for about 140 children, opened 
in 1888. Homes for the Blind were opened in 
1896.5 The Home of the Little Sisters of the Poor 
and St. Vincent’s Home for Boys, a Poor Law school 
founded in 1893 in memory of the late Bishop 
O’Reilly, are also in Fulwood. 

A local board was formed in 1863.4 Since 1894 
there has been an urban district council of twelve 
members, elected by three wards—Central, East, and 
West. For parliamentary elections Fulwood is included 
in Preston. 

The open land is chiefly in pasturage ; the soil is 
loam and clay, with subsoil various. 

Races used to be held on Fulwood Moor. 
were discontinued about 1833.° 

Fulwood was probably included in the 

MANOR forest of Lancaster on its formation,® and 
was thus taken out of the township and 

parish of Preston.” It occurs but seldom in the 
records before its disafforestation,® but part was in 


The electric tramways of 


They 


trials showed that the registers at Preston, 
Kirkham, Poulton and Lytham had been 
tampered with, as also the official tran- 
scripts at Chester ; ‘had the court rolls of 
the manor of Lea near Preston not been 
preserved there is only too much reason 
to believe that the ingenuity of the forgers 
would have been rewarded before their 
forgeries could have been exposed... 
These court rolls were kept in private 
hands, and so were out of the reach of the 
forgers, even if they had known how im- 
portant they really were.’ 

% End. Char. Rep. for Preston. 

§1 See, eg., the account of Thomas 
Hoghton of Hoghton. Alexander Hogh- 
ton was reported ae contumacious in 
1586; Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1868), i, 180. 
Mrs. Hoghton of Lea was reported to 
keep a ‘Papist’ schoolmaster ; Fishwick, 
Preston, 264. Mass was said at Tulketh 
in 1607 and confirmation given there in 
1687; ibid. The Eyves amily resided 
at Ashton ; Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. 
Cath, iii, 288. 

%2 See Woodplumpton. 

1 Including 3 acres of inland water. 

2 End. Char. Rep. (Lanc.), 1902, p. 3- 
There is an endowment of about £25700 
a year. 

3 They were founded in Preston in 
1864 ; Hewitson, Preston, 243. 

* Lond. Gaz, 10 Mar. 1863. 


7 


5 Hewitson, Preston, 120. 

6 See the account of the forest. 

7 There was a dispute between the 
incumbents of Preston and Lancaster 
churches as to the tithes of the forest of 
Fulwood and the park of Hyde in 1323 ; 
Lanc. Ch, (Chet. Soc.), ii, 448-50. 

8 Free pasturage in the forest of Fulwood 
was allowed to the burgesses of Preston 
by King John’s charter of 1199, together 
with as much wood as they might require 
for building their town, on the view of the 
foresters ; Abram, Mem. of the Guilds, 3. 
The grants were confirmed and extended by 
later charters. See also Ing. a.q.d. 19 
Edw. II, no. 183 ; Lancs. and Ches. Rec. 
(Rec. Soc, Lancs, and Ches.), ii, 272, 
275, &e 

The bounds of Fulwood were thus de- 
fined in 1228 : From the hey of Ravenkel 
to the road of Dunepool, along the water- 
course to Deepdale, to the upper head of 
Lund, by the watercourse of Deepdale to 
Fulwood and so to Uctredsgate, by the 
road to Coleford, thence to Cadley Shaw 
and to the hey of Ravenkel; Farrer, 
Lancs. Pipe R. 421. : 

Pontage for five years was allowed in 
1291 for repairing the causeway of 
Fulwood ; Cal. Pat, 1281-92, p. 430. 

In 1297 the forest was worth a mark 
yearly to the Earl of Lancaster, and in 
addition the men of Broughton paid 10s. 


137 


for having common there; Lancs. Ing. 
and Extents (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 289-go. 

Some particulars are given in the 
survey made in 1346 in Add. MS. 32103, 
fol. 148. John de Burton held the 
herbage of Myerscough and a close called 
Cadley in Fulwood ; Grimbald the Mercer 
had pasture rights, &c., in Fulwood, as 
had Thomas Banastre for Broughton. 
Roger de Elston had  Killanshagh 
(Killinsough), a piece of waste by Fulwood, 
at a rent of gos. Thomas son ot 
Lawrence Travers had Great Cadley. 

In 1442 Thomas Urswick had a lease 
of the pastures of Myerscough and Fulwood 
in the forest of Amounderness and an 
annuity of £10 a year from them; Dep. 
Keeper’s Rep. xl, App. 536. , 

A charge of cutting down and carrying 
away trees and underwood in the king’s 
forest of Fulwood was in the time of 
Edward IV preferred against William 
Singleton of Broughton, Brian Singleton 
of the same, Richard Singleton of Ingol- 
head, John Singleton of the Peel (son of 
Nicholas of Brockholes) and others ; Pal. 
of Lanc. Plea R. 29, m. 9 d. 

The king in 1481 included 40 acres of 
moor in Fulwood in his grant to Sir 
Thomas Molyneux, but it was not per- 
manent ; see the account of Eccleston in 
Leyland. 


18 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


1551 granted to Anthony Browne, who also had a 
moiety of the manor of Eccleston, &c.® Soon after- 
wards Browne transferred it to John Charnock and 
Thomas Clayton. Subsequently the ‘manors’ of 
FULWOOD and CADLED are named, but little 
satisfactory evidence exists. Hyde Park was at the 
east end of the township.!! Inquiries as to the wastes 
of Fulwood were made in 1638 and 1640." 

Lambert Stodagh of Stodday died in 1511 holding 
lands in Preston and Fulwood of the king in socage.}8 
His son Lawrence founded the school at Broughton. 
The Claytons of Whittle-le-Woods in the 17th century 
became the principal residents in Fulwood. Their 
estate descended to Robert Clayton, Bishop of Clogher, 
who died in 1758, having bequeathed it to his 
relatives the Claytons of Adlington. 

Several of the inhabitants had their estates seques- 
tered under the Commonwealth,!® and a number of 
‘Papists’ registered estates in 1717.17 

An Inclosure Act for Cadley and Fulwood Moors 
was passed in rS14.?8 

For the Church of England Christ Church was 
built in 1865. The vicar of Lancaster is patron.!® 

There is a Congregational church, founded in 
1894. 

A school at Cadley was founded in 1707 by John 
Hatch.*’ Brunswick Chapel was purchased for the 
use of the school in 1865. 


MYERSCOUGH 
Mirscho, 12583 Miresco, 1265 ; 
1297. It is pronounced locally Masca. 
This township, lying between the parishes of 
Preston, Garstang and St. Michael-on-Wyre, has 


Mirescowe, 


an area of 2,707 acres,! and the population in 1901 
numbered 423. The surface slopes from east to west 
from about 120 ft. above sea level on the border of 
Barton to between 30 and 4o ft. at the other side. 
The Brock crosses the northern end on its way west 
to the Wyre; north of it are Myerscough House, 
Light Ash and Stanzaker; to the south is Myer- 
scough Hall, between the Brock and another brook 
flowing west. The latter is a two-story 18th- 
century building with barred sash windows, hipped 
roof and deeply overhanging eaves, erected by 
William Greenhalgh, high sheriff in 1729, in the 
place of an older building of the same name. On 
the brook is the mill; near it is the Lodge, the 
former home of Sir Thomas Tyldesley. Badsberry is 
near the centre, and Midghalgh at the southern 
end of the township. 

The great highway from Preston to Lancaster 
passes along the eastern boundary. ‘There are several 
minor roads, including one passing westward near 
the hall, towards St. Michael’s. The London and 
North-Western Railway crosses the south-east corner, 
and the Preston and Kendal Canal winds northward 
through the centre. 

The population is agricultural. The soil is heavy, 
with subsoil of clay. Wheat is grown, and much of 
the land is in pasture. 

The township has a parish council. 

Henry Borron Fielding, son of Henry Fielding of 
Myerscough House, was a botanist of some note. 
He lived at Bolton near Ulverston and then at 
Lancaster, dying in 1851.7 

MYERSCOUGH seems to have been 
FOREST part of one of the forests, possibly that of 
Amounderness, and then to have been 


9 The grant was of waste lately approved 
in Fulwood Forest; Pat. 5 Edw. VI, 
pt. vi. 

John Charnock of Leyland, &c., by 
his will in 1571 gave Joan his wite all 
his lands and tenements in Fulwood 
lately purchased of Sir Anthony Browne, 
deceased, and «ther lands there; they 
were hed of the queen by knight's ser- 
vice; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xii, 
no. 3¢. 

1° Parcels in Hyde Park, Cadlev, Brede- 
land, Kilanshaugh and Fulwood were by 
James I granted on lease ty George 
Whitmore and others and by Charles I to 
Edward Ditchfield and others in fee; 
Pat. 8 Jas. 1, pe. xxvii; 4 Chas. I, pt. xxiii. 
This may have been the origin of the 
reputed manors of Cadley and Fulwood. 
A reat of £19 73. 7d. was paid for 
Cadley and Fulwood in 1670 to the 
Crown by Hugh Wadsworth; Pat. 22 
Chas. HT, pti, rot. 1. Ina recovery of the 
manors of Li:r'¢ Cadley and Fulwood in 
1705 the vouchees were Hugh and Ro“ert 
Wa isworth of Haighton; Nicholas Starkie 
and William Shawe were the tenants ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 481, m. 5. 

In a fine respecting the mazar: of Great 
Caley and Fulwood in 1718 the defor- 
ciants were Sir Thomas Abney, Nicholas 
Starkie and Wiliam Shawe, and the 
Fiaintiff was John Dorsett (? Barrett) ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 2-9, m. 
122. This was probably the same estate. 

The manors cr lordships of Great 
Cadley, Little Cadley and Fulwood, with 
lands, &c., in Hachton, Broughton and 
Fulwood, were in 1-73 held by Thomas 


Barrett; Pal of Lance. Piea R. 618, 


m.to. An abstract of the title of Thomas 
Barrett may ‘te seen in Piccope MSS. 
(Chet. Lib}, xiv, 123. It shows that the 
‘manors’ were those of the Wadsworth 
family, but does not give the origin of 
their title, as the earliest deed cited is 
dated in 1682. 

The name occurs as early ae 12573 
Lancs. Ing. and Extens, i, 222. It may 
refer to the hide of land (6 carucates) in 
Preston. In 1583 Oliver Wrigan and 
others (who had received from Queen 
Elirabethin 1576) let to Thomas Singleton 
part of their lands in Cadley, Little Cadley 
and Hyde Park in Fulwood ; also in Kil- 
lawneshauge ; and the water-mill; Pic- 
cope MSS. xiv, 68. 

1 Duchy of Lanc. Spec. Com. 851, 
1041. 

Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. iv, no. 1. 

'* See the account of Crook in Whittle. 
Thomas Clayton died in 1591 holding 
the moiety of two messuages, &c., in 
Fulwood of the queen by the hundredth 
part of a knight’s fee; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. xv, no. 3. The pedigree (com- 
piled by Mr. R. Stewart-Brown) reads: 
Thomas, d. 1591 —s. William, d. 1631 
-8. Thomas, d. 1669 -s. Robert —sona 
Thomas (s.p.), William (d. 1715), and 
John, Dean of Kildare. 

‘8 Dict, Nat. Bing. Thomas Clayton, 
who was fifteen years of age in 1664, 
when the pedigree was recorded (Dugdale, 
Visit. 85), became a barrister-at-law ; 
Foster, Alumni Oxon. He died without 
issue, but had a brother William (d. 1715), 
a Liverpool merchant, who left several 
daughters as heirs. William’s younger 
brother John was the father of the bishop, 


138 


who was born at Dublin in 1695. Dr. 
hs Clayton was incumbent of St. 

ichan’s, Dublin, and Dean of Kildare, 
1708 25. His son Robert was educated 
at Westminster and Dublin ; D.D. 1730. 
He was made Bishop of Killala and 
Achonry 1730, held other sees, but was 
refused the Archbishopric of Tuam, being 
accuscd of Arianism, and afterwards 
threatened with a prosecution for heresy. 
He published various works. Mr. F. 
Clayton of Morden has afforded the 
editors information about the family. 
Sce also H. Peet, Liverpool in the time of 
Quen Anne, 

16 Thomas Lingard (dead in 1651), 
Lawrence Sharrock (dead in 1654), both 
of them recusants, and Lawrence Sudall ; 
Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 2749; v, 3196; iv, 
3090. Sudall’s estate was put in the Act 
of 1652 to be sold for treason ; Index of 
Royalists (Index Soc.), 44. 

Anne Kitchen, John” Newsam, 
Lawrence Tomlinson, John Kendall, 
James Hatch, John Chew, John Sudall, 
Thomas Werden, Thomas Coseney, 
Thomas Miller and William Cowpe; 
Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. .on- 
JUTITS, 955 Selny 

The Kendall family here named pro- 
duced 8. cra} notable ecclesiastics ; Gillow, 
Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. iv, 4-12. 

1 51 Geo. III, cap. 55. 

19 A district chape'ry was formed in 
1865 ; Lond. Gaz. 15 Dec. 

» End. Char. Rep. (Fulwood), 1902, 
pt. 

1 The Census Rep. 1901 gives 2,708 
acres, including 30 of inland water. 

® Dict, Nat. Buog, 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


joined to the forest of Lancaster.2 The name does 
not occur in Domesday Book **, and it is uncertain 
which of the neighbouring townships then contained 
it4 Unlike Fulwood it does not appear to have 
In 1297 the forest 
of Myerscough was worth 20s. a year to the Earl of 
Lancaster.5 The Earls of Derby were once keepers 
of the park,®and the Tyldesleys of Wardley and then 
About 1620 the 
latter had licence to inclose go acres of the Outwood 
of Myerscough.§ James I stayed at their house, 
known as the Lodge, in 1617,9 and Charles II in 
1651.19 Various grants were made by the Crown.!! 
A survey is extant made in the Commonwealth time,!? 
There are 16th- 
century Court Rolls at the Record Office,!! and an old 


been styled a manor at any time. 


of Morleys were under-keepers.” 


and a plan of the park in 1769.18 


plan has been preserved.}5 


Leland, writing about 1536, thus refers to it: 
‘Ere I came to Garstang by a mile and a half I left 
Myerscough, a great park partly enclosed with a 


8 See the account of the forest, .C.H. 
Lanes. ii, 439, 448-9 ; Lancs. and Ches. 
Antiq. Soc. xix, 19. 

Myerscough is not named in the early 
Pipe Rolls, or in the perambulation of 
the forest in 1228, but was an ancient 
forest ‘beyond the memory of man,’ in 
1323 3 Lanc. Ch. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 449. The 
forest of Amounderness, as distinct from 
those of Wyresdale and Lonsdale, occurs 
in 1246-8 ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Ree. 
Soc, Lancs. and Ches), i, 170. It formed 
part of the gift to Theobald Walter in 
1194 (Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 435), but as 
late as 1337 Myerscough was not reckoned 
within it ; ibid. 425. About 1322 Thur- 
stan de Northlegh farmed the herbage of 
the parks of Myerscough and Fulwood by 
demise of John Travers, keeper of the 
same ; Coram Rege R. 254, m. 54.4. 

3a The township may be the lost vill of 
Aschebi, one plough-land in 1066. 

4 Tithes were claimed in 1591 by the 
farmer of the rectory of St. Michael’s, 
Myerscough being said to be part of the 
chapelry of Woodplumpton ; Ducatus 
Lanc, (Rec. Com.), ili, 261. 

5 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), i, 290. 

The extent of 1346 appears to regard 
both Myerscough and Fulwood as appur- 
tenances of Quernmore; Add. MS. 
32103, fol. 148. The herbage of the 
park was then worth £8 a year. William 
de Holland and William his son had a 
cottage, &c., called Baggerburgh, next the 
park of Myerscough, paying 7s. a year, 
also 1d. a day wages of a parker, and 
keeping up the park palings. Thomas 
Wambergh had a messuage and lands in 
Mygelhagh (Midghalgh), at a rent of 
70s. Alice de Shireburne also had land 
there. Thomas and Robert de Haldeslegh 
had pannage, &c., in Myerscough and 
Bradshaw hey. ‘Baggerburgh’ is no 
doubt Badsberry, 

Richard de Radcliffe had a lease of the 
foreign wood of Myerscough in 1360 at a 
tent of 18 marks; Dep. Keeper’s Rep. 
xaxii, App. 343. 

Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), i, 294-5. 
Thomas Bayton was master forester in 
the time of Elizabeth ; ibid. iii, 331, 366. 

"Ibid, i, 148, 158, é&c.; iii, 36. Fora 
complaint by Thurstan Tyldesley in 1531 
see Duchy Plead, (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and 
Ches.), i, 228, 

8 Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), ii, 262, 294. 


apart from 


have been 


9 The king stayed there from 12 to 14 
Aug. and hunted, killing several bucks ; 
Assheton’s Journal (Chet. Soc.), 32-4. 

10 On 13 Aug. on his way to Worcester 5 
Civil War Tracts (Chet. Soc.), 287. 

11 In 1605 Rippon Park in Myerscough 
was granted to Charles Earl of Devon; 
Pat. 2 Jas. I, pt. vii. 

Bannerhurst and Colthey, parts of 
Stanzacre by Myerscough Park, a water- 
mill, a messuage and lands called Midg- 
halgh, &c., were granted to Edward Bradley 
and others in 1623 ; Pat. 20 Jas. I, pt. iii. 

Several leases of the herbage in the 
park are known; eg. Cal. S. P. Dom. 
1638-9, p. 62. 

In 1809 Myerscough Park was leased 
to William Heatley for thirty-one years, 
and he in 1815 transferred to William 
Fitzherbert-Brockholes ; D. at Claughton. 

12 Lancs. and Ches. Rec. i, 43. 

3 Ibid. i, 25. 

M4 Duchy of Lanc. Ct. R. bdle. 79, 
no. 1035-6. 

15 Lancs. and Ches, Recs. i, 24. 

15a Itin, v, 98. The deer were de- 
stroyed about 1778 ; Assheton’s Journal, 
loc. cit. 

16 Leonard Helme in 1601 held two 
messuages, &c., in Myerscough, but the 
tenure is not stated ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
p-m. xviii, no. 20. 

The Richardson family appear at Over 
Wood and Nether Wood before 15303 
Ducatus Lanc. ii, 43, 232. Thomas 
Richardson, son of William, held lands in 
Woodplumpton, &c., destined for the 
maintenance of the schoolmaster of Gar- 
stang ; he had the reversion of a messuage, 
water corn-mill, &c.,. in Myerscough, 
where he died in 1637. His mother 
Janet was living. His son William was 
only a year old; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. 
p-m. xxviii, no. 76. 

Elizabeth widow of Thomas Richard- 
son afterwards married Hugh Kighley 
and then Thomas Jepson ; being a recu- 
sant two-thirds of her lands were seques- 
tered in 1645, and a petition for the 
removal of the sequestration in 1654-5 
seems to have failed. William Richard- 
son was then living ; Royalist Comp. 
Papers (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), iv, 
29. 
Walter de Myerscough occurs in 
1262-5 3 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 229, 
234. Families of this name are after- 
wards found at Lancaster and Penwor- 
tham ; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and 


139 


PART OF 
LANCASTER 


hedge, partly (all on the moor side) with a pale. On 
the right it is replenished with red deer. 
of Derby hath it in farm of the king.’15« 

But few of the inhabitants occur in the records,!6 
the 
family, who made it their 
chief residence, probably for 
religious reasons.!7 The family 
noticed in 
accounts of Morleys in Astley 
and Wardley in Worsley. 
Edward Tyldesley, the first 
of Morleys, was in 1587 18 
succeeded by his infant grand- 
son and namesake, who died 
at Myerscough in 1621, when 
his son Thomas was about 
nine years of age.!® The heir, 
the typical Lancashire Cavalier,2° was about thirty 
years of age when the Civil War broke out ; he at 


The Earl 


Tyldesley 


Ze 
Zs 


the 


Tyxpestey. Argent 
three molehills vert. 


Ches.), ii, 243 Lancs. Ct. R. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches), 42, 45. 

17 Morleys is known to have been a 
Roman Catholic mission station. Myer- 
scough was secluded and nearly 15 miles 
from Lancaster parish church. Elizabeth 
Tyldesley (of Morleys) in 1628 com- 
pounded for her sequestration for recu- 
sancy by an annual payment of £15. 

18 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xiv, no. 10. 
He was buried at Leigh. By his wife 
Anne, the daughter and heir of Thomas 
Leyland, he had not only Morleys but a 
number of small estates scattered over the 
county, e.g. in Preston, Chipping and 
Lancaster. Myerscough is not named in 
any of the inquisitions, perhaps because 
it was held in right of a subordinate office. 
The heir was Edward Tyldesley son of 
Thomas son of Edward deceased, aged two 
years. 

Two inquisitions were taken respecting 
the estates of Thomas Tyldesley, father of 
the heir ; ibid. xv, no. 30, 37. It appears 
that he died at Myerscough on 23 Feb. 
1585-6. He was buried at Leigh. One 
of his daughters, Elizabeth, was Abbess of 
Gravelines in Flanders. 

19 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lanes. and 
Ches.), ii, 261-9. Elizabeth Tyldesley 
widow of Thomas (the father) and Eliza- 
beth Tyldesley widow of Edward were 
living at Myerscough. Edward’s will is 
in Stanley Papers (Chet. Soc.), iii, 
P> CCCXXX1, 

20 There are numerous references to 
him in Civil War Tracts, Lancs. War and 
Stanley Papers (all Chet. Soc.) ; a memoir 
in Dict. Nat. Biog. 

There is no question as to Sir Thomas’s 
religion, but at the beginning of the struggle 
a leading Parliamentarian told Sir Gilbert 
Hoghton and Mr. Tyldesley ‘he could 
like them well if they were not so familiar 
with Papists’; Civil War Tracts, 21. 
Another of the same side wished the Par- 
liament to ‘send for this Tyldesley, for 
he is a captain, one of the commission of 
array, and doth more harm than any man 
I know’; ibid. 23. A more generous op- 

onent wrote : ‘In Amounderness among 
the Papists there were several companies 
raised under the leading of Mr. Thomas 
Tyldesley of Myerscough as colonel, a 
man much esteemed in the country ; most 
were willing to comply with him, All 
the captains raised by him were Papists,’ 
except one ; they included William Butler 
of Myerscough. ‘There was not a man 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


once took sides with the king 7! and was advanced to 
the rank of colonel,” and to knighthood in 1643.8 
He took part in the leading events of the conflict in 
the county, assisting in the siege of Manchester,”4 
the capture of Lancaster, and the storming of 
Bolton * ; he was defeated at Wigan** and Orms- 
kirk,?> and compelled to surrender Liverpool,?® and 
Lichfield afterwards *°; still later he joined in the 
Duke of Hamilton’s invasion of Lancashire,®! and 
then in the Earl of Derby’s attempt to lead rein- 
forcements to Charles II at Worcester. 
attempt he fell, being killed in the battle at Wigan 
Lane 25 August 16512; he was buried in Leigh 
Church.3? His grandson Thomas, a strong Jacobite, 
died early in 1715,°% and his son Edward joined 
the insurrection at the end of that year, but was 
acquitted on trial ; ‘his sword had a silver handle.’ #4 
He seems to have been the last Tyldesley of Myer- 
scough, and his son James, who served in the Young 
Pretender’s army in 1745, sold Morleys.*® 
MYERSCOUGH LODGE was pulled down in 
It had long been used as a farm-house, and 


1888. 


in all the county more zealous and fervent 
for the king’s part than Colonel Tyldesley 
was, not the Earl of Derby himself, for it 
was thought he forwarded the earl more 
than he would have been. He was a 
noble, generous-minded gentleman. His 
zeal for the king’s cause put him on so 
that having many well affected to him to 
follow him, besides many of the free- 
holders’ band whom he allured or com- 
manded to march with him to Warrington, 
and when he had them there would not 
suffer any of them to return home, but 
compelled and forced them to march 
with him after the king, then returning 
from Chester, and so to Kineton field 
and Edgehill battle, whence most of them 
never returned again’ ; War in Lancs. 19. 

The Earl of Derby addressed him 

affectionately as ‘Thom’ ; Stanley Papers, 
tii, p. clxxiii, &c. 

21 Civil War Tracts, 13. 

29 Ibid. 47 (Sept. 1642). He was after- 
wards described as major-general to the 
Earl of Derby ; ibid. 303. 

23 He gained it by commanding the 
cavalry in a desperate charge over the 
thirty-six arches of Burton Bridge in 
July ; ibid. 99. He was accompanying the 
queen on her way from York to join the 
king in Warwickshire. 

24 Ibid. 46, 51. From the lodge at 
Aldport ‘Tyldesley with a drake played 
fiercely against the town at that end 
called Deansgate, but did no execution 
worth memory’ ; War in Lancs. 7. 

38 Civil War Tracts, 85. On the sub- 
sequent capture of Preston ‘ Master 
Tyldesley was much busied about Mr. 
Edmund Werden’s house,’ i.e. in plunder- 
ing; War in Lancs, 30. Then (May 
1643) he accompanied the Earl of Derby 
in his unfortunate excursion to Whalley ; 


On 23 Oct. the same year ‘was seques- 
tered Mr. Thomas Tyldesley’s estate of 
Myerscough, being the first that was 
sequestered within Amounderness Hun- 
dred, and the very life of all that acted 
against the Parliament within it’ ; ibid. 
44. It appears that his mother Elizabeth 
(Westby) was in possession of a large part 
of the family estates, and that two-thirds 
were sequestered for her recusancy. She 
survived her son, dying about 1652, 80 
that Sir Thomas’s property was probably 


In this 


small. See the petitions, &c., in Cal. 
Com. for Comp. iv, 2568-9. Sir Thomas’s 
estates were declared forfeit for treason 
and ordered for sale by an Act passed in 
July 16515 Index of Royalists (Index 
Soc.), I. 

26 Civil War Tracts, 197 3; May 1644. 
In the subsequent plundering ‘some of 
the soldiers of the Fylde country, who 
had been abroad from home much of a 
year, brought cloth from them [the Bolton 
people] to their wives and families which 
served them many years after’; War in 
Lancs, 52. The same day the Parliamen- 
tary soldiers, taking prisoners to Lancaster 
Castle, stayed ‘at the Lodge in Myer- 
scough, Colonel Tyldesley’s house’ ; ibid. 

7 Civil War Tracts, 98 ; Apr. 1643. 

38 Thid. 206 ; Aug. 1644. 

29 Ibid. 104 5 June 1643. 

80 Ibid. 2143 July 1646. This sur- 
render was by the king's general orders to 
the commanders of castles, &c., still held 
for him. 

He had been taken prisoner in Sept. 
1644 near Montgomery ; ibid. 206. 

31 Ibid. 255; Aug. 1648. He was left 
by the main body to attack Lancaster 
Castle, but upon the duke’s defeat he 
retreated to Appleby, where he surren- 
dered, on condition of going beyond sea ; 
ibid. 273-5. He is said to have gone to 
Ireland and afterwards joined the Earl of 
Derby in the Isle of Man. 

32 [bid. 298-9 ; War in Lancs. 72, 76. 
His monument was erected by Alexander 
Rigby, formerly his cornet, near the 
spot where he fell; Stanley Papers, iil, 
p. cccxxxiii. His portrait is in Baines’ 
Lancs. (ed. 1836), iii, 610. It was his 
saying that ‘he would follow his business 

close, to the end that he might the more 
enjoy his pleasures’ Blundell, Cavalier’s 
Note Bk. 121. Three of his daughters 
became nuns in the Augustinian convent 
at Paris. 

32a His son Edward succeeded, being 
under age; Cal. Com. for Comp. loc. cit. 
He obtained the place of bow-bearer of 
Myerscough Chase, and was also made 
steward and forester of Myerscough, 
Wyresdale and Quernmore in 1660; Cal. 
S.P. Dom. 1660-1, p. 145. He recorded 
a pedigree in 1664 ; Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. 
Soc.), 302. He was living in 1679, when 
being ‘a reputed though not convicted 


140 


was described in 1848 °* as containing an oak stain 
case of spacious dimensions, the ‘railing’ of which 
was ‘very beautiful.’ 
ground floor was an elaborately carved oak chimney- 
piece with eight panels, the four upper ones having 
the armorial bearings of the Tyldesley and Derby 
families together with the initials T.T., and those 
below medallion heads in strong relief. Two of the 
walls in the same room were panelled in oak, and at 
the east end of the house on the upper floor was a 
small semi-hexagonally roofed apartment called ‘ The 
King’s Room,’ * where according to tradition James | 
and Charles II slept during their respective visits here 
in 1617 and 1651. 
with the inscription ‘Old Dog Lad 1714.’ The 
Lodge was in a dilapidated state immediately prior to 
its demolition, and the old oak had been removed some 
years before and taken to London. The modern house 
now called Myerscough Lodge stands about 40 yds. 
to the east of the site of the original building.* 

The estates of William and Edward Butler ‘° and 
some others were sequestered under the Common- 


In one of the rvuoms on the 


Over the stable door was a stone 


popish recusant ' he had licence to travel 
to Lancaster, returning within ten days; 
Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 111. 
He and his son Thomas were among the 
‘popish recusants’ destined to exile in 
1680; Cavalier’s Note Bk. 166. He scems 
to have been anxious to avoid a formal 
conviction in 1682 ; Hist, MSS. Com. Rep. 
xiv, App. iv, 143. He is supposed to 
have died soon afterwards. 

33 Thomas Tyldesley was accused of 
participation in the so-called ‘ Lancashire 
Plot’ of 1694 ; Jacobite Trials (Chet. 
Soc.), 16, &c. He was buried at Gar- 
stang as * Thos. Tinsley, esq., of Lodge,’ 
26 Jan. 1714-15. His Diary, 1712-14, 
was printed, with notes, by Messrs. Joseph 
Gillow and Anthony Hewitson in 1873. 
It contains a pedigree of the family. 

34 R, Patten, Rebellion of 1715 (ed. 3), 
116, 

Edmund Tyldesley of the Lodge in 
1717 a8 a‘Papist’ registered an estate 
(leasehold) at Myerscough, and in a 
moiety of the manor of Holcroft, valued 
at £720 a year; Estcourt and Payne, 
Eng . Cath, Nonjurors, 155. 

> Tyldesley Diary, 14. 

36 Canon Raines’ Notes to Nicholas 
Assheton’s Journ. (Chet. Soc. xiv). 

387 Hewitson, Northward, 29. 

88 The stone is now built into one of 
the outbuildings, The inscription is said 
to refer to Mr. Tyldesley. 

39 Hewitson, op. cit. 28. 

40 Edward Parkinson of Myerscough 
died in 1631 holding a messuage and 
land there of the king as of his manor 
of Enfield. His daughters Cecily and 
Isabel had died before him, leaving issue 
William Butler, aged sixteen, and Anne 
Shireburne, aged seventeen and more; 

Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. xxvii, 00. 57+ 
He gave lands to this grandson (William 
Butler), who left a daughter Cecily, with 
remainder to William's brother Edward ; 
Royalist Comp. Papers,i, 258,263. William 
Butler (note 20) was killed in the battle 
of Newbury fighting for Charles I. 

William son of Edward Butler of 
Myerscough was a burgess of Preston 10 
1682; Preston Guild R. (Rec. Soc. Lancs 
and Ches.), 182. Myerscough House, 
the estate of William Butler, was advet- 
tised for sale in 1700; Pal. Note-bh. itty 
283. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


- wealth,#! and in 1715-17 other estates seem to have 
been confiscated or threatened.4? William Butler 
was executed for taking part in the rebellion of 

1¢43 

The Old House at Badsberry was in 1718 be- 
queathed by John Cross to endow a school at Bils- 
borrow.4# Mary Cross of Myerscough in 1889 
founded a charity for the poor.4® Midghalgh was 
early in the 18th century owned by a family named 
Lund,‘® and was a Roman Catholic mission station.‘’ 
Anthony Lund, the heir of the family, was a 
Douay priest ; he built the present chapel at Ferny- 
halgh.*® 


BLEASDALE 


Blesedale, 1228. 

Although now in the parish of Lancaster, owing to 
its inclusion in the forest, Bleasdale has remained in 
the hundred of Amounderness, and was probably 
once within Garstang. It occupies a hilly country, 
divided into three main parts by the Rivers Calder 
and Brock, which rise near the Yorkshire border and 
flow south-west through it. The northern part lies 
on the slopes of Grizedale and Stake House Fells, the 
height on the border of Wyresdale ranging from goo ft. 
to 1,520 ft. above sea level. The central portion, 
between the rivers, is occupied by Bleasdale Moors 
on Oakenclough and Hazelhurst Fells ; most of this 
is over 1,000 ft. level, 1,505 ft. being the highest 
point. Bleasdale Tower lies on the north side of 
the Brock. The part of the township south of this 
stream is in the main lower, but on the eastern 
boundary the ground rises very steeply, the flat- 
topped Parlick at the south end of the ridge attaining 
1,416 ft. above sea level, while Fairsnape Fell to the 


41 The cases of Sir T. Tyldesley and 350. 


He died in 1811, having sold 


PART OF 
LANCASTER 


north attains 1,700 ft. on the boundary of Yorkshire. 
In this part Admarsh Chapel is situated. The stream 
which bounds the township on the south is also called 
the Brock. There are 7,2984 acres! in the township, 
and the population in 1901 was 403.2 

There are few roads; one leads from the western 
boundary to Bleasdale Tower, while another leads 
circuitously to Admarsh, Lower Fairsnape and Blind- 
hurst. 

Some prehistoric remains have been found.3 

The township is governed by a parish council. 

The North Lancashire Reformatory School was 
built by subscription in 1857 for the training of boys 
in farm work, The boys are now taught various 
trades and work in the mills. 

In 1314 there was an iron mine. The land is 
now chiefly in pasture,® the soil being a peaty moss, 
with clay subsoil. Butter and cheese are made. At 
Oakenclough are paper-mills and a fish hatchery. 
The water of the streams is impounded by the Fylde 
Water Board, affording the chief supply for the 
western part of the hundred. 

Cuthbert Anthony Parkinson of Blindhurst, 1666— 
1728, was a Franciscan historian and missionary.® 

The district of BLEASDALE was in- 
cluded in the forest of Lancaster before 
the time of Henry II, and was therefore 
excepted from the charter of the forest of 1217. The 
boundary as defined in the perambulation of 1228 
included the greater part of the present township, the 
Calder, instead of Grizedale Fells, being the northern 
boundary.’ The value to the earl in 1297 was only 
24 marks a year.® 

Bleasdale scarcely ever occurs in the records.9 The 
most important family of later times was that of Parkin- 
son of Fairsnape,’” a pedigree being recordedin 1613. 


FOREST 


made by Sir John Booth, the king’s re- 


Elizabeth Jepson have been mentioned. 

John Parker, recusant, in 1653 desired 
to compound for two-thirds of his estate 
sequestered ; Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 
3174. Thomas Pierson of Newcastle 
was allowed to compound for his estate 
in Myerscough, though it had been 
ordered for sale ; ibid. iv, 2958. Andrew 
Thistleton of Myerscough House had his 
estate sold in 1653 ; ibid. 3145. These 
estates and that of Francis Westby were 
ordered to be sold under the third Act, 
1652; Index of Royalists, 44. 

* The estates of John Parkinson and 
John Edsforth, ‘Papist,’ seem to have 
been forfeited ; Lancs. and Ches. Rec. i, 
174-5. The following ‘ Papists’ regis- 
tered estates in 1717: Anne Baine, 
James Brand, Robert Cardwell of Barton, 
William Catterall, Elizabeth Crookall of 
Badgebury (Badsberry) within Myerscough 
and Francis Malley ; Estcourt and Payne, 
op. cit. 

<oe Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. i, 


“End, Char. Rep. (Lanc.), 1903, 
Pp. 115. 
4S Tbid, 117, The gross income is 
£8 16s. which is given annually to nine 
or ten persons in gifts of money. Miss 
Cross, who founded many other charities 
(see the Preston report), died in 1896. 
_‘6 Anthony Lund the younger registered 
his estate as a ‘Papist’ in 17173 Est- 
court and Payne, op. cit. 151. 
at Gillow, Haydock Papers, 62-4. 
"8 Gillow, Bibl, Dict, of Engl. Cath. iv, 


Midghalgh. 

1 Including 10 acres of inland water. 

Including 124 in the Reformatory 
School. 

8 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 2435 Lancs. and 
Ches. Antiqg. Soc. xvii, 2§5 5 xviii, 114. 

4 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 28. 

5 There are only 8 acres of arable land 
to 3,213 of permanent grass ; woods and 
plantations occupy 319 acres. 

6 Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. v, 
243. He joined the Franciscans at Douay 
and was sent to the English mission 
in 1695. He published his Collectanea 
Anglo-Minoritica in 1726. 

T Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 421. The 
bounds are thus given: From the source 
of Calder south to Ulvesty, thence to the 
summit of Parlick, down Mereclough to 
the Brock, down the Brock to Wensnape, 
thence up to Stogesthol and to Senesty, 
thence going down to the Calder and up 
this stream to its source. See also Cal. 
Pat. 1338-40, p. 427. 

A commission to define the bounds of 
the forest of Bleasdale was issued in the 
time of James 1; Lancs. and Ches, Rec. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 279. 

8 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 290. The 
vaccaries of Blindhurst, Hazelhead, Fair- 
snape and ‘between the Brooks (Brocks)’ 
existed in 1323; ibid. ii, 128. The 
pasture between Calder and Grizedale was 
also accounted for ; ibid. 178. 

9 In the time of Henry VII the tenants 
of the Chase complained of distraints 


141 


ceiver, on their cattle in the pasture lands 
in Bleasdale ; Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), 
i, 112. 

A mill site was granted in 1609 at 
Admarsh ; Pat. 7 Jas. I, pt. xi. 

By the county lay of 1624 Bleasdale 
was required to pay 14s. 113d. to each 
£100 contributed by the hundred ; Greg- 
son, Fragments (ed. Harland), 23. 

10 Anthony Richardson, the queen’s 
lessee, had a dispute with Ralph Parkinson 
in 1572 respecting Admarsh, Fairsnape 
and the Fells, and the matter occurs 
later; Ducatus Lanc. ii, 3993 iii, 47, 
275. 
Ul Visit, (Chet. Soc.), 134 3 the succes- 
sion is given as Ralph -s. Ralph -s, 
Ralph —s. Robert (living 1613). 

Robert Parkinson in 1602 and George 
in 1642 were burgesses of the Guild; 
Preston Guild R. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), 57, 116. George Parkinson sold 
or mortgaged Fairsnape and Blindhurst, 
water-mill, &c., to Edward Hodgkinson 
in 1649; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 
146, m. 103. A dispute occurred in 
1659 between the widows of George and 
Robert Parkinson; Exch. Dep. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 34. 

One moiety of Fairsnape and Blind- 
hurst passed by marriage to the Cliftons 
of Lytham and thence by sale to William 
Garnett of Salford. The other moiety 
remained in the Parkinson family till the 
18th century, when there was a further 
partition between William Sharp of Lan- 
caster (as husband of the granddaughter 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Hazelhurst'? and Oakenclough'* were other vac- 
caries." The messuage called Brooks was in 1720 
sold by Richard Blackburne 
and Elizabeth his wife to 
Robert Lawson of Lancaster.’ 

William Garnett of Lark 
Hill, Salford, acquired a lease 
of the manor or forest from 
the Crown and greatly im- 
proved the district, converting 
wild lands into meadow and 
pasture. He built Bleasdale 
Tower, and was high sheriff 
of the county in 1843. At 
his death in 1863 he was 
succeeded by his son William 
James, who continued the 
work of improvement, and, 
dying in 1873, was followed by his eldest son, 
Mr. William Garnett of Quernmore, who served as 
high sheriff in 1879." 

More than half the area of the moorlands remains 
uninclosed. The pasture rights have been purchased 
from the duchy by the landowners. 

The chapel at Admarsh existed in the 
time of Elizabeth,” but is of unknown 
origin and invocation. In 1610 it was 
described as ‘a chapel, without service, in the king’s 
chase,’ and the stipend was said to be detained by 
Robert Parkinson, commissary of Richmond.’"* In 
1650 it had ‘neither minister nor maintenance,’ and 
the people were declared to be ignorant and careless, 


Parxinson of Fair- 


snape. Gules on a 
cheveron between three 
ostrich feathers argent as 
many mullets sable, 


CHURCH 


knowing nothing of the worship of God, but living in 
ignorance and superstition.'” Nothing seems to have 
been done at that time, but in 168g Richard White 
of Chipping had the Bishop of Chester’s licence to 
preach in Admarsh Chapel,” and in 1702 Christopher 
Parkinson of Hazelhurst gave £5 10s. a year for the 
wages of a minister.” In 1717 there was ‘service 
every first Sunday in the month and no other,’ # 
Afterwards an augmentation was obtained, and from 
1749 there seems always to have been a curate in 
charge. The church was rebuilt in 1835, and called 
St. Eadmor’s™; it was restored and enlarged in 18y-. 
The vicar of Lancaster is patron, The following 
have been curates and vicars ™ :— 


1749 John Penny 

1764 John Braithwaite 

1767 Thomas Smith * 

1778 Joseph Stuart 

1825 James Bleasdale 

1828 Osborn Littledale 

1833 William Fenton 

1837 James Robinson 

1846 Henry Short * 

1851 David Bell, M.D. (Glas.) ” 

1855 William Shilleto, B.A. (Univ. Coll., Oxf.) 

1864 Robert Charles Colquhoun Barclay, B.A. 
(T.C.D.) 

1891 John Frederick Heighway Parker ” 


The above-named Christopher Parkinson also be- 
queathed money to pay a schoolmaster {10 a year.” 

The once-existing charities have failed; they 
amounted to less than {4 a year.” 


and heir of Henry Parkinson) and Richard 
Parkinson (brother of Henry). This 
Richard was grandfather of Canon Parkin- 
son of Manchester. See his Old Church 
Clock (ed. 1880), pp. xii, lxxv—Lexvii. 

John Clifton of Fairsnape and Thomas 
his son were burgesses of the guild of 
16623; Preston Guild R. 142. See the 
account of Clifton in Kirkham. 

12 This also was held by Parkinsons ; 
Ducatus Lane. ili, 275. So also was 
Stake House ; ibid. ii, 42. 

18 Ibid. iii, 294, 363. 

M In 1622 the vaccaries appear to have 
been Falsnape (Fairsnape), Blindhurst, 
Hazelhurst, Brooks, Calder and Oaken- 
clough, with land called Scoring Moss ; 
Pat. 20 Jas. I, pt. iii. 

In 1670 John Sturzaker paid £2 a 
year rent for Oakenclough, Peter Black- 
burne £2 111. for Brooks, Richard Par- 
kinson {2 11s, 8d. for Falsnape and 
John Fanshaw £2 for Calder ; ibid. 22 
Chas. IT, pt. ii, no. 1. 

18 Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), ili, 
206, from 2nd-3rd R. of Geo, I. at 
Preston, 


16 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 18-0), ii, 5405 
Burke, Landed Gentry, 

7 Raines in Gastrell’s Notitia Cestr. 
(Chet. Soc.), ii, 438. 

18 Hist, MSS. Com, Rep. xiv, App. iv, 8. 

19 Comminw. Ch Surv. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), 126. 

2 Stratford's Visitation List, 1691, at 
Chester. 

21 Gastrell, Nositia, ii, 437-8 ; Parkin- 
son gave a rent-charge of {4 a year for a 
‘preaching minister who should officiate 
monthly.’ 

2 Ibid. 

©The name Admarsh was perhaps 
thought to be connected with Eadmer, 
the friend of St. Anselm and historian of 
his time. 

34 Ch. Papers at Chester Dioc. Reg. 

35 Richard Parkinson, named in a 
former note, ‘who had twelve children, 
engaged the Rev. Mr. Smith to become 
a permanent resident in his house and 
teach his children and officiate in the 
chapel, giving him for his labours board 
and lodging and £12ayear’; Old Church 
Clock, p. xiv. 


142 


% Afterwards rector of Stockton Forest, 
Yorks. 

7 Afterwards vicar of Goole. 

38 Afterwards vicar of Goosnargh. 

39 Mr. Parker has assisted in the com- 
pilation of this list. 

50 End. Char. Rep. for Lancaster, 1903. 
Formerly the curate of the chapel was 
often the schoolmaster also, 

3. Ibid. Richard Blackburn in 1743 
gave £50 for the poor. The capital 
passed to John Lawson and A. R. Ford, 
and in 1826 the interest, {2 10s., was 
still paid. Nothing is now known of it. 
Thomas Parkinson in 1728 lett £10 to 
the poor ; interest of gs. a year was paid 
by Henry Parkinson down to 1794, when 
his heirs were two daughters married to 
John Garner of Crookhall in Cockerham 
and to William Taylor of Borwick; a 
moiety of the interest was paid by William 
son of John Garner down to his death in 
1817, when the entire legacy failed. 

A dole of £1 35. ghd. was in 1826 
received from Brabin’s charity, of which 
an account is given under Chipping. It 
is now applied to the school there. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


KIRKHAM 


KIRKHAM 


KIRKHAM 
MEDLAR-WITH-WESHAM 
RIBBY-WITH-WREA 
BRYNING-WITH-KELLAMERGH 
CLIFTON-WITH-SALWICK 
NEWTON-WITH-SCALES 
FRECKLETON 

WARTON 
WESTBY-WITH-PLUMPTONS 


In addition to the township which affords a name 
to the whole, the parish of Kirkham contains thirteen 
others extending north from the Ribble to the Wyre, 


WEETON-WITH-PREESE 

TREALES, ROSEACRE AND WHARLES 
GREENHALGH-WITH-THISTLETON 
LITTLE ECCLESTON-WITH-LARBRECK 
SINGLETON 

HAMBLETON 

GOOSNARGH 

WHITTINGHAM 


district. Thus, after other parishes had been cut off, 
the detached fragments of Goosnargh remained subject 
to Kirkham; and in early times the rectors and 


=a tA pe 
“ Riret pu) 


eK 


INGLETON S42 a 
Gf Singleton Urm GH ‘s . 
MX Engm 13S Liz c Yi; Goose P- : s 
ee 2S S41 poseacre LZ te J ae ae Yi ti; 
4] Preese “3 af: y--TREALes Gy ws 
WeETOW? 2G LROSEACRE Yy : 
a ae : ~TNano | q 
nee! 3. WHARLES ZZ 
Vrs SET NR. : 
CLP a a f: : Li 
Yi rer le BE TO ice 
= ES. see, Jatwie 
Se eeese #3 sabe che 7 
tj 2 .CLIFITON 
‘ i co: 
2 ie Fibby’-, 7 ean 
Zrrwentioanck, NEF Pu EP ES 
¢< Ballam > aoe Soren Met Crtron iD 
¢: Gromn ‘prey Sie ek J wsatwier % ize 
eA ee, 8 RIE, Zs 
Common ie) Lhasa 3 = ( HY ome LZ NA, 
Side i a = JZ 
i A MM att WAnTOn te X ioe ELLE! Ze 
0k Joel MY; PENWORTHAM 


Broadhead *~ 


tie ZZ 
&, 

oo mit 
‘Astes? 7th 4 


Bultsnape 
SOCSNARE H 


tj analy Kidsnape 3 gy 
Middleton Exes gg vi 


»: 


a distance of 8 miles, one on the further side of 
the latter river, and the two townships of Goosnargh 
and Whittingham, to the east, quite detached from 
the main part, Newsham again being a detached 
hamlet of Goosnargh. The area of Kirkham proper 
1s 33,5643 acres, and of Goosnargh chapelry 11,864, 
making a total of 45,4284 acres, including 2,788 
acres of tidal water. ‘The population in 1901 was 
15,465.1 

There are indications in addition to the name to 
show that Kirkham was the ecclesiastical head of the 


icars seem to have been also usually deans of Amoun- 
derness. Otherwise there is little to notice in the 
history. The great lords, temporal and spiritual, 
were non-resident. The chief local family was that 
of Clifton in the south; the others appear to have 
been little more than yeomen, though some acquired 
greater importance in course of time. ‘The parish is 
comparatively seldom mentioned in the records. 
The ‘fifteenth,’ which became fixed about the 
1th century, shows the relative importance of the 
various townships at that time,? and the county lay, 


1 The total is composed thus: Kirk- 
ham proper, 11,138 3 Goosnargh, 4,327. 
Of the former of these, the townships of 
Kirkham and Wesham contain half. 

2 Gregson, Fragments (ed. Harland), 19. 
The details are: Kirkham, 16s. 4d. i; 


Bryning, £1 25.3 Clifton, £1 25. 8d. 5 
Eccleston, Little, 125. 8d.; Freckleton, 
£1 tos. 6d.; Greenhalgh, £1 4s. 24d. 5 
Medlar, £1 2s.; Newton, £1 15.; Ribby, 
16s.; Treales, 18s. 14¢.; Warton, £1 45.5 
Weeton, £1; Westby, 12s. 8d.; Single- 


143 


> 


ton, £1 4s.; Hambleton, 165s. 4d.— 
making a total of £15 2s. 6d. when 
the hundred paid £56 45. 8d. 

In addition to this Goosnargh paid 
£2 6s. 8d.. Newsham 4s, 8d. and Whit- 
tingham {£1 75. 944. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


established in Abe, gives a similar indication for the 
i7th century.3 

Kirkham, like most of the Fylde country, was hostile 
to the Reformation, and between 1629 and 1633 the 
following squires and yeomen compounded for the 
two-thirds of their estates legally liable to sequestra- 
tion*: John Barrow oe Weeton, {4 ayear; Sir 
Cuthbert Cliston of Westby, £160 ; Gervase Clifton 
of the same, £5 ; George Crook of Kirkham, £2 ; 
Ralph Eccleston of Singleton, £4; John Gaunt, 
senior and junior, of the same, {4 and £5 ; George 
Grayson of Clifton, £2 ; Thomas Hesketh of Mains 
(described as of Poulton), £15 ; William Horskar of 
Clifton, £2; Thomas Kirkham of Warton, £2; 
Thomas Pattison of Great Singleton, £4; Thomas 
Threifall of Clifton, £2 ; Thomas West>y of Mow- 
breck (described as of Burn), £100; and Edward 
Worthington of Weeton, {4.5 It is not surprising, 
therefore, that on the outbreak of the Civil War the 
king’s side found zealous supporters,® the Fylde proving 
a valuable recruiting ground. There was little fight- 
ing, if any, in the parish,’ for the men were drawn 
away to other placcs, where they proved themselves 
good pillagers, according to the parliamentary his- 
torian,® who wus, however, candid enough to record 
a plundering expedition by the troops of his own 
side.® 

After the Restoration the district settled down to 
a quiet agricultural life again, the Revolution and the 
Jacobite insurrections producing litt'e apparent effect 
in Kirkham !°; but one story of injustice has been 
told, that of Robert Blackburne of Thistleton, He 
was charged with having been implicated in a con- 
spira.y to assassinate William III in 1695, and 
though he was never brought to trial, there being 
apparently no evidence against him, he was kept a 
close prisoner in Newgate for fifty years.!! Although 
for a century there have been cotton and other 
manufactures at the town of Kirkham, the far:-h as 


® Gregson, op. cit. 23. The details of 
this tax are: Kirkham f1 7s. 11d, 
Bryning £1.17:.~}7.,Clifton £1 18:.0}4., 
Eccleston {1 1s.84.,Freckletonf2 12.24, 
Greenhalgh £2 15.5.4.,Me tar, 117 7a, 
Newton £1 1s. rtd, Ricby 1 ce 44d, 
Treales £1 11s., Warton 2 15, off, 
Weeton £1 14s. 29.0, Westby fi 1s. 84, 
Singleton {2 15. Off, Hambleton 
Liz. r1pt. Thus for each £100 con- 


ing the Rihb-e. 
feats of ss 
of the district ; 


the Preshvteran Class of 1646 were 
Eiwa-d 1) «ss of Wesham and Richard 
Wikins of Kirkham. 


They levied contribu- 
mn, cattle, &c., from the people 
“glad was the country so 
ts be free of them, though most were 


giad at their coming.’ 


a whole has remained agriculturai, as the following 
figures will show !!+;— 


Woods 
Per- and 
Arable ma:cnt planta. 
land grass tions 
ac. ac. ac. 
Kirkham ‘ « Be 587 22 
Bryning-with- Acljsmoeeht 304 9044 3} 
Clifton-with-Salwick . - 7454 2,289} 103 
Eccieston — (Little) - with- 2634 Bry 7 
Larbreck 
Freckleton ‘ 44c2 1,782 — 
Greenhalgh-with- Thistleton 350} 1,498 413 
Hambleton : O4f 151324 — 
Medlar-with-W esham - 4849 1,284) 27 
Newton-with-Scules . - 167} 9803 — 
Ribby-with-Wrea. « 3614 9394 454 
Singleton : ‘ - 5812 1,980 103} 
Treales, Roseacre and 947} 2,905$ 63 
Wharles 
Warton : . + 172 Wligp 25 
Weeton-with-Preese -1,127$ «1,671 = g2h 
Westby-with-Plumpton 1,157} 1,920 82} 


742324 21,8684 617 


These figures are for Kirkham proper. 

The church of $7. MICHAEL™ 
stands at the north-east end of the town 
and consists of achancel 36 ft. by 28 ft. 
with south aisle and north organ chamber,!? nave 
86 ft. by $9 ft., and west tower and spire 12 ft. 3 in. 
square, all these measurements being internal. The 
building is entirely modern, the nave dating only 
from 1822, the tower and spire from 1844, and the 
chancel from 1853. ‘The former church |4 was prac- 
tically a rchuilding of the early 16th century, and 
consisted of a chancel, nave with north and south 
aisles under one roof, and west tower about 60 ft. 


CHURCH 


to have been confiscated for treason in 
1717, though some in Goosnargh were. 


" Lancs. and Ches, Antiq. Notey i, 
7 In Aug. 1/44 the royal treopsmus- 45-50. The imprisonment was by 
tered on Freckleton Marsh, thence cross- special Acts of Parliament, 10 & 11 


Will. III, cap. 13, renewed at the 
beginning of the reigns of Anne, George I 
and George II. 

Na Statistics from Bd. of Agric. (1905). 


The leaders, Lord 12'The church seems to be the St. 


tr-buted by the h ndred Kirkham proper 
had to raise {25 17s. §d. In addition 
Goosnargh paid £3 195. 1od., Newsham 
ye. u1gd. and Wh ttncham £2 7). 644. 

4 Trans. Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xa), 
173, &c. 

*In addition John Gaunt of Singleton 
paid £1 as composition for arrears and 
Edward Hankinson of Clifton (appa- 
rently a conformist) paid £2 for his 
grandmother's arrears. 

Occasional notices of the recusants and 
their ‘Sunday shillings’ occur in the 
town's books; Fishwick, Kirkham, 97, 
102, 107. 

® In addition to the local squires the 
Ear! of Derby had great estates in the 
par.sh. On the other s'de Major Edward 
Robinson of Euxton lived at Newton- 
with-Scales, and was an act!:e¢ officer; 
other Parliamentary officers were Wiliam 
Pateson of Rvbv, Richard Wilding of 
Kirkham, Richard Smith and George 
Carter of Hambleton ; while members of 


Moivneux and others, had their provi- 
sions from Meworeck Hall. Sir John 
Meldrum moved his troops at Penwor- 
tham and Preston to attack them, but 
they were delayed, and so arrived too 
late. ‘For more expedition command 
was given that horsemen should take 
behind them musketeers, who rid up 
speedily to Proud Bridze in Freckleton, 
where some remained. And coming up 
within musket shot of them killed one 
or two and the rest fled; but it being 
marsh ground and many pools and holes, 
nor very passable for strangers, there was 
not pursuit of them, so that all got over 
safely and marched up to the Meols’; 
Wear in Lancs. (Chet. Soc.), 56-8. 

5 Ibid. 53. 

9 Ibid. 38; ‘they thought all the Fylde 
country were their enemies.’ This was 
in 1643. In 1648 a ‘thievish regiment’ 
from Durham was quartered at Kirkham 
by Cromwell ; ibid. 67. 

10 No estates in Kirkham proper seem 


144 


Michael's named in Godfrey the Sheriff's 
charter of 1093; Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R, 
270. The invocation also appears from 
the Clifton case in 13373 Fishwick, 
op. cit. 35. 

1 The organ is now at the west end 
of the south aisle, and the original organ- 
chamber is used as a choir vestry. The 
clergy vestry occupies the east end of the 
south aisle. 

14 A view of the old church forms the 
frontispiece of Fishwick’s Hise. of Kirk. 
ham (Chet. Soc.) ; a description is given 
ibid. 41-3. Anordinance as to the forms 
in 1606-7 will be found ibid. gs. 

The Clifton chapel (Fishwick, op. 
cit. 39) was perhaps at the end of the 
south aisle; it was about 1630 con- 
sidered to be the most recently built 
part of the church. At that t'me a 
“great flag stone which as is thought had 
been an aitar stone” was lying near the 
east wall, being used to make mortar 
u, on. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


high with embattled parapet and angle pinnacles.15 
The chancel was the width of the nave and south 
aisle and was under two roofs, and the nave was lit by 
dormer windows. The east end of the north aisle 
was the private chapel of the Westbys, and before its 
demolition there were galleries at the east and west 
ends and on the north side.1® 

The present wide, aisleless nave, which is in the 
Gothic style of the second decade of the last century, 
with tall single-light windows, is built on the old 
foundations. Its north-east corner is still known as 
the Westby chapel and retains the old square 18th- 
century pews, and there are galleries on the north, 
south and west sides. The chancel is in 14th- 
century style with a good five-light east window with 
reticulated tracery, and the tower is a rather florid 
example of modern 15th-century work built of Long- 
ridge stone, with a crocketed spire 150 ft. in height. 
The church was repaired and reseated in 1877, and 
the interior underwent a partial restoration in 1909. 
A few relics of the former building remain. Built 
on the inside of the west wall of the tower is a stone 
with the arms of Clifton, which was formerly in one 
of the tower buttresses, and a stone coffin and the 
plain octagonal bowl of a font, probably of 16th- 
century date, are preserved under the tower. ‘There 
is a very good 1 8th-century brass chandelier suspended 
by an elaborate wrought-iron rod ; and on the south 
wall of the nave is a monument of good Renaissance 
design to Thomas Clifton, son of Sir Thomas Clifton 
of Lytham Hall, who died in 1688. In the floor of 
the chancel are stones in memory of two former 
vicars, Richard Clegg (d. 1720) and Charles Buck 
(d. 1771). 

There is a ring of eight bells 1” cast by C. & G. Mears 
in 1846. 

The plate 8 is all modern, and consists of a set of 
two chalices, two patens and a flagon of 1845, pre- 
sented by Charles and Elizabeth Birley in 1853. 


Cuthbert Clifton in rg12 left 


of Lancaster by John when Count of 


KIRKHAM 


The registers of baptisms and burials begin in 
1540 and those of marriages in 1539, but the first 
volume, 1540 to 1628, is a copy made in the latter 
year, 19 

The earliest dated gravestone in the churchyard is 
of 1653. On thesouth side is a sundial on a fluted 
stone shaft, the name ‘ Noblett ’ alone being decipher- 
able on the plate. 

The church of Kirkham was no 
ADVOWSON doubt one of the three in Amounder- 
ness mentioned in Domesday Book. 
Together with its priests it was in 1093 given by 
Geoffrey the sheriff of Count Roger of Poitou to 
Shrewsbury Abbey,”? but in the following year by 
Count Roger himself to St. Martin ?! of Sées. It was 
about 1140 restored to Shrewsbury,” but in 1196 
obtained by Theobald Walter, he agreeing to pay 
the abbey 12 marks a year.23 The Crown usually 
presented to the benefice,”4 and in 1279 the advowson 
was acquired by the king from Theobald Boteler,™* 
and was soon afterwards given to the Cistercian Abbey 
of Vale Royal, near Northwich. After the Sup- 
pression in 1538 it was given to Christ Church, 
Oxford,?® which continues to hold the rectory, pre- 
senting the vicars. 

The vicarage seems to have been ordained when 
the church was given to Vale Royal 2”; by a further 
ordination in 1357 the abbot and convent were 
allowed to present one of their own monastery to the 
benefice, they paying him 40 marks a year, and he 
being responsible for the maintenance of the parson- 
age-house and the care of souls.?8 

As early as 1220 the church, or perhaps two- 
thirds of it, was valued at 80 marksa year.22 In 1291 
the rectory was taxed at £160 and the vicarage at 
£23 6s. 82.,,°° but on account of the destructive 
raid of the Scots in 1322 these amounts were reduced 
to £53 6s. 8¢. and £6 135. 4d. respectively.2! The 
Priors of Penwortham and Lancaster had shares of 


m. 16d.,95. Two years later Theobald 


‘£6 135. 4d. towards building of the 
steeple.’ 

16 Whitaker, writing about 1822, says: 
‘The present church is well repaired and 
handsome . . . there is not, however, a 
telic of anything sufficiently old or curious 
about the place to detain a topographer’ ; 
Richmondshire, ii, 436. 

The old bells were sold, In 1571 
‘the great bell had been taken down and 
a new one put up’; Fishwick, op. cit. go. 
A second bell is named in 1613 (ibid. 
95) and a clock was set up in 1612, 

18 The plate in 1601 consisted of ‘two 
old platters’ and a ‘communion cup with 
cowl of silver’; Fishwick, op. cit. 94. 
The books in the church at that time 
included a ‘prayer-book for the corona- 
tion’ and two copies of Foxe’s Acts and 
Monument. 

In 1641 the church was broken into 
and ‘the green covering for the com- 
munion table and all the other clothes in 
the [iron] chest stolen’; ibid. 102. 

19 In Fishwick, op. cit. (89-115), may 
be seen extracts of the records of the 
thirty sworn men who governed the 
parish, 
| 90 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 270. Various 
confirmations were given later. 

31 Thid, 290. : 

* Ibid. 276-83. In spite of this res- 
toration the church of Kirkham was 
included in a confirmation to the priory 


7 


Mortain, 1189-93 ; ibid. 298. See also 
the account of the religious houses, “.C.H. 
Lanes. ii, 167. 

® Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 2. Theobald Walter had 
already in 1194 had a suit with Adam 
the Dean of Kirkham and Richard the 
Clerk respecting the advowson; Curia 
Regis R. 2, m. 17d. 

In 1347 the Abbot of Shrewsbury 
alleged that the Abbot of Vale Royal was 
withholding the rent of 12 marks due to 
him from Kirkham. The defendant 
pleaded a release from the plaintiff dated 
30 May 1341, which was accordingly 
allowed ; Coram Rege R. 348, m. 41. 
See also Fishwick, op. cit. 32. 

21 The right of the heirs of Theobald 
Walter was acknowledged from time to 
time by the Crown, e.g. Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 
1203; Cal, Pat. 1232-47, Pp. 175. 

24a In 1270-1 Theobald le Boteler, who 
was the great-grandson of ‘Theobald 
Walter, claimed the advowson of Kirk- 
ham against the king, asserting that if 
the kings had presented they had done so 
on account of the minority of the heirs 
at the time ; Curia Regis R. 201, m. 19; 
204, m. 20. In 1277 Edward I, on a 
fresh vacancy, claimed the advowson 
against Theobald le Boteler, and also 
against Edmund the king’s brother, as 
lord of the honour; De Banco R. 21, 


145 


acknowledged the king’s right; Final 
Conc. i, 157. See also Cal. Close, 1272-9, 
- 546. 

235 The advowson of the church, with 
the chapels, was first granted on 5 Dec. 
1280, and was confirmed in 1287; Chart. 
R. 74 (9 Edw. I), m. 11, no. 885 81 
(15 Edw. I), m. 3, no. 8; Fishwick, 
op. cit. 211. A further confirmation of 
the abbey’s possessions was granted in 
1299, and in this it is stated that at the 
king’s request Honorius IV and Nicho- 
las IV had appropriated the church to 
the monastery; Ormerod,Ches. ii, 168-70; 
Dugdale, Mon. v, 709-11. In the abbey 
chartulary the grant from Pope Honorius 
is ascribed to the good will of Otes 
Grandison ; ibid. v, 706. The date is 
given as 1286 in Fishwick, op. cit. 30. 

28 The grant of the manor, rectory, 
&c.. of Kirkham and the chapel of 
Goosnargh was made in 1546; Pat. 
38 Hen. VIII. 

27 The vicarage is named in the taxa- 
tion of Pope Nicholas, 1292. 

28 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1870), ii, 484, 
citing the registers of the archbishop’s 
court. In 1378 the fruits of the church 
were sequestered because it was found the 
40 marks were not being paid by the 
abbey ; Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xxii, 
389. % Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 120. 

30 Pope Nich. Tax. (Rec. Com.), 307. 

51 [bid. 307, 337: 


1g 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


the tithes,™ 
reiu ed rates in 1341.% 


the vicarage at {21 15.8 


The same benefices were returned at the 
In 1535 the value of the 
rectory was estimated at £100 a year, and that of 
The rectorial tithes were 
usually let on lease. In 1650 the vicar received 
£80 a ycar ‘rom tithes and other dues as well as £50 
augmentaton from the Committee of Plundered 
M nisters.*’7 About 1717 the income was given as 
only £60, arising from the small tithes, Easter dues, 


The following have been incumbents :— 


Instituted 
GOUT Se, ve 
CeoTDEI 8 eo 
4 July 12130. 
G. T2225 


Richard ® 


Adam the Dean”? . . . .. . 
Walter de'Grep oe 4. we es 
Simon le Blund * 


William de York®. 2. 2. 1. ee 


Recrors 
Name 


. z + . ” 


12AG we Oe The King . 
29 Jan. 1246-7. Aymerde Valence” . . 2. 3 ‘ 
Co VOGT 2. Artaud de Sancto Romano“ . . = i 
c. T2580 ee Henry de Wingham’. 2.2 = « 3 ; 


33 Pope Nich. Tax. (Ree. Com.), 309 5 
the Penwortham share was estimated at 
£2 and that of Lancaster at £1 61. 8d. 
The former priory received 235. gi. in 
15353 /alor Eccl. (Rec. Com.), v, 232. 

S Ing. Nonarum (Rec. Com.), 37. The 
tithes of corn, &c., were thus valued in 
the several townships: Clifton, £3 61.5 
Newton, £2 §5.8./.; Freckleton, £3 15.5 
Warton, £2 $5. 84.; Bryning, £2 75. 84.5 
Ribby, £2 145. 4d.; Westby, £2 25. 4.4; 
Weeton, £2 7.84.5 Singleton, £3 14:.4.45 
Hambleton, £2 65.; Larbreck, £2.175.84.; 
Thistleton, £2 95; Wesham, £1 175. 44.5 
Treales, £3 145. 4d.; Kirkham, £2 1435 
Goosnargh, £6 135. 4d. ; Whittingham, 
£5 6s. 84.; Newsham, £1 61. 84. The 
ditference between the old and new 
taxations was accounted for by the omis- 
sion of the tithe of hay, &., about 
10 marks a year, small tithes, ob:ations, 
&c., pertain ng to the altarage 20 marks 
and the glebe of the church 10 marks; 
but the main deficiency was due to tie 
destruction and war of the Scots, viz. 
£80 a year. 

M Valor Eccl. (Ree. Com.), v, 274 (mis- 
printed 100s.). In 1540 the farm of the 
uthes of Kirkham produced £44, those 
of Goosnargh £-y 9s., and the manse 
£8 105.3; Dugdic, Man. ingly, 714. 

SValer Eccl. (Rec. Com.', v, 263. 
The manse was valued at 1s, tithes of 
wool and lambs £7, of hay, small tithes 
and Easter roll £14 91. 4d. The church 
dues paid by the vicar amounted to 
gs. 4d. 

% Fishwick, op. cit. 363 Cammciru. 
Ch, Sure. (Rec. Soc, Lancs. and Ches.), 
153-4. The family of Clifton of Westby 
an: Lytham have usually been lessees of 
all or fart. 

8 Tid 154-550 Prund. Mins. Acets. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 9, 96. 

5* Gastrell, Nanda Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), 
i, 414. There were four churchwardens 
chosen by the vicar and thirty men, viz. 
one yearly out of Treales or Weeton, one 
out of Clifton-with Saiwck, one out of 
Westby with Pumptons and the other 
out of the remaninz townshifs. 

39 Baines, Lancs. (e4. 1835:, iv, 385. 

40 Nfaeca. Dioc. Dir. 

‘1 Information of the Dean of Christ 
Church, Oxt. 

“@ He is called ‘de Kirkham’ and was 
fro>ably rector of the church and Dean of 


Am. ucderness ; Farrer, op. cit. 38, 424, 


366. He was concerned in the plea of 
1194 regarding the advowson already 
mentioned. A char.er of about the same 
date was attested by Adam the Deun, 
William de Kirkham and other ecclesi- 
astics, whi'¢ another was atte:ted by Simon 
and Wiliam chaplains of Kirkham living 
while Richard was rector there ; Cocker- 
sand Chartul, (Chet. Soc.), i, 335) 332+ 


Sce also the account im Purks. Arch. 
Journ, xxi, §9. 
4 Chancellor of England 1205 14, 


Bishop of Wercester 1214, Archbishop of 
York 1215-55 ; Dice, Nat, Biog.  Kirk- 
ham was one of the benefices given him by 
King John, who had the right of presen- 
tation by reason of the minority of the 
heir of The bald Walter; Dods. MSS. 
ex.ix, fol. 58 ; Curia Regis R. 204, m. 20. 

“Ko La Pat (Req Cris, 1024 
Simon Biund or B.undel was nephew of 
the Archbishop of Dulin. The king pre- 
ecnted t+ two-thirds only of the rectory, 
wh:ch he held (as above) on account of 
the wariship of the son and heir of 
Theobald Waiter ; Lancs. Ing. and Extent, 
i, 120. Henry de Loundres was Arch- 
bishop of Dubin 1212-285 Dur Nut 
Biog. 

© Richard rector of Kirkham occurs 
early in the time of Henry HII; for 
instance, he attested a charter in con- 
junction with Adam de Yealand, ‘then 
sheriff,’ ie. 1228-313 Lytham D. at 
Durham, 1a, 2 ae, 4 ae, Ebor. no. 40. 
See also Whalley Couch. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 
459; Lanc. Ch. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 4293 
Kuerden MSo>. ii, fol. 197. It is thus 
evident that he resided at Kirkham, but 
he was only a ‘clerk’ and had se-eral 
children, one of whom, Master Wiliam 
de Kirkham, also a clerk, seems to have 
been a man of standing in the district ; 
Lytham D. 2a, 2 ae, 4 ae, Ebor. no. 26; 
Cockersand Chartul, (Chet. Soc.), i, 217, 
&c, Another son, Jorian, had land in 
Goosnargh and Greenhalgh ; ibid. i, 240. 

It should be noticed that in one deed 
Richard is called conrector of Kirkham ; 
during the tenure of Simon le Biund he 
held the other third part of the rectory, 
and probably succeeded to the whole on 
Simon’s death ; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. & 5+, 
no. 27. Among the Lytham Priory 
charters at Durham is one attested by 
Simon Blund, rector of Kirkham, and 
Richard, rector of Kirkham; Misc. Chart. 
no. 477. 


146 


Patroa 


The King . 


and surplice fees; there was an old house with a 
customary acre of glebe belonging to it.” 
value of the small tithes advanced rapidly in the 
latter part of the 18th and the beginning of the 
1gth century, being £1,600 in 1835.” “The vicar's 
income is now returned as £400." 
Chapter of Christ Church have recently given the 
rectorial tithes of the present reduced ecclesiastical 
parish of Kirkham to the vicar." 


The 


The Dean and 


Cause of Vacancy 


res. W. de Grey 


: . res. W. de York 
res. A. de Valence 
d. A. de S. Romano 


48 Cal. Put, 1232-47, p. 156. In the 
February following the king notified that 
he had given the advowson of the church 
of Kirkham (as part of the possessions of 
the heir of Theobald le Boteler) to Richard 
Earl of Poitou and Cornwall, guardian of 
the heir; ibid. 175. Richard, king of the 
Germans, according to the later pleadings 
confirmed the presentation of William de 
York ; Curia Regis R. 2°4, m, 20. 
William was a prominent public official, 
one of the three custodians of the realm 
in 1242 and Bishop of Salisbury 1246-56 ; 
Dict. Nat. Biogs He was provost of 
Beverley in 124%, when the rectory of 
Kirkham was said to be worth 240 marks 
a year; Assize R. go4, m. 22. 

4 Cal, Pat. 1232-47, p. 4963 he is 
bere called son of the Count de la Meche, 
and elsewhere the king's brother, for 
Isabel, widew of King John, married 
Hugh Count of La Marche. He became 
Lishop of Winchester in 1250-1 and died 
12603; Dict, Nat. Biogs Aymer is named 
as rector in 1248 3 Close, 62, m. 10d, 

In a charter of about 1245-65 there 
occur among the witnesses ‘Il .obert and 
Roger, chaplains of the church of Kirk- 
ham’; L;)tham D, at Durham, 1a, 2 ac, 
4ac, Ebor. no. 54. 

* In the long statement regarding the 
advowson in 1277 it is recited that King 
John (as above) presented Walter de Grey 
and Simon le Blund, and that the latter 
died rector in the time of Henry III; 
also that Henry III presented William de 
York (cause of vacancy not state !), Aymer 
de la Marche, Artaud de Sancto Rumano 
(who died rector), Henry de Wingham 
and Henry de Gaunt; De Banco R. 21, 
m. 16d, 95. These presentations had 
been made by reason of minorities, except 
the last, when the king presented by 
reason of regality, the rector having been 
elected to the bishopric of London. 

Artaud de Sancto Romano was pre- 
sented to Shalfurd in 12413; Cal. Par. 
1232-47, p. 268. He is often named in 
the Patent Roll:, &c., being an officer of 
the Wardrobe. He seems to have die! 
about 1257; Excerpta e Rot. Fin. (Rec. 
Com.), ii, 252, 326. 

9 Cal, Par, 1247-58, p. 624. Henry 
de Wingham or Wengham was also a 
public official : kee;er of the Great Seal 
1255-9, Bishop of London 1264 62; 
Dict. Nat. Biog. He was also rector of 
Pre.ton 1256-62. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


KIRKHAM 
Instituted Name P 

c1259. - + ‘ok eae . Giant re. King oe 5 ae Th de Wingham 
22 Aug. 1277. . John de Kir a ee ee o, teattt ; 

c. ane : : . John de ee OB Os. alagl y Seiieeetic tes Els de Gaunt 

Vicars 
oc. 1331. . « Johnde Arden . , , . . , ne i 
oc. 1332-49 + Robertde Newton®* . . 2... —- ——- 
c1350. . . William de Slaidburn® . . . bee og ——e 
oc. 1357. + ~ William de Bolton®® . . . . , aes =e 
28 Aug. 1362 . Philip de Greenhul” . . . Ab, of Vale Royal . hee, 
oc. 1394-1401 Thomas de Hornby ®. . . , os ae’ 
Roger Diring . . . . . . . Ab. of Vale Royal 

28 Dec. 1418 . William Torfot5*68 . . | . , ¥. d. R. Diring 

g Sept.1420 . Mr. John Cottam®™ . . 2... + d. W. Torfot 

14 Mar. 1452-3 Edmund Lache® . . . . 3 . d. J. Cottam 


Richard Davy ® 
Thomas Smith * 
James Smith © 


oc. 1504. « 
cISIO. . 


C1542. . 
6 Sept. 1585 . 
17 Nov. 1591. 
20 Nov. 1594 . 
18 Aug. 1598 . 


22 Jan. 1627-8. John Gerard, M 


50 Master Henry de Gaunt seems to 
have succeeded Artaud at the Wardrobe ; 
Excerpta e Rot. Fin, (Rec. Com.), ii, 364. 

51 Cal. Pat. 1272-81, p. 227. The 
king having obtained the advowson pre- 
sented John de Kirkby, no doubt the 
Bishop of Ely, 1286-go ; Dict, Nat. Biog. 

52 He occurs as rector in 1290, 1292 
and 1297; De Banco R. 86, m. 2143 
Assize R. 408, m. 91, 10o1d.; Cal, Pat. 
1292-1301, p. 237. He must have been 
appointed before the appropriation of the 
rectory to Wale Royal. 

§3 He attested a Freckleton deed in 
1331; Kuerden MSS. iii, F 3. 

54 He attested deeds in Oct. 1332 and 
in 1349; Dods. MSS. cliii, fol. 73 
(J.P.E.); Kuerden MSS. iv, K17. He 
is named as vicar in a pleading in 1344 ; 
Assize R. 1435, m. 43. In the arch- 
deacon’s claim for dues it was alleged that 
the vicarage of Kirkham was twice vacant, 
on account of the plague, between 8 Sept. 
1349 and 11 Jan. 1349-50; Engl. Hist. 
Rev. v, 526. 

55 He was vicar early in 1354.3 Duchy 
of Lanc. Assize R. 3, m. ij. In 1357 he 
was described as ‘lately vicar’; ibid. 6, 
m.3d. He was Dean of Amounderness 
and appears to have been guilty of oppres- 
sion in his office, securing a pardon some 
time between 1354 and 1361; Dep. 
Keeper's Rep, xxxii, App. 344. 

5° This name is given by Fishwick (op. 
cit. 70) on the authority of ‘the records 
of the Thirty-men.’ He may be identical 
with Slaidburn. 

57 Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xxii, 387. 
This and some later institutions are given 
in Whitaker, Hist. of Richmondshire, ii, 437 
(from Torre), Greenhill (or Greenhalgh) 
was a monk of Vale Royal, 

big In 1394 Hornby (or Hernby) was 
going across the seas and nominated 
attorneys; Towneley MS. CC (Chet. 
Lib.), no, 392. His estate in the vicar- 
age was ratified in 1399 ; Cal. Par. 1399- 
1401, p. 3. He was plaintiff in 1401; 
Pal. of Lanc. Plea R, 1, m. 5 d. 

560 Raines MSS. xxii, 395. He was 
a priest, 

‘ 51 Ibid, xxii, 397 ; he was a priest. He 
1s named in various charters, &c.; Kuerden 
fol. MS. p. 383 (1422) ; Kuerden MSS. 


James Smith © . ; 
James Sharples, M.A.” 2... 
Nicholas Helme, Ge ae ls 
Arthur Greenacre, M.A. 2. . 


John Smith 
M.A.® . 


AO. oe ee Beh 


iv, K17 (1427-8); Pal. of Lanc. Plea 
R. 3, m. 284 (1441) 3 Fishwick, op. cit. 
51 (1450-1). 

In 1448 it was ordered that he and 
others should be put in prison till they 
should pay {£200 to the Abbot of Vale 
Royal; Pal. of Lanc, Plea R. 11, m. 
206, 

He seems to have had a son Peter in 
1429; Kuerden MSS. iv, K 18. His 
father was named William and his grand- 
father was John Cottam. 

62 Raines MSS. xxii, 379. He was 
vicar in 14583; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soc.), ii, 81. 

63 Kuerden MSS. iv, P121, no. 74. 
He founded a chantry or added to the 
endowment of the old one. A Richard 
Davy of Gonville Hall, Camb., became 
M.A. in 1495-6; Grace Book B (Luard 
Mem.), i, 82, 119. One of the name 
was rector of Norton in Norfolk in 1535 ; 
Valor Eccl. iii, 320. 

64 In areturn compiled in 1527 Thomas 
Smith is given as vicar for eighteen years 
past, having been presented by the Abbot 
and convent of Wale Royal ; his benefice 
was worth £40 a year; Duchy of Lanc. 
Rentals, bdle. 5, no. 15. He occurs as 
vicar in 1512; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
p-m. iv, no. 12. He was buried at Kirk- 
ham 23 Oct. 1541; Fishwick, op. cit. 
72, 122. 

William Stringer was ‘parish priest’ 
(curate-in-charge) in 15373 Wills (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 73. 

65 A Precipe was addressed to the Bishop 
of Chester and James Smith, clerk, on 27 
Mar. 1542, that they should permit Miles 
Spencer and William Wright to present to 
the vicarage, then vacant and in their 
gift; Pal. of Lanc. Writs Proton. (67, 34 
Hen. VIII). From this it seems that 
Smith was already in possession. His 
name appears in the visitation lists of 
1548, 1554 and 1562. He was buried at 
Kirkham 11 July 1585; Fishwick, op. 
cit. 73, 124. For church goods in 1552 
see Chet. Misc. (new ser.), i, 4. 

66 Some of the institutions and notes 
have been taken from Baines’ Lancs. 
(ed. Croston), v, 361-2, and Fishwick’s 
Kirkham, 73-87, where notices of the 
different vicars will be found. The records 


147 


Ab. of Vale Royal . . 


Christ Ch., Oxf 2... 
John Sharples . 
Cuthbert Sharples. . . 
Christ Ch., Oxf... . 


eee 


d. A. Greenacre 


in the Diocesan Registry, Chester, have 
also been searched. 

John Smith of Stalmine Grange was 
patron in virtue of a grant by William 
Troutbeck, true patron; Earwaker 
MSS. 

87 Educated at St. John’s Coll., Camb., 
of which he was scholar; M.A. 1591; 
information of Mr. R. F. Scott. Buried 
at Kirkham 21 Sept. 1594. 

68 The patron presented in virtue of a 
grant from the Dean and Chapter of Christ 
Church, Oxf. dated 8 Dec. 1591. 
Nicholas Helme was educated at Brasenose 
Coll, Oxf.; M.A. 15853; Foster, 
Alumni. A complaint to the Bishop of 
Chester in 1598 (Visit. Papers) alleged 
that Helme was supposed to have come 
into the vicarage by simony, that he kept 
another man’s wife in his house under 
suspicious circumstances, that he refused 
to wear the surplice and ‘administered 
the wine as it came from the cellar, with- 
out any prayers or reverenc2,’ and that 
he was ready to minister the sacrament 
to a blind woman and another who ‘had 
beads in their hands’; Fishwick, op. cit. 
75. The charges may have been malicious 
merely, but Helme’s death would render 
inquiry unnecessary. He was buried at 
Kirkham, 16 July 1598. 

69 The patron was son of John Sharples. 
Greenacre was described as ‘a preacher’ 
in 16103 Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. 
iv, 9. He died in 1627, and his widow 
afterwards practised as a midwife, attesting 
a monstrous birth in or about 1646 ; 
Fishwick, op. cit. 79. The surname is 
given as Gatacre. 

70 Act Bk. at Chester, 1579-1676, fol. 
96. The institutions from this time have 
been compared with those in the Institu- 
tion Books, P.R.O. as printed in Lancs. 
and Ches. Antig. Notes. 

John Gerard compounded for first-fruits 
23 Feb. 1627-83 Lancs. and Ches. Rec. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 412. He 
appears to be the John Gerard of Christ 
Church, Oxf. (M.A. 1615), who was 
beneficed in Norfolk in 1630; Foster, 
Alumni Oxon. He is said to have ‘ex- 
changed with Mr. Fleetwood, who passed 
over to his son’ (son-in-law) ; note in the 
Reg. by Vicar Clegg. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Instituted 
17 July 1630 
1650 + | John Fisher” 


31 Mar. 1663 


Edward Fleetwood, M.A... . 


Name 


20 June 1666 Richard Clegg, M.A. 2. 2. we 3 
1o June 1720 =. «William Dickson, BA. 2. 2... re 
7 July 1744 . Charles Buck, M. APe 2 4 - is 

g Aug. 1771 . Humphrey Shuttleworth, M. Ae ‘ 

18 Jan. 1813. . James Webber, D.D.“ . ‘ ~ 
15 Dec. 1847 . George Lodowick Parsons, M.A. 78 : 33 
24 Aug. 1852 . William Law Hussey, MA” . % 
1862 . George Richard Brown,M.A.% . . i 

15 June 1875 . Henry Williams Mason, M.A. i 
20 Nov. 1902 . Welbury Theodore Mitton, M.A.*? 3 


It will be observed that the early rectors, presented 
by the kings, were as usual busy public officials who 
discharged their duties by deputy, and that the dona- 
tion to Vale Royal was probably of advantage to the 
parish, as giving it a permanent and properly paid 
vicar instead of a stipendiary curate. 
however, do not seem to have been of more than 
local importance, and even since the Reformation, 
while the advowson has been held by Christ Church, 
Oxford, none of them calls for special mention. Before 
the Reformation the due service of the parish church, 
chantry and chapels at Lund, Singleton and Hambleton 
This was the staff 


would require five priests.* 


71 For pedigree see Dugdale’s Visit. 
(Chet. Soc.), 111. Fleetwood com- 
pounded for first-fruits 29 Oct. 1630. 
He had various quarrels with the parish- 
ioners and bishop. He seems to have 
been a Puritan, ‘sometimes’ omitting to 
use the surplice, though he said the Litany 
regularly thrice a week. In 1634 the 
sum of 45. 3d. was ‘paid for the exercise 
and for the moderators and the preacher’ ; 
Fishwick, op. cit. 98. ‘Exercise days’ 
are again mentioned in 1646; ibid. 102. 
He readily conformed to the Presbyterian 
discipline in 1646 (Baines, op. cit. i, 228) 
and signed the ‘Harmonious Consent’ 
in 164%. 

In 1646 he published, under the title of 
Strange Signs from Heaven, an account of 
the strange birth above mentioned. A 
parishioner, Mr. Hoghton, ‘a great Papist 
and of great parentage,’ and his mother- 
in-law ‘did usually ecotf and mock the 
Roundheads, and in derision of Mr. 
Prynne and the others cut off the cat's 
ears and called it by his name’; his wife 
also, being pregnant, wished that rather 
than be a Roundhead, or bear one, her child 
might have no head, which monstrosity 
was accordingly borne by her ; Fishwick, 
op. cit. 78—9. 

2 Fisher had been minister of Bispham, 
and was regarded as ‘a go: ly and orthodox 
divine,’ succeeding Fiestwood (whose 
daughter he marr.ei) at Kirkham in or 
before Feb. 1650-1, when the £50 out of 
Thomas Clifton’s sequestered tithes was 
confirmed tohim; Plusd. Mfins. Acces. i, 
39, 96. He conformed at the Restoration 
and died in possession 18 Mar. 1665-6. 

It is a token of his conformity that in 
1662 a font was ‘put up’ at a cost of 
£2 155. 4.4.3 Fishwick, op. cit. 105. At 
the same time the king’s arms and the 
Commandments were piinted. 

‘8 Educated at University Coll, Oxf. ; 
MuA, 26694 Forte, Aloe, He is 
chiefly known for his violent oppssition 
to Cuthbert Harrison, the Nonconformist 
minister at Elswick ; he had also disputes 


These vicars, 


remain.®” 
curate.®8 


w.th his parishioners. ‘There is extant a 
letter from him dated 1684, in which he 
complains that the Quakers, ‘the most 
incorrigitle sinners that I know,’ had 
opened a burial-ground, and desires that 
the sheriff may be informed ; Hist. MSS. 
Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 146. He was 
‘conformable’ in 1689; ibid. 229. He 
founded a charity for the poor at Kirk- 
ham, and also established a school and a 
loan fund at Todmorden. There is a 
monument to him in the church, 

™ Educated at Christ Church, Oxf. ; 
B.A. 1701; Foster, .f/umn:. The name 
is also spelt Dixon. 

7 Educated at Christ Church, Oxf. ; 
M.A. 17363 Foster. On his epitaph in 
the church he is described as ‘most famous 
for piety ani learning.’ His son Charles 
was curate of Lund (d. 1808) and had 
among othrr issue a son Henry Rishton 
Buck, lieutenant 33rd Reg., who fell at 
Waterloo ; Fishwick, op. cit, 131-2. 

76 Educated at Christ Church, Oxf. ; 
M.A. 1760; Foster. He was also vicar 
of Preston 1782-1809 ; see the account 
of that church. He was buried in the 
chancel of Kirkham Church. 

7 Educated at Christ Church, Oxf., 
becoming tutor and censor; M.A. 1796; 
D.D. 1829. He was vicar of St. Mary 
Magdaicn, Oxf., 1803, Prebendary of 
York 1812, Dean of Ripon 1828, and 
had other preferments a: various times ; 
Foster, Alumni. He vigorously asserted 
his rights, recording hie esti taction at 
making the vicar ‘as he ought to be, the 
first person in the place.’ He procured 
the rebuilding of the church (the cost 
being borne by a rate, and raised the 
vicar’s income from £250 to over £1,600 
a year; but in the opinion of his parish- 
ioners he grossly neglected his duties, 
being non-resiicnt and rendering no 
additional service for the increased income, 
and they petitioned Parliament on the 
matter; Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1870), ii, 
486. 

“s Educated at Christ Church, Oxf., 


148 


Patron 


Christ Ch., Oxf... 


- {christ Chew. 9. % 


recorded at the bishop’s 
1554; butin 1562 only the vicar and two others are 
named, and the vicar alone seems to have conformed 
fully to the Elizabethan requirements.® He had 
apparently been brought up under the Reform of 
Henry VIII and accepted all the changes made by the 
civil power, holding the benefice till his death. No 
zeal can be looked for in such cases,® and the three 
chapels appear to have been left to decay, but it may 
be noted that the organ in the church was allowed to 
The vicars appear usually to have had a 
In the Commonwealth time additional 
places of worship seem to have been provided, but it 


Cause of Vacancy 
res. J. Gerard 


E. Fleetwood 


Webber 


d. 
2 as! so ede 


visitations in 1548 and 


of which he was student ; M.A. 1834. 
Incumbent of Bensington 1835. 

79 Educated at Christ Church, Oxf., 
of which he was student; M.A. 1837. 
He was hon, canon of Manchester 1856 
and rector of Great Ringstead 1862-88. 

40 Educated at Christ Church, Oxf. ; 
M.A. 1841. Incumbent of Maiden 
Bradley 1851-62. 

51 Educated at Christ Church, Oxf. 
of which he was student; M.A. 18651. 
Incumbent of Wigginton 1858-75, hon. 
canon of Manchester 1887. He died 
20 June tgo2. 

“4 Educated at Pembroke Coll., Camb.; 
M.A. 1888. Formerly beneficed in 
Canada; vicar of Pecl 1899-1902. 
Some details in the text and notes are 
due to him. 

58 At an inquiry made in 1362 it was 
stated that in the church of Kirkham 
there used to be of right two priests 
celebrating daily and serving the parish, 
which ‘chantries’ had been withdrawn 
by the Abbot of Vale Royal, one of them 
thirteen years before and the other a year 
ago; Ing. p.m. 36 Edw. III, pt. i, no. 
120. 

#4 Lists at Dioc. Reg., Chester. 

8) The vicar, James Smith, appeared 
and subscribed. William Nickson secms 
to have stayed at home and Lawrence 
Kempe appeare! but did not subscrib-. 

“© He may be the vicar who in 1581 (?) 
reported the presence of two seminary 
priests in his parish ; Baines, Lancs. (ed. 
1868), i, 180 (from Harl. MS. 360, fol. 

2). 

: Y tn 1576 for ‘dressing the organs’ 
2s. was paid, and in 1643 ‘for organ 
pipes, which had been pulled asunder by 
the soldiers,’ 3s. 4d.; Fishwick, op. cit. 
91, 102. The parish clerk in 1572 and 
1576 was ordered to teach singing ; ibid, 
lie 

- % Curates are noticed in the registers 
in 1596, 16728, 161g, &c. ; see also Afi. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Chet), 1, 68, 
124% 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


was not till the 18th century that chapels at Hambleton, 
Lund, Singleton and Warton are found to be regu- 
larly used for service.® 

A report made to the Bishop of Chester in 1669, 
probably by the vicar of Kirkham, gives a lively 
account of the conditions ecclesiastical :— 


There are three sorts of conventicles, viz. Papists, Quakers, 
and Fanatical or Mixed Multitude. Of the Papisrs there are 
two conventicles very visible at Westby Hall, rented by one 
Mr. Butler, the supposed priest, whither resort some hundreds. 
Another at Mowbreck where Mr. Hughson (alias Whaley) 
sojourneth with Mrs. Westby and, as is more than said, 
officiates as priest there. At Mr. Gervase Clifton’s of 
Plumpton, as is said, is set apart a place or chapel for 
Romanists, but since Mr. Hughson’s abode at Mowbreck it’s 
not so much used. At Salwick Hall, it’s said, the Romanists 
out of Preston have their meetings. In Great Singleton they 
be generally papists, but have not their conventicles so fixed, 
but have two or three supposed priests. There hath usually 
been a conventicle of Quakers at one Brewer’s house in or near 
Little Eccleston, Of the Fanatical party there was a conventicle 
at Lund chapel on Sunday in last Lent assizes by Mr. John 
Parr ; and either for that or the like offence the next Sunday at 
Heapa chapel, it’s said, he is to answer at the next assizes. 
There was another conventicle held by one Hartley, a York- 
shireman and lately a weaver and now an Antinomian speaker. 
He usurped the pulpit at Kirkham in the absence of the 
minister. He hath also held many conventicles at Goosnargh, 
the vacancy of which chapel gives the Nonconformists encourage- 
ment to meet there since the expiration of the Act against 
conventicles, The factions plead indulgence because of the 
indulgence of the papists and their experience that church- 
wardens’ presentments are but laughed at.% 


Dr. William Grimbaldson in 1725 left £500 for 
the maintenance of daily morning and evening prayers 
in the parish church, and these have accordingly been 
maintained ever since, for the donor ordained that 
should the prayers be neglected the income of his 
fund was to be given to poor housekeepers of Treales.9! 
The visitation returns of the 18th century afford 


In the 1610 list (Hist. MSS. Com. of 4d. to the lord 


KIRKHAM 


various interesting particulars. In 1706 a return of 
the church furniture was made; it included two 
decent surplices, two communion cups and several 
flagons. In 1722 the vicar administered the sacra- 
ment of the Lord’s Supper on Palm Sunday, Good 
Friday, Easter Day, Whit Sunday, St. Jamestide, 
Michaelmas, Martinmas, Christmas and Shrovetide. 
The 1,177 families in 1755 were thus classified: Of 
the communion of the Church of England, 868 ; 
Popish families, 269; Protestant Dissenters, 40. 
There were church rate contests in 1849 and later, 
the Nonconformists refusing to pay.” 

At St. Mary’s altar a chantry was founded by one 
of the Clifton family.®? Its endowment consisted of 
burgages and lands in Kirkham, Warton, Freckleton, 
Newton and Bilsborrow, and in 1547 amounted to 
£5 13s. 1d. clear per annum.*! Thomas Primett was 
the incumbent in 1535 % and until the Suppression. 
He was sixty years old in 154.8, and noted as ‘ decrepit ’ 
in the visitation of that year. He lived on until 1564 ; 
his will has been printed by the Surtees Society.%8 

Detailed official inquiries into the 
charities of the parish were made 
in 1824 and 1902-3 ; the report of 
the latter, issued in 1904, contains a reprint of the 
former.” The principal Kirkham charity is the 
grammar school, with an income of £1,260, and 
there are small educational endowments in many of 
the townships. There are also some special endow- 
ments for the parish church and the chapel at Lund. 
For the poor generally there exist funds producing 
£31 4s. 8d. a year distributed in money, in coal, 
&c.98 

The township of Kirkham has a United Charities’ 
Fund of £27 145. a year, distributed in medical relief, 
in money and in kind” ; also other sums amounting 


CHARITIES 


extinguished in 1898-9 by a transfer of 
consols to the official trustee. 


of Penwortham and 


Rep. xiv, App. iv, 9) no chapel except 
Goosnargh is mentioned. Hambleton 
may have been an occasional exception, 
asa curate there is named in1611. The 
vicar and the schoolmaster are the only 
clergymen named in Bishop Stratford’s 
visitation list in 16913; Chester Dioc. 
Reg. The chapels named in the text 
were in use in the time of Bishop 
Gastrell ; Notitia Cestr. ii, 422, &c. 

% Visitation papers at Chester Dioc. 
Reg. 

51 The benefactor is described as M.D., 
of St. Dunstan’s in the West, London. 
He ordered that the prayers were to be 
at 11 am. and 5 p.m. in summer and 
11 am. and 4 p.m. in winter ; End. Char. 
Rep. 

" Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. i, 98- 
100. 

% Raines, C hantries (Chet. Soc.),21 3-16. 
Earlier ‘chantries’ are named in a pre- 
ceding note, This chantry was named in 
1527 as in the gift of William Clifton, 
the annual value being estimated as 443 
Duchy of Lanc. Rentals, &c., bdle. 5, 
no. 15. 

In 1492-3 Richard Davy and others 
were enfeoffed of various lands—appa- 
rently the chantry property—of the gift 
of James Clifton and Richard Davy, in 
order to establish (faciant) a fit chaplain 
to celebrate at the altar of B. Mary 
for the souls of Richard Davy, his rela- 
tives and all the parishioners of Kirkham ; 
Kuerden MSS. iv, K 18, 

“The gross rental of the chantry 
lands was £6 os. 11d., but quit-rents 


7s. 6d. to the lord of Kirkham were pay- 
able. 

For a dispute as to the chantry lands 
in 1567 see Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), 
ii, 327. 

% Valor Eccl. (Rec. Com.), v, 263. 
William Clifton in 1537 bequeathed 
£3 6s. 8d. ‘to the church of Kirkham 
towards emending of our Lady’s work,’ 
and four cows to ‘the stock of our Lady 
of Kirkham’ to pray for his soul, and 
desired his executors to be ‘good masters’ 
to Sir Thomas Primet, whom he styled 
‘my chantry priest,’ and to whom he 
left 6s. 8d. ; Wills (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), 71-3. Thomas Clifton in 1551 
left a cow ‘towards our Lady’s stock’ ; 
Piccope, Wills (Chet. Soc.), iii, 76. 

96 Richmond Wills,171. He desired to 
be buried at Lytham, but left his surplice 
to Kirkham Church. The bequest of 2s. 
to the light of St. Nicholas in Lancaster 
Church shows how imperfectly Elizabeth’s 
reformation had then been carried out in 
Lancashire. 

97 The details here given are derived 
from this report. The Goosnargh 
charities are given separately. 

98 Henry Colborne, a native of the 
parish and afterwards a scrivener in 
London, by his will in 1655 left money 
to purchase lands, a rent-charge from 
which was to be applied to schools and 
to the poor. The share of the poor was 
soon afterwards fixed at £5 Ios. a year, 
which is given to the townships in rota- 
tion, and used by the overseers in a 
variety of ways. The rent-charge was 


149 


Edward Robinson and others, apparently 
trustees, invested £80 in 1648 in land in 
Freckleton ; 50s. a year of the rent was to 
be paid to the minister of Lund, and the 
rest given to the poor of the parish. 
In 1824 the benefits were in practice 
confined to Clifton and four adjoining 
townships. The present income for the 
poor is £17 155., and it is divided among 
the townships or hamlets of Kirkham, 
Freckleton, Newton-with-Scales, Clifton- 
with-Salwick, Treales, Warton, Weeton 
and Wrea Green, and given in money or 
kind to the poor. 

The Bread Charity represents a com- 
bination of benefactions, and goes back 
as far as 1670; it seems to have been 
due to the suggestion of the vicar, 
Richard Clegg. The present income is 
£5 955 of which the vicar gives £2 125., 
and is spent on a distribution of penny 
loaves every Sunday after morning service 
at the parish church, and on various 
holidays. The number of applicants is 
very small. 

Mary Jones, widow, in 1827 left £100 
for an annual Christmas gift to poor 
widows. The income is £2 tos. 8d., 
which is given in coals to widows in 
the townships of Kirkham and Wesham 
—the modern ecclesiastical parish. The 
vicar and churchwardens have charge of 
the distribution, but no difference is 
made on account of creed. 

99 Richard Brown in 1641 gave a rent- 
charge of £1 on his land and Mrs. Clegg 
and Mrs, Sayle (before 1734) gave £20 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


to £8 os. 3d. a year given in money.!% Bryning- 
with-Kellamergh has a special fund of {2 125. 6d. a 
year's Freckleton, £1 35.'7 ; Medlar-with-Wesham, 
£2 105%; Ribby-with-Wrea, {2 12s. 6¢.'*—all 
given in money ; Treales, Roseacre and Wharles, 
£13 105., which may be distributed in several ways  ; 
Warton, {£3 155. 8¢.'%; Westby-with-Plumpton, 
10s. 8¢.'"”—both distributed in goods; Hambleton, 
£2'; Greenhalgh-with-Thistleton, £6 65."; and 
Little Eccleston-with-Larbreck, £1 1os."—all in 
money doles. Two or three charities have been 


lost: 

KIRKHAM 
Chicheham, Dom. Bk.; Kirkeheim, 1196; 
Kirkeham, c. 1200; Kirkam, 1260; Kirkham, 
1271, 


This township, which contains the church, is com- 
paratively central for the main portion of the parish. 
It has an area of 857 acres,’ and the population in 


1901 numbered 3,693. The surface is generally 
level ; the highest ground is in the centre and at the 
west end—here 100 ft. above sea level is attained— 
and it slopes away to the north and east, forming 
a slight valley, through which the boundary brook 
flows. 

The principal road is that from Preston westwards ; 
along it the town is built, as it descends from the 
Mill Hill on the east, rises, falls and rises again to 
the Willows at the west. A road branches south to 
Freckleton, from the old market square, and another 
north to the church. Further west is the road leading 
to the railway station in Wesham. The market cross 
was demolished about a hundred years ago.’ 

The town had in 1825 manufactures of sail-cloth 
and cordage, and also of fine and coarse linen; 
and the cotton manufacture had been introduced.* 
This last has continued to expand, and affords em- 
ployment to the majority of the people. 

The soil is boulder clay, sand and gravel, overlying 
red marls. 


each for the poor, Land was purchased 
and the bailiffs of the town have ad- 
ministered the income —sometimes irregu- 
larly. Some of the land has been sold 
and the proceeds, with accumulations, 
are now represented by £628 consols. 
The gross income is £27 145. and it 
may be applicd, under a scheme of the 
Charity Commissioners made in 18y, 
in various ways—subscriptions in aid of 
hospitals, provident clubs, &c. ; provision 
of nurses, outfit on entering a trade, 
eupriy of food, fuel, clotucs, &c., or 
money grants. 

jw Evizabeth Brown in 1739 left 
£40 on trust for poor widows. The 
interest has been distributed in small 
money gifts. The capital, now amount- 
ing to £48 145, has been paid over to 
the official trustee. 

Wiiam Harrison’s gift of £149 for 
Bibles and other religious books, for 
poor people in Kirkham and L ttle 
Ecclestun-with-Larbreck, is now applied 
to school prizes, &c. 

Mary Bradkirk in 1816 gave £100 for 
five poor persons of Kirkham, members 
of the Church of England and regular 
attenders of the parish church. The 
fresent income, £2 125. 64., is distri- 
buted accordingly. 

A sum of £180, trust money of un- 
known origin, was in 182 invested for 
the benefit of poor widows. The income 
is £5 33. 9.4, which is given in small 
sums to between fifty and sixty widows, 

Jel This was a gift of the above-named 
Mary Bradkirk. The income is divided 
among five poor persons ; attendance at 
Warton or Wrea Green Church is a 
qualification, in accordance with recent 
ecclesiastical arrangements. 

12 This sum appears to be due to 
ancient gifts by Andrew Freckleton ani 
others, once charged upon the Marsh, 
and to a rent-charge of 10s. on a close 
called Swainson Butts. The former gift 
is now provided for in this manner: 
‘There are 2324 cattle gates on Fre.k e- 
ton Marsh, but in practice 231 are let 
yearly, the rents received being paid into 
the general fund . . . except that of the 
odd half-gate, which is now paid to the 
parish council As it represents nothing 
eorpsreal ond only exists as a fiction for 
the sake of this charity it is not asse:sed 
fur rates, &c., like the other cattle gates.’ 


The rent varies from time to time. The 
doles are given on St. Thomas’s Day and 
vary from 6d. to 4s. 6d, 

13 This charity was in existence in 
1789. It is the income of two cattle- 
gates on Freckleton Marsh purchased 
with the original endowment said to have 
been given by Thomas Thompson and 
William Crookall. The moncy is dis- 
tributed on St. Thomas’s Day to about 
forty poor persons. 

1 This is another of Mary Bradkirk’s 
benefactions, simijarto that | r Kirkham, 
It is given to fve poor persons in equal 
shares. 

MS William Grimtaldston, M.D., in 
1725 left £302 for binding out poor chil- 
dren of Treaics as apprentices; £400 for 
the master of Kirkham Sch: «!, provided 
he had been irei at Westminster, Win- 
chester or Eton, o- in default for appren- 
ticing, as before; £50 for clatsics, fur 
Kirkham School; £500 for the saying 
of daily prayers in Kirkham Church, or 
in default fur poor housekcepers born in 
Treales ; £50 for books for poor children 
of the parish belonging to the Church of 
England. The money was invested in 
land, and, as there were few applications 
tor apprenticing, a school was foundcd in 
Treales. The gift for daily prayers 
remains as directed; the rest of the 
income is now devoted to Kirkham 
Grammar School. 

Ellen and John Bolton in 1657-8, 
James Porter and his brother in 1729 
and others gave money for the poor which 
was invested in a house and land at Cat- 
forth in Woodplumpton. The rent, now 
£13, is administered under a scheme 
made by the Charity Commissioners in 
1899. The scheme, however, is prac- 
tically disregarded, and the net income is 
divided on St. Thomas’s Day among poor 
persons belonging to the hamlet of Treales, 
Old ‘charity money’ of £15, supposed 
to be the gift of one Bridgett, is now 
represented by {20 in Kirkham Savings 
Bank. The income (10s.) is given in 
doles of 15. or 15. 6d. to poor people of 
Whories. 

106 Mrs. Mary Southworth in 1870 
bequeathed £200 for the benefit of the 
school and scholars of the Established 
Church of England at Wharton. The 
portion for the scholars is spent on clogs 
for those who attend most regularly. 


150 


107 Anne Moor of Westhy in 1805 left 
the residue of her estate, £40, for the 
school and the poor. ‘The capital is now 
invested in consol:, and the poor’s moiety, 
formerly distributed in kind, seems for 
many years to have been allowed to 
accumulate. 

8 This was a rent-charge on Lent- 
worth Hall and other lands made by Sir 
Nicholas Shireburne in 1706, The 
charge was in 1868 placed upon a farm in 
Hambleton, and since its sale has been 
paid by the purchasers of the difterent 
portions. It ts collected by the vicar and 
churchwardens and distributed at Uhrist- 
mas among about ten poor families. 

109 Mary Hankinson, a benefactor of 
Esprick School, also bequeathed £200 in 
1805 for the benefit of the poor of that 
hamlet. In 1g01-2 there were only two 
poor persons in Eeprick, and the money 
was paid to them in monthly instalments. 

One Lawrenson, of date unknown, 
left {£20 to the poor of Greenhalgh. 
This sum was invested in the highways, 
but only £12 has been repaid; the 6. 
interest is divided among the two or three 
poor persons in the hamlet. 

19 Tn 1697 William Gillow of Little 
Eccleston charged a close called Porter's 
Harlow with a rent of 10s. a year for the 
poor of the township, and George 
Gillow in 1720 added 20s. a year from 
the same land. The 30s, continues to 
be paid to the overseers, who distribute 
it in doles of 4s, to 7s, among poor widows 
and others. 

11 For Kirkham generally and Freckle- 
ton there was in 1824 a rent of 6s. due 
to a gift of Elizabeth Clitherall in 1675, 
and another rent of 275. of unknown 
origin. This was given in moncy doles. 
The rent-charges have long ceased to be 
paid owing to disputes as to liability and 
as to the lands charged. 

Mrs. Nightingale (before 1786) pave 
£10 for the poor of Hambleton. The 
money was spent on paving a lane. 
Interest was paid until 1885, when the 
auditor disallowed it. It appears that 
the £10 would have been repaid to the 
vicar and churchwardens a: trustees, if 
these wardens had not oppoted it, fearing 
loss of interest. 

1 Including 2 acres of inland water. 

7 Lanes. and Che:. Antiz. Soc. 1x, V5 4. 

§ Baines, Dir. 1825, i, 655-6. 


The market has long been obsolete. The dates 
of the fairs have been changed from time to time; 
there are now three cattle fairs—4-5 February, 
28-9 April and 18-19 October. 

The court-house and police station is in Freckleton 
Street ; the workhouse of the Fylde Union (1844) is 
at the west end of the town. 

Kirkham and the district were visited by the plague 
in 1631.5 

Halfpenny tokens were issued in 1670 and 1671 
by Kirkham traders.§ 

In 1754 there was a ‘chalybeate water called 
Humphrey’s Spa’ to the north of the town.” 

The cucking-stool was used at Kirkham.8 

A football match used to be played in the streets on 
Christmas Day in the afternoon.° 

The printing press is said to have been in use in 
the town about 1790.10 

‘The town hall or moot hall was destroyed by fire 
some eighty years ago [c. 1810]; it formerly stood in 
the market place. The ground floor was occupied by 
shop-keepers, and part of the upper story was used as 
a flax-dressing room, the remaining space being taken 
up by the large room in which the town’s business 
was transacted. ‘This room was approached from the 
outside by a flight of stone steps.’!1. The urban 
district council meets in Station Road. 

Zachary Langton, third son of Cornelius Langton 
of Kirkham, born 1698, and educated at the local 
grammar school and at Magdalen Hall, Oxford, 
acquired some reputation as a divine, publishing an 
essay Concerning the Rational Human Soul. He died in 
1786. ‘Thomas Parkinson, likewise born at Kirkham 


4TIt was in 1825 held on Thursday, &c. 
according to the charter. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


The abbot in 1314 claimed a mes- 
suage, 2 oxgangs of land, &c., against 


KIRKHAM 


(1745) and educated there, became Fellow of Christ’s 
College, Cambridge, and Archdeacon of Huntingdon 
and Leicester. He distinguished himself as a mathe- 
matician, and was elected F.R.S. in 1786. He died 
in 1830. Philip, son of Humphrey Shuttleworth 
vicar of Kirkham, was born in the town in 1782. 
After education at Winchester he went to New College, 
Oxford, becoming warden in 1822. ‘This dignity 
he held till he was made Bishop of Chichester in 
1840, He wrote against the Tractarians. He died 
in 1842.2 
In 1066 KIRKHAM, like the whole 
MANOR parish, was part of the fee of Earl Tostig ; 
it was assessed as four plough-lands.!3 This 
probably included Wesham and other hamlets, Kirk- 
ham proper }4—the later township—being no doubt 
then or soon afterwards a rectory manor, held by 
the clerks or others responsible for the church, and 
it always descended in the same way as the rectory, 
the history of which has already been recorded. The 
Dean and Chapter of Christ Church, Oxford, leased 
the manor to the Cliftons of Lytham,!® but in 1871 
the manor and part of the land were sold to Thomas 
Langton Birley.!” No courts are held. 
Soon after receiving Kirkham the 
BOROUGH Abbot and convent of Vale Royal in 
1296 constituted a free borough there. 
The burgesses were to have a gild, with gaol, pillory 
and cuck-stool and other means of punishing male- 
factors, the assize of bread and ale, and other liberties 
of a borough ; their bailiffs were to be presented to 
the abbot. Perquisites of the courts, stallage and 
other dues were reserved to the abbey.8 A charter 


18 A bad copy of the original charter is 
printed by Fishwick, op. cit. 209-10. A 


5 Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 47- 
There were about 200 burials in August 
and September 1631, the only ‘Mr.’ 
being one Henry Clifton (26 Aug.). 

5 Lancs. and Ches. Antig. Soc. v, 79+ 

TPococke, Travels through England 
(Camd. Soc.), ii, 6. 

8 Fishwick, Kirkham (Chet. Soc.), 205. 

9 Ibid. 206, 

10 Loc. Glean. Lancs. and Ches. i, 31. 

Nl Fishwick, op. cit. 25. 

2 Accounts of these three worthies 
may be seen in the Dict. Nat. Biog. 

18 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 2882. 

44 From the boundaries of the manor in 
168: it appears that Kirkham proper was 
assessed as 18 oxgangs of land ; Fishwick, 
Op. cit. 21. 

16 This seems clearly implied- by the 
wording of Sheriff Godfrey’s grant (1093) 
to Shrewsbury Abbey of ‘the church which 
he used to have in the demesne of St. 
Michael [of] Kirkham, with the priests 
and the land which pertains to them’; 
Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 270. In later 
charters it is merely the ‘church’ of Kirk- 
ham which is named; later no ‘manor’ 
occurs apart from the church. 

In 1246 William de York, provost of 
Beverley and rector of Kirkham, secured 
the acknowledgement that an oxgang of 
land in Kirkham held by Robert son of 
William de Kirkham and another held 
by Alan de Newton were not lay fees but 
free alms pertaining to the church ; Final 
bi (Rec, Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), i, 103, 
106. 

_ The Abbot of Vale Royal was plaintiff 
in several cases in 1292 in respect of sums 
owing to him; Assize R. 408, m. 30, 34, 


Adam son of Henry de Blackburn and 
Alice his wife ; De Banco R. 204, m. 136. 

16 Fishwick, op. cit. 25. The Cliftons 
had usually been lessees of the rectery 
and manor. The Abbot of Vale Royal in 
1526-7 gave William Clifton a receipt 
for £16, rent of the manor of Kirkham ; 
Kuerden MSS. iv, K 18. In 1582’Thomas 
Clifton, in right of a grant from the 
Abbot of Vale Royal, claimed certain per- 
quisites of the court of the manor of 
Kirkham against Richard Davy ; Ducatus 
Lanc. (Rec. Com.), iii, 109. 

A lease of the manor to Thomas 
Fleetwood of Calwich in 1601 is printed 
in Porter’s Fylde, 374. 

A rental of the lands in Kirkham, as 
well as an account of the tithes (1508-9) 
belonging to the abbey, is preserved in 
Towneley’s MS. OO. 

17 Information of the Dean of Christ 
Church. Formerly the rectory and manor 
were leased separately, the terms being 
twenty-one years in each case. The last 
leases, granted in 1850 to Thomas Clifton, 
were not renewed. Another part of the 
land was in 1871 sold to George Wray 
and the remainder, together with the 
rectorial tithes of Kirkham proper, was 
annexcd to the vicarage under Acts 
29 Chas. II, cap. 8 and 1 & 2 Will. IV, 
cap. 45. At the same time several 
annexations of tithe-rent charges were 
made to various district churches. 

For the Birley family see Burke, 
Landed Gentry, T.L. Birley, the purchaser 
of the manor, died in 1874 and was suc- 
ceeded by his son Mr. Henry Langton 
Birley, who is said to be the present lord 
of the manor. 


151 


17th-century translation is in the posses- 
sion of W. Farrer. No confirmation by 
the Crown is known. 

In 1330 the community of Kirkham 
rendered an ox to the abbey ; Ormerod, 
Ches. (ed. Helsby), ii, 167. 

The burgages are constantly mentioned. 
In 1375 a burgage in Preston was ex- 
changed for one in Kirkham ; Kuerden 
MSS. iv, P 118. John de Slaidburn and 
Alice his wife had a burgage settled upon 
them in 1407; ibid. K 17. In the same 
year John de Bradkirk granted a parcel 
of his burgage to Robert son of John the 
Smith, wh ch burgage he had had from 
Adam de Newton. The parcel was a 
corner at the south end adjoining a bur- 
gage called the Kilnyard. The deed was 
attested by the bailiffs Robert de Myer- 
scough and John the Smith; Earwaker MS. 
Christopher Singleton in 1560 claimed a 
burgage and land called ‘an oxeon’ 
(oxgang) against Lawrence Singleton and 
others 3 Ducatus Lanc. ii, 232, 233, 296. 
See also ibid. 262, 277. 

Several extracts from the bailiffs’ records, 
1680-1743, are printed in Fishwick, op. 
cit. 20-5. Various payments are recorded 
“for his freedom within the borough of 
Kirkham.’ At the court leet of Oct. 1681 
Thomas Hodgkinson was steward and 
there were fifteen jurors ; two bailiffs were 
appointed, a serjeant, constable, galdlayers, 
burleymen, prisers, leather-searchers and 
flesh and fish viewers. ‘The seal of the 
borough is a dove with an olive branch in 
its mouth. The original seal is stillin the 
possession of the bailiffs, but is not in 
a perfect state of preservation’; ibid. 


25. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


for a weekly market and a fair at Midsummer had been 
granted to the town by Edward I in 1287.9 
In 1599 the mayor and burgesses of Preston, in 

virtue of their charters, which granted all the toll and 
stallage of the wapentake of Amounderness, complained 
that they had been defrauded of their dues by the 
bailiffs of Kirkham. The bailiffs in reply quoted their 
charters, and stated that the Abbot and convent of 
Vale Royal had had, in addition to the Midsummer 
fair, another fair at St. Luke’s Feast (viz. 17-21 


October), by prescription.” 


‘Formerly the fee-farmer convened annually a jury 
of thirteen inhabitants who constituted a court leet 
and met in June, when they nominated two bailiffs 
for the borough, a constable for the borough, town 
and township, with tax-layers, viewers of fish, flesh 
and other provisions; scavengers, by-law men, affeerers, 
swine-ringers, pinders or pounders, assizers of bread 
and beer, and leather searchers. The lord himself 
The bailiffs and twelve 
or more burgesses constituted a corporation.’*! A 
court of requests was granted in 1770, and used to 
meet monthly for the recovery of small debts. 


appointed a collector of tolls. 


19 The market day was Thursday and 
the fair was for five days at Midsummer, 
23-7 June. The charter is known from 
the abbot’s reply in 1292 to the writ ‘de 
quo warranto,’ and from the copy in an 
inspeximus of 1401 ; Plac. de Quo Warr. 
(Rec. Com.), 383 5 Cal. Pat. 1399-1401, 
p- 508. This inspeximus is printed in 
Fishwick, op. cit. 13. In 1292 the abbot 
claimei various privileges for ‘his men’ 
at Kirkham on the ground of a charter 
given to Vale Royal in 1269-7¢. 

In 1498 the abbot proved his right to 
the market and fair; Pal of Lanc. Plea 
R. 86, m. 6. 

The charter was confirmed by Queen 
Elizabeth in 1560. 

® Duchy of Lanc. Plead. Eliz. clxxxix, 
P53 cxciv, P13. For decrees see Lancs. 
and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc, Lanes. and 
Ches.), ii, 238, 242. 

31 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1870), ii, 484. 

® Act of 10 Geo. III. 

B Lond, Gas. 13 Jan. 1852. 

% A public lamp lighted with oil at the 
town’s charge was ordered to be erected 
‘in the middle of the borough of Kirkham 
in some convenient place’ in 16923 
Baines, op. cit. 487. 

25 See a preceding note. In 1259-60 
Richard le Boteler claimed the custody of 
the son and heir of Ralph de Kirkham 
against Roger de Hetton ; Curia Regis R. 

166, m. 36. 

% The list of those who contributed to 
the subsidy in 1332 is printed in Exch. 
Lay Subs. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
-1, No freeHolders are mentioned as Sof 
Kirkham’ in 1600. 

37 The mill seems to have been held in 
shares. In 1326 Adam son of Richard 
the Harper and Maud his wife claimed a 
fourth part of the mill of Kirkham 
against the Abbot of Vale Royal; De 
Banco R. 260, m. 218. 

William Cottam (or Cotom) in 1442 
claimed the third part of the mill against 
Robert son of William Cottam ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Chan. Mise. 1/10, no. 7. Some 
deeds of the family are preserved in 
Kuerden MSS. iv, K 7, 18. From these 
it appears that Nicholas son of Adam 
Aldwayn in 1372 gave a tenement in 
Kirkham to John son of Thomas 

con of Henry de Cottam. John de 


town. 


in 1839.74 


A local board was appointed in 1852,%° and this 
was in 1894 transformed into an urban district council 
of nine members. There was no school board. The 
Fylde Rural District Council holds its meetings in the 
Kirkham and the district around are supplied 
with water by the Fylde Water Board; the gas 
supply is in the hands of a private company, formed 


Kirkham occurs as a surname, but in mediaeval 
times there does not seem to have been any important 


resident family.*® The mill was held by the Cottams.2” 


1844.32 


Cottam in 1391 acquired a messuage 
from Thomas Southwood and Cecily his 
wife ; Finzl Conc. iti, 38. Again, Richard 
son ot Michael de Staining and Christiana 
his wife in 1356 granted a burgage 
in Kirkham to Adam Skillicorne, and 
Edward Skillicorne in 1399-1400 gave 
it to Wilam Cottam; Kuerden, loc. 
cit. William’s lands were in 1427-8 
settled on his children Robert, James, 
Joan, Amice and Margaret, while two 
years later John Cottam, vicar of Kirk- 
ham, gave a half-burgage to his father 
Wiliam with remainders to Robert, 

James and William sons of William, to 

Peter son of John Cottam, to Amice, 

Joan and Margaret, daughters of William. 

From another deed it appears that the 

vicar was a grandson of John Cottam, 

who was no doubt the John mentioned 

in 1322: 

Alice widow of William Cottam in 
1435-6 released her dower in Kirkham, 
Freckleton, Newton, Warton, Bankhouses 
and Goosnargh to her son Henry ; and in 
1446-7 William son of Henry Cottam 
made a feoffment of his lands; ibid. 
Margaret daughter of John Cottam, clerk, 
had in 1463 a burgage which was to 
descend to Wiliam Cottam, and (in 
default) to the right heirs of William son 
of John Cottam. Roger son of James 
Cottam in 1489-0 released to William 
son of Henry Cottam all right in a tur- 
gage, &c. 

8 The following appear in the inquisi- 
tions : 

James Anderton of Euxton in 1552 
held his lands in Kirkham of ‘New 
College’ (Christ Church), Oxford, in 
socage by a rent of 15d.5 Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p-m. ix, no. 145 xi, no. 31. 
He had purchased them in 1532 from 
Rainbrown Robinson and Elizabeth his 
wife ; Pal of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 11, 
m. 85. : 

Evan Brown's burgages, &c., were in 
1545 said to be held of the king, but 
George Brown's, in 1567, were held of 
the Dean and canons of Christ's Coll., 
Oxf., in socage, by a rent of 144.5 Duchy 
of Lane. Ing. p.m. vii, no. 24 5 X'y NO 435 
xiv, 0. 42. 

The Kirkham lands of John Boteler 
of Rawcliffe were in 1502 stated to have 


152 


Many of the neighbouring gentry had burga 
jan in the town? sae aon 

William Walker, attorney, had his estate sequestered 
by the Parliament for adhering to Charles 1.2% James 
Lowde recorded a pedigree in 1664.9 Thurstan 
Whalley of Warton registered an estate at Kirkham 
in 1717, being a ‘ Papist.’ 3! 

The parish church has been described above. 

The Wesleyan Methodist church was built in 
The Congregationalists’ first chapel, Zion, 
was built in 1810 and the next in 1818 ; the present 
church replaced it about 1900. 


been held (like Rawcliffe itself) of the 
Earl of Derby; ibid. iii, no. 45. The 
tenure is not recorded in later inquisitions, 

The Clifton of Clifton estate in Kirk- 
ham was in 1512 held of the abbey of 
Vale Royal, in 1551 and later of the king 
as of the dissolved abbey, and in 1585 of 
the Dean and Chapter of Christ Church ; 
ibid. iv, no. 12; ix, no, 18 5 xiv, no. 21, 
The ‘manor’ is not named in any of 
the inquisitions, William Clifton of 
Kidsnape also held of the abbey; ibid. 
Vv, No, 21, 

George Hesketh of Poulton died in 
1571 holding burgages, &c., of ‘the lord 
of Kirkham ' by the rent of 25. 6d. ; ibid. 
xiii, no. 15. In 1622 the same were 
found to be held of Cuthbert Clifton ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), iii, 364. 

The tenure of William Skillicorne’s 
messuages, windmill and lands (1600) is 
not stated. 

John Westby of Mowbreck in 1581 
held two messuages, &c., of the dean 
and chapter; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. 
xv, no. 6; Lancs, Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), 
i, 34. James Bradley of Bryning held a 
burgage and windmill similarly in 1617; 
ib:d. ii, 79. 

In addition Sir Robert de Pleasington 
held land in 1387 and William Ambrose 
in 1421; Final Conc. iii, 29, 79 5 Kuerden 
fol. MS. fol. 37+ 

99 Cal. Com. for Comp. ii, 1398. He 
had left his house at the beginning of the 
wars for Bangor in North Wales and had 
contributed voluntarily to the mainte- 
nance of the king's forces. He com- 
pounded in 1646, but the fine was raised 
to £220 on information that he had 
joined Prince Rupert in Lancashire, after 
professing penitence and being made an 
officer of Parliament. 

George Crooke’s leasehold estate was 
sequestered for his recusancy ; ibid. i, 724. 
3 Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 191. 

81 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjur:rs, 140. 

33 Hewitson, Our Counery Churcher, 3273 
the first attempt to establish Methodism 
wasa failure; the second, in 1841, re- 
sulted in the present chapel. 

3 Preaching commenced in 1805 na 
small room. ‘There is a memorial to the 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


The Roman Catholic church of St. John the Evan- 
gelist, at the Willows, represents the old mission at 
Mowbreck. ‘This was transferred to Kirkham in 
1809, when the chapel of Holy Cross, taken down 
in 1883, was opened. ‘The present church, designed 
by Pugin, was consecrated in 1845.54 There are 
registers from 1775. 


MEDLAR-WITH-WESHAM 


Middelarghe, Middelerwe, 1226; Middilhargh, 
1292. 

[hie 1203 ; Westeshum, 1262 ; Westesom, 
Westsom, 1292 ; Wessum, 1324. 

Bredekirk, 1249. 

Mulebrec, 1249 ; Molebrek, 1276. 

Wesham, with Mowbreck on the east, occupies the 
southern part of the township, having Medlar as a 
long prolongation northwards, and Bradkirk, which 
(though quite detached) is reckoned with Medlar, 
as a prolongation westward. The total area is 
1,9654 acres,! of which the two portions of Medlar 
furnish 1,079 and Wesham 8864. In 1gor there 
was a population of 1,826. The surface in general 
varies from 25 to 60 ft. above the ordnance datum, 
but there is some higher land on the west of Bradkirk, 
125 ft. being there attained. 

The principal village is modern, clustering round 
the railway station on the border of Kirkham. 
Through it go roads northward to Greenhalgh and 
north-west through Bradkirk to Weeton and Black- 
pool. The railway from Preston to Blackpool and 
Fleetwood crosses the township close to the southern 
border, having the station already named, which is 
called Kirkham and Wesham. From it the Lytham 
line branches off. 

There are two cotton factories. The soil is clayey ; 
wheat, oats and potatoes are grown, but most of the 
land is used for pasture. 


KIRKHAM 


The township is governed by a parish council. 
There are a lecture hall and concert room. 

None of the component parts of the 
township—Medlar, Wesham, Mowbreck 
and Bradkirk—is named in Domesday 
Book; in 1066 they were probably included in 
Kirkham and Greenhalgh.” Afterwards they were 
in the hands of different lords. 

MEDLAR was about 1180 held in thegnage by 
Roger de Hutton of Penwortham by a rent of 85. ; 
it was assessed as one plough-land.* He gave it to 
his daughter Cecily in free marriage with Benedict 
Gernet ‘+; she afterwards, as it seems, married Ellis 
de Stiveton or Steeton. She gave Medlar to the 
Knights of St. John about 1207, and they granted to 
Gilbert son of Roger son of Reinfred,® he in turn 
transferring it to the canons of Cockersand.* In 
1299 the Hospitallers confirmed the Cockersand 
right ; a rent of 25., instead of 15. 6¢., was to be 
paid to them, and 2s. also on the death or removal 
of an abbot.’ The canons retained possession till 
the Suppression,’ and in 1543 Medlar was granted 
by the Crown to William Eccleston of Great Eccleston.° 
In 1592 Thomas Eccleston had only a rent of 205. 
from lands there, the greater part having apparently 
been acquired by the Westbys of Mowbreck,! for in 
1557 William Westby held messuages in Medlar and 
a close called the Cornfield of the king and queen in 
chief by the fortieth part of a knight’s fee and a rent 
of 85.,)? i.e. the old thegnage rent. Land or rent in 
Medlar was re-granted to the Hospitallers by Queen 
Mary, as part of the Stidd estate,¥ and seems after- 
wards to have been acquired by the Shireburnes.!4 

WESHAM was in 1189 confirmed to Roger son 
of Augustin de Heaton by John Count of Mortain ; 
one part, assessed as 4 oxgangs of land, was held by 
a rent of 2s. yearly, due to the chief lord, Count 
John ; the other part, also assessed as 4 oxgangs, had 
been granted to Roger by Adam son of Adam Artwin,?® 


MANORS 


Rev. R. M. Griffiths, the minister from 
1816 to 1848. A full account is given 
in Nightingale’s Lancs. Nonconf. i, 92- 
103. 
34 Liverpool Cath. Annual, 

11,967 acres, including 7 of inland 
water; Census Rep. 1901. 

? Wesham was later reputed to contain 
two (or three) plough-lands and Medlar 
one (or half). The former was probably 
taken from Kirkham and the latter from 
Greenhalgh. 

8 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), i, 47 5 it was held by 
Ellis de Hutton son of Roger in 1212. 

_ ‘Ibid. She was living and in posses- 
sion in 1212, 

5 Robert the Treasurer, Prior of the 
Hospitallers in England, confirmed to 
Gilbert (son of Roger) son of Reinfred 
‘the whole vill of Medlar, i.e. one plough- 
land with all its appurtenances, &c., which 
we had by the gift of Cecily daughter of 
Roger, formerly wife of Benedict Gernet.’ 
Gilbert and his heirs were to pay 12d. a 
year to the knights on St. Oswald’s Day, 
half a mark as obit, and the 8s. a year 
due to the king; Cockersand Chartul. 
(Chet. Soc.), i, 170. 

Ellis de Hutton confirmed his sister’s 
grant to the Hospitallers ; ibid. 171. 

5 Ibid. 168 ; one plough-land in Medlar, 
the mill of Greenhalgh and the service of 
Adam de Cornay and his heirs. The 


7 


canons were to perform the service due to 
the king. The grant was made in or 
before 1216, when the king confirmed 
Gilbert’s grant to the abbey; Cal. Rot. 
Chart. (Rec. Com.), 218. 

Gilbert seems to have become the 
abbey’s tenant. He obtained a quitclaim 
respecting Medlar from Maud de Stiveton, 
daughter and beneficiary of Ellis de Stive- 
ton, and had granted his whole tenement 
to Reyner de Stiveton, guaranteeing also 
to pay the 8s. service due to the king ; 
Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 44.0-2. 

It was perhaps in consequence of this 
grant that an Ellis de Stiveton claimed 
Medlar in 1235, and on the Abbot of 
Cockersand calling William de Lancaster 
(son of Gilbert the benefactor) to warrant 
him Ellis resigned his right on being paid 
25 marks by William ; Cockersand Chartul. 
i, 169; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 63. 

7 Cockersand Chartul. i, 167 5 see p. 17% 
for the earlier agreement for 1s. 6d. rent. 

The canons obtained 3 oxgangs of land 
from Robert son of Ellis de Hutton, and 
another in 1271 from Eda daughter of 
Roger de Medlar, who had been enfeoffed 
by her father in marriage ; ibid. 172. 

This last grant is probably that referred 
to in a claim by Eda daughter of Roger 
de Furness in 12923 she alleged that she 
had demised an oxgang of land to the 
abbot’s predecessor for life in 1276, he 


153 


promising a robe yearly, which was with- 
held. The verdict was for the abbot; 
Assize R. 408, m. 96d. 

§ In 1324 the Abbot of Cockersand was 
stated to hold Medlar in conjunction with 
Newbigging or Singleton Grange ; Dods. 
MSS. cxxxi, fol. 40. In 1346 he held 
half a plough-land in Medlar in thegnage 
by a rent of 85.; Survey of 1346 (Chet. 
Soc.), 52. A similar tenure was recorded 
in 1445-6, but the abbot alleged that he 
held in pure alms; Duchy of Lance. 
Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, no. 20. 

In 1303 Adam son of Richard de 
Mowbreck claimed a messuage and half 
an oxgang of land in Medlar held by the 
Abbot of Cockersand ; De Banco R. 145, 
m. 95d. 

The Cockersand rentals 1451-1537 are 
printed in the Chartul. iii, 1264-5. 

9 Pat. 35 Hen. VIII, pt. ix, m. 11. 
The grant included a close called Cornfield. 

10 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xvi, no. 38. 

11 William Westby was defendant in 
1543 in various claims as to lands in 
Medlar lately of Cockersand Abbey ; 
Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), ii, 80. 

12 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. x, no. 17. 
A similar return is made in later inquisi- 
tions. 

18 Pat. 4 & 5 Phil, and Mary, pt. xiv. 

M Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. xxvi, 
no. 5. 

15 Farrer, op. cit. 437» 


20 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Five years later the whole plough-land was confirmed 


to Roger de Heaton by Theobald 


of 4s. being apparently unaltered.1® 
Roger’s heir in 1212,'7 and in 1262 a later Roger 
de Heaton was found to have held in chief of the 
king 8 oxgangs of land in Wesham, 2 in demesne 
and 6 in service, rendering 45. yearly.}§ 
passed to the lord of Mowbreck, who in 1557 was 
holding lands, windmill, &c., in Wesham of ‘the king 
and queen by the rent of 45.19; but the mesne lord- 
ship, like that of Mowbreck itself, 
Botelers of Ireland,”° perhaps in virtue of the grant 


Borerer. Ora chief 
indented azure. 


of Amounderness, and as an appurtenance of their 


lordship of Weeton was acquired 


16 Farrer, op. cit. 439. The homage 
and service of Alexander de Wesham was 
included. 

7 Lancs, Ing. and Extents, i, 48. Sabina 
widow of Roger de Heaton had dower 
from Wesham in 1203-4 3 Farrer, Lancs. 
Pipe R. 181. 

4S Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 231. The 
value was 16s, a year. 

19 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. x, 00. 17+ 

20 In 1286 William de Hoton (Heaton) 
was mesne tenant between Theobald le 
Boteler and Adam de Bradkirk ; Lancs. 
Ing. and Extents, i, 265. 

Two plough-lands in Wesham and 
Mowbreck were included in the Earl of 
Ormond’s estate in 1346; Survey (Chet. 
Soc.), 52-4. The two plough-lands may 
have been composed thus : Wesham, one ; 
Mowbreck, half ; Bradkirk, half. 

41 Sir John Stanley held the Boteler 
estate in 14313; Feud. Aids, iii, 95. 

The Derby rental (at Lathom) for 1522 
shows that 4s. was paid to the king as the 
free rent of the vill of Wesham. The 
tenants at will paid 44s. a year and eight 
hens (each worth 144.) The 45. paid to 
the Crown in 1557 by William Westby 
was no doubt the same rent, he being 
immediate tenant. 

21 In 1292 Thomas son of William de 
Greenhalgh claimed the third part of 
certain moor and turbary in Wesham 
against John de Sotehill and Denise his 
wife, William le Boteler of Warrington 
and others. Denise replied that she held 
in dower, of the inheritance of Christiana, 
daughter of Roger de Heaton, and that 
plaintiff had common of pasture and 
turbary. The father of the plaintiff 
married Alice daughter of Roger de Heaton 
(called Hoghton) and Roger gave her in 
marriage 3 oxgangs of land out of the 8 
he held in the vill ; Assize R. 408, m.45- 
From another pleading it appears that 
Denise was the widow of Roger. 

Thomas de Greenhalgh, John de 
Marays and John son of Roger de Brad- 
kirk brought a claim against William de 


STANLEY. Argent on 
a bend azure three stags’ 
heads caboshed or, 


Walter, the rent 
It was held by 


The estate 


was vested in the 


Wesham.”’ 


by the Stanleys.7! 


Heaton and others in 1334, but did not 
prosecute it ; Coram Rege R. 297, m. 122. 

James Greenhalgh died in 1559 holding 
messuages, &c., in Wesham of John 
Westby in socage, bya rent of 184. yearly; 
Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. xii, no. 23. 
The rent was the proportion of the 45. 
due for 3 oxgangs. George Greenhalgh 
grandson of James succeeded. 

William Westby in’ 1547 complained 
that James Greenhalgh and others had 
made encroachments on the waste of 
Wesham lordship 3 Ducatus Lanc. i, 231. 

28 Richard Mason in 1564 purchased a 
messuage, &c., in Wesham from George 
Greenhalgh and Agues his wife ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 28, m. 266. 
Gregory Mason purchased a messuage— 
perhaps the same—from Hugh Mason, 
Anne his wife and Margaret Mason 
widow in 15713 ibid. bdle. 33, m. 13. 
Gregory died in 1581 holding his land, 
&c., of John Westby by the rent of 18d. 
Cuthbert his son and heir was thirteen 
years old ; his widow was Ellen Pleasing- 
ton; Duchy of Lance Ing. p.m. xiv, 
no. §5. Cuthbert secured his inheritance, 
or made a further purchase, by agreement 
with James Greenhalgh in 1585 ; Pal. of 
Lane. Feet of F. bdle. 47, m. 104. 

Peter Mason ‘of Wesham’ was a 
recusant in 1607; Cal. S. P. Dom, 
1603-10, p- 383- Ralph son of Peter 
Mason ‘of Lathom’ in 1612 held, in 
addition to his father’s lands, a messuage 
and 40 acres of land, &c., in Wesham of 
Thomas Westby in socage by 18d. rent ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 237+ His heirs were two 
daughters. The estate may have passed 
to the Fleetwood family. 

4 The local surname was used. John 
son of Roger de Wesham wasa free tenant 
in 13303 Final Conc. ii, 78. In 1350 
Roger son of John de Wesham granted to 
Cecily daughter of Richard le Spencer of 
Newton, whom he married, an oxgang 
of land in the place for life ; Towneley 
MS. C85 (Chet. Lib.), Edw. III, no. 11. 


154 


The Earl of Derby remains the chief landowner to 
the present time. 
was held by the Greenhalgh family,-? but was sold 
to the Masons in the time of Elizabeth.” 
two other holders occur.*# 

MOWBRECK was trom an early time in the 
possession of the Botelers of Ireland.%% 
was held, like Wesham, by the Heaton family, the 
immediate tenant in 1286 being Adam de Bradkirk, 
who rendered 45. yearly,?* which continued to be the 
service due from the manor. 
on William de Heaton and 
Anilla his wife in 1328-30, 
the free tenants being Nicholas 
del Marsh, John de Bradkirk, 
Thomas de Greenhalgh and 
John son of Roger de 
About 150 years 
later the manor was held by 
one William Westby,?* per- 
haps by descent from Nicholas 
del Marsh, and in 1479 he 
settled it upon his son John 
and Mabel daughter of 
Richard Boteler. They had 
issue two daughters—Beatrice, 
who married Lawrence Pres- 
ton, and Alice—but John by a second marriage had 


For a long time part of Wesham 


One or 


Of them it 


The manor was settled 


Wistsy of Mow- 
breck. Argent on a 
cheveron asure three 
cinguefoils pierced of the 
feeld. 


William Aspinwall purchased a mes- 
suage, &c., in Roseacre and Wesham from 
the Earl of Derby and Lord Strange in 
15913 Pal. of Lance. Feet of F. bdle. 53, 
m. 209. Edward Aspinwall died at Toxteth 
Park in 1632 holding an estate in Rose- 
acre and Wesham of the king as of his 
duchy, by knight’s service; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxviii, no. 1. It seem 
to have descended to Edward Aspinwal 
of Hale in 1698; Pal. of Lanc. Feet © 
F. bdle. >yo, m. 116. 

Thomas Hesketh of Rufford in 152, 
held land in Wesham, but the tenure was 
not known; Duchy of Lance. Inq. p.m. 
v, no. 16. 

‘Mr. Robert Fleetwood of Wessum’ 
was buried at Kirkham 1g March 1641-2; 
Reg. A ‘Mr. Fleetwood’ was buried 
there 21 Oct. 1665 and Mrs. Mary 
Fleetwood 22 Aug. 1667 ; ibid. 

Richard Fleetwood of Rossall held 
Wesham Hall and the demesne lands in 
1696 ; Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.),11i, 252, 
quoting R. 5 of Geo, II at Preston. 

% In 1249 the land of Theobald 
le Boteler in Mowbreck and Bradkirk 
rendered 4s. yearly; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents, i, 172, 265. 

25 Ibid. 265. In 1276 Denise widow 
of Roger de Heaton complained that 
William de Heaton, Adam de Bradkirk 
and John de Goosnargh had broken her 
grange at Mowbreck ; De Banco R. 15, 
m. 58. 

A year later William de Heaton com- 
plained of waste by Denise in Wesham 
and Mowbreck ; ibid. 21, m. 74. 

37 Final Conc. ii, 78. This fine con- 
firmed a charter dated at Mowbreck io 
13263; Memo. R. (L.TR.)y 128, m. xy. 

In 1334 Thomas de Greenhalgh, John 
del Marsh and John son of Roger de 
Bradkirk were tenants; Coram Rege R. 
297, m. 122. 

33 One William Westby and Ellen ke 
wife had lands in Lancaster and Urswick 
in 14133 Final Conc. iii, 71. Ellen 
Westby, probably a widow, beld Burn io 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


a son William, who after various disputes obtained 
the manor from the Prestons.”® 

He died in May 1557 holding the manor of 
Mowbreck of the king and queen as of their duchy 
of Lancaster in socage by 4s. rent, and leaving a son 
and heir John, twenty-seven years old.*¥ This son 
proved one of the most uncompromising adherents of 
the old religion in the county. At the beginning 
of active persecution in 1568 he was summoned before 
the queen’s commissioners, and replied that he had 
‘not resorted to the church Sundays and holydays,’ 
as the laws of the realm required, nor ‘received the 
communion in such sort as by the laws he (was) like- 
wise appointed” ; he had entertained William Allen 
(afterwards Cardinal), not as a disloyal subject but 
regarding him only as a relative.*! He remained 
constant, and is found on the recusant lists as heavily 
fined.®? In 1585 he sent a petition to the queen 
asking for some consideration ; he was sixty years of 
age, he had lately paid (25 for the furnishing of a 
light horseman,** and his goods had been seized 
for a fine of £80, though his ‘ancient rents’ 
amounted to no more than {42 a year. He there- 
fore desired the queen to accept £10 or 20 marks 


KIRKHAM 


of the family estates; the heir was his son John, 
eleven years old. 

The younger John Westby died in 1605, and was 
succeeded by his brother Thomas, then nineteen 
years of age.*6 Thomas Westby, who recorded a 
pedigree in 1613 *” and paid £13 65. 8d. in 1631 
on declining knighthood,** died at Burn in Thornton 
in September 1638, leaving his son John heir to a 
somewhat diminished estate“? On the outbreak of 
the Civil War John Westby and his brothers espoused 
the king’s side,!° and his estates were sequestered and 
finally sold for his recusancy and delinquency by the 
Parliamentary authorities! The estate of his brother 
and successor Francis suffered a like fate,*? as did that 
of his half-brother George.“ 

Francis Westby succeeded in 1661, and recorded 
a pedigree in 1664, being then forty-four years of 
age.44 Mowbreck descended to his son Thomas *° 
and grandson John, who in 1717 as a ‘Papist’ 
registered his estates at Burn in Thornton, Mow- 
breck, Westby, &c., the Lancashire portion being 
valued at £230 6s. 14d. per annum.4® He left four 
daughters as co-heirs, and they or their representatives, 
after the death of his brother Robert in 1762, obtained 


as a composition.” 


Thornton in 1445-63; Duchy of Lanc. 
Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, no. 20. The 
William named in the text was probably a 
later member of the family ; for him see 
the pleadings of 1517-18 printed in Fish- 
wick’s Kirkham (Chet. Soc.), 172-4. It 
appears that John Westby died about 
1511, and that his son William was then 
under age. 

Writs of diem cl. extr. after the death 
of William Westby, probably the grand- 
father, were issued on 11 Mar. 1515-16 
and 1 Apr. 1517; Towneley MS. CC 
(Chet. Lib.), n. 754, 787. 

The surname Westby is derived from 
a place of that name in Gisburn, held 
of the Percys; Adam de Westby occurs 
in 1258 ; Yorks. Ing. (Yorks. Arch. Soc.), 
i, 70. 

29 The agreement was made in 15313 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 11, m. 102. 
William Westby was plaintiff, and Law- 
rence Preston and Beatrice his wife were 
deforciants. 

® Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. x, no. 17. 
In addition to Mowbreck he held lands 
in Medlar, Wesham, Kirkham, Newton- 
with-Scales, Burn in Thornton, Heaton 
and Urswick. Elizabeth his wife sur- 
vived him. 

William Westby’s will is printed in 
Richmond Wills (Surtees Soc.), go. He 
desired to be buried in his pew and under 
his form in Kirkham Church. He left 
the manor of Mowbreck to his son John, 
his wife having been provided for by the 
assignment of Burn Hall to her. 

81 Gibson, Lydiate Hall, 205, from 
S. P. Dom. Eliz. xxxvi, 2. 

A pedigree was recorded in 1567; 
Visit, (Chet. Soc.), 47. 

8? In 1586 he was liable to the fine of 
£260 a year; Gibson, op. cit. 238. In 
1582 his house had been one of the 
Tesorts of one of the missionary priests, 
a nephew of his; ibid. 222, quoting 
S. P. Dom. Eliz. cliv, 76. It is related 
that on one occasion he ‘was glad to 
stand for a whole winter's day almost 
in a pit of water up to the ears, and often 
forced to duck under the water lest he 
should be espied of the persecutors’ ; 


He died in 1591 in possession 


Allen, True, Sincere and Modest Defence of 
Engl. Caths. 173-4 (quoted in Month, civ, 
517). 

38 This was a special tax on recusants. 

54 Gibson, op. cit. 235, quoting S. P. 
Dom. Eliz. clxxxvii, 51. The peti- 
tioner had a wife and four children, of 
whom the eldest was under six years. 
He had elder daughters by a former 
marriage. 

35 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xv, no. 6. 
In addition to lands in Lancashire he also 
had the manors of Holmes, Duffield and 
Westby in Yorkshire, with lands there 
and in Gargrave, Thorpe, Settle, Gisburn 
and York. The tenures of Mowbreck, 
&c., were recorded as before. His will 
(recited in the inquisition) names his 
youngest son William, daughters Ellen 
and Mary and cousin William Haydock 
of Cottam. 

Anne his widow was a recusant in 
1593 3 Gibson, op. cit. 261. 

36 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lanes. 
and Ches.), i, 33-6. The tenures of the 
manors of Mowbreck, &c., are recorded 
as before. 

87 Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 90. Two of his 
sons, John and Thomas, were safely taken 
to Douay in 1623, but the attendant was 
captured at Dover on his return; Cal. 
S. P. Dom. 1623-5, p. 6. 

88 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 221, 

89 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvili, 
no. 42. The tenures of Mowbreck and 
Wesham were recorded as before. John 
Westby was aged twenty-nine. 

40 It is said that six of the brothers 
fought for the king; Misc. (Cath. Rec. 
Soc.), i, 128. In the 1664 pedigree it is 
recorded that one brother, Thomas, was 
killed at Preston on that side. This was 
‘the popish doctor, Dr. Westby,’ killed 
in 16433; Civil War Tracts (Chet. Soc.), 


ar Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 2634 5 Index 
of Royalists (Index Soc.), 44. Mowbreck 
and other manors were purchased by 
Thomas Wharton and James Lowd. 
Though most or all was recovered, the 
family were impoverished. 


155 


the Mowbreck estates.47 


Division and sales followed, 


42 Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 3124. 

43 Ibid. iv, 3138. George Westby of 
Rawcliffe was ancestor of the later 
Westbys of Mowbreck. In this way 
White Hall in Rawcliffe became the 
principal seat of the family. 

44 Dugdale, Visir. (Chet. Soc.), 331. 
Most of the details as to later descents 
in the text and following notes are from 
the pedigree in Foster’s Lancs. Peds. 

43 He was one of those charged in the 
‘Lancashire Plot’ of 1694; Jacobite Trials 
(Chet. Soc.), 16, 30, 33. He died in 
1699. Three of his sisters in 1681 sent 
40s. to the receiver of recusants’ estates, 
“which is’ (they state) ‘according to what 
we always paid since this charge was laid 
upon us’; Hist. MSS. Com, Rep. xiv, App. 
iv, 127. 

In 1688 John Westby son and heir- 
apparent of Thomas Westby of Mowbreck 
was contracted to marry Jane daughter of 
Christopher Parker of Bradkirk ; Piccope 
MSS. (Chet. Lib.), iii, 202, quoting 
2nd—3rd Roll of Geo. I at Preston. 

46 Estcourt and Payne, Eng/. Cath. Non- 
jurors, 14.7, 318. John Westby died in 
1722. 

John Westby was succeeded by his 
brother Thomas, who died in 1729, and 
was followed by Robert. In 1731 a 
Private Act was obtained (4 Geo. H, cap. 
29) by which the manor of Burn and 
lands in Thornton and Carleton were to 
be sold for the discharge of debts, &c. 
Several family deeds are recited in it. 

47 Foster, ut sup. The co-heiresses were 
Catherine wife of Alexander Osbaldeston 
(of Sunderland), Mary wife of Rev. Thomas 
Alderson, Anne wife of Rev. John Benison 
and Bridget wife of William Shuttleworth, 
whose only child and heir (Margaret) 
married Thomas Westby of Rawcliffe in 
1744. : 

In 1740 Robert Westby, having no 
male issue, settled his estates with re- 
mainders to the right heirs of Thomas 
his father ; Piccope MSS. iii, 194, quoting 
Roll 9 of Geo, I at Preston. Another 
deed (1756) states that Catherine mother 
of Alexander Osbaldeston was a daughter 
and co-heir of John Westby ; Robert, the 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


but part returned by marriage to Thomas Westby of 
Rawcliffe, a distant cousin.'* His estate descended to 
two of his sons,*? and then by will to the son of a 
nephew, George Westby,*! who was in 1842 
followed by his son Joscelyn Tate Fazakerley 
Westby.®2 It was in 1893 purchased from the mort- 
gagees by the Earl of Derby, the present owner.°? 
BRADKIRK,*™ though recently accounted as part 
of Medlar, seems always to have belonged to the lords 
of Wesham.*** It gave asurname to a family of long 
continuance in the district.6> Adam de Bradkirk 
died in September 1349 holding in conjunction with 
Ismania his wife the manor of Bradkirk of Edmund 
de Heaton by fealty and the service of 45. yearly. 
John his son and heir was only two years of age.*® 


Later the estate was held on lease of the Earl of 
Derby 5™ by the Parkers,*’ and in 165 3 was purchased 
by Christopher Parker.°® It did not continue much 
longer in his family, being sold in 1723. After 
passing through several changes it was again sold in 
1797 to Joseph Hornby of Ribby,*® and has since 
descended with his estates. 

James Hornby of Medlar, as a recusant, had part 
of his estate sequestered under the Commonwealth, 
and John Swarbrick of Wesham, as a ¢ Papist,’ 
registered his estate in 1716,% 

Christ Church, Wesham, was built in 1894 as a 
chapel of ease to the parish church of Kirkham. 

There is a Primitive Methodist chapel, 

During the times of persecution mass was said at 


brother, is named ; ibid. 370, from Roll 
32 of Geo. II. An indenture of 1769 
respecting lands, &c., in Wesham and 
Medlar was enrolled in the Common 
Pleas Hil. 10 Geo. III (R. 15); see also 
ibid. Mich. 13 Geo. III, m. 3 for the 
manor of Mowbreck. 

48 The descent is thus given: John 
Westby (d. 1638) -s. George (Rawcliffe) 
-s. John -s. John— s. Thomas, who had a 
brother George, as below. 

4" John, who died in 1811, and Thomas, 
who died in 1829, both unmarried. 

59 Thomas Westby, son of George, 
above-named. 

51 The pedigree in Burke’s Commoners, 
i, 597, after stating that George Westby 
had held office in Honduras, recorded 
that the family ‘is one of those ancient 
Catholic houses still numerous in Lanca- 
shire which through good and bad repute 
adhered to the faith of their forefathers.’ 
The tradition seems to have been ended 
by George Westby’s act, for ‘his widow, 
a recent convert, went to reside with her 
young family in London. Here she re- 
lapsed, and the children were not educated 
in the faith of their forefathers’ ; Gibson, 
op. cit. 205. 

52 Mr. Westby married in 1863 Matilda 
Harriett daughter and co-heir of H. 
Hawarden Fazakerley of Gillibrand Hall, 
near Chorley, and then assumed the name 
Fazakerley in addition to his own. 

53 Inform. of Mr. Windham E. Hale, 
who adds that a century ago the Mow- 
breck estate was held by four lords, all 
Westby descendants. On a division au- 
thorized by a Private Act in 1857 the 
hall and 331 acres became the property of 
J. T. Westby. The former estates of the 
family are now held chiefly by Lord 
Derby and the representatives of the late 
John L. Birley of Kirkham. 

“+The name was commonly spelt 
Bredkirk. 

‘ta The land of Bradkirk had before 
1189 been granted by Hervey Walter and 
Theobald his son to Roger son of Augus- 
tine de Heaton ; Farrer, op. cit. 437. In 
1249 the land of Bradkirk and Mowbreck 
had paid 4s. yearly to Theobald le Boteler ; 
Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 172, 265. This 
rent was in later times paid by Mowbreck 
alone. 

55 Adam de Bradkirk about 1230 gave 
lands in Elswick in marriage with his 
daughter Amabil ; Whalley Coucher (Chet. 
Soc.), ii, 459. He in 1235 purchased an 
oxgang of land in Wesham from Ellen 


widow of Richard de Rimington for which © 


he was to render 6d. a year; Final Conc. 
i, 72. He (or his son Adam) had also 
land in Greenhalgh in 1242; Lancs. Ing. 
and Extents, i, 152. Adam de Bradkirk 


was living in 1262, Roger in 1286 and 
another Adam in 12933 ibid. 231, 264, 
277. Adam de Bradkirk and Adam his 
son attested a charter c. 1260-70 ; Dods. 
MSS. liii, fol. 85, no. 24. Adam son of 
Adam de Bradkirk about 1250 confirmed 
land in Elswick to the monks of Stan- 
law ; Whalley Coucher, ii, 464. John son 
of Adam de Bradkirk made a grant in 
1281; Dods. MSS. liii, fo. 864, no. 45. 
Another John was a free tenant of Wesham 
in 1328-303; Final Conc. ii, 78. 

John de Bradkirk and Alice his wife 
had a grant from Lytham Priory in 1327 ; 
they had a son John, who was succeeded 
before 1344 by his brother Edmund and 
he by another brother Adam; see the 
account of Lytham. 

A little light is thrown on the descent 
by pleadings of 1349, in which Adam (son 
of John) de Bradkirk produced the charter 
granting his land, made by Roger son of 
Augustine de Heaton, to Adam the clerk 
son of Richard. This last-named Adam 
was great-grandfather (? ancestor) of the 
former, who then had a dispute with his 
superior lord as to the tenure, he alleging 
that he held by the service of 4s. only, 
while Edmund son of William de Heaton 
alleged that he held by the fourth part of 
a knight’s fee; De Banco R. 349, m. 
209 d.3 356, m. 353. 

*6 Ing. p.m. 28 Edw. III (2nd nos.), 
no. 14. Adam also held land in Green- 
halgh, Newton-by-Freckleton, Whitting- 
ham and Poulton. 

John died in or before 1363, when the 
wardship of the heir (his brother Adam), 
under age, was in dispute; De Banco R. 
413, m.81d.3 420, m.257d. An Adam 
de Bradkirk was verderer for Amounder- 
ness till 1384 ; Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxii, 
App. 356. Adam de Bradkirk (with 
Olive his wife) occurs in 1390 and 1398 ; 
Final Conc. iii, 35 ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 70. 

In 1401 John de Bradkirk granted to 
Robert son of John the Smith of Kirk- 
ham part of his burgage in that town ; 
Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xiv, 137. 
There are other Bradkirk deeds in the 
same volume. John de Bradkirk was 
living in 1420; Final Conc. iii, 86. 

William Bradkirk was described as of 
Greenhalgh in 1477; Pal. of Lanc. Writs 
Proton. file 17 Edw. IV. In 1492-3 
Philip son of William Bradkirk was 
ordered to hold with Sir Thomas Wolton 
a convention as to the manor of Bradkirk 
with messuage and land there, &c. ; ibid. 
Ric. III and Hen. VII. In 1479 was 
issued a writ of diem cl. extr. after the 
death of Roger Bradkirk; Add. MS. 
32103, no. 1417. 

564 Tt does not appear when the estate 


156 


was acquired by the Earl of Derby. It is 
not named in the rental of 1$22, but 
was owned by Edward, the third earl, in 
1570; Add. MS. 32104, fol. 415, 

87 John Parker of Bradkirk held by 
lease of the Earl of Derby in 1625. He 
was a recusant, and his estate was seques- 
tered by the Parliament and put in the 
act of sale, 1652, but as he was dead his 
infant grandson and heir William Parker 
(son of William) petitioned for discharge 
in 16523; Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 2445; 
Index of Royalists (Index Soc.), 43. It 
was perhaps the same John Parker of 
Radholme Laund in Yorkshire whose 
estate was sequestered for delinquency and 
recusancy in 1643. 

His son Christopher was in 1650 de- 
scribed as ‘of Bradkirk'; Cal. Com. for 
Comp. loc. cit. He was son of John by a 
wife Margaret, daughter of Anthony 
Parker, and had come of age in 1649, 
and, his father being dead, claimed 
relief. 

A pedigree was recorded by Christopher 
Parker of Bradkirk in 1664. It shows: 
William Parker, d.c, 1612 -s. John, d. 
1649 —8. (by second wife) Christopher -s. 
Anthony, aged seven; Dugdale, Visit. 
(Chet. Soc.), 227. 

58 This, like Mythop, Swarbreck and 
other lands in the neighbourhood, forme: 
part of the forfeited estates of the seventh 
earl sold by the Parliament ; Cal. Com. 
for Comp. ii, 1117. The purchaser 
agreed with Charles Earl of Derby to 
receive from him an absolute conveyance 
on paying three years’ value to him; 
Piccope MSS. iii, 126. From other 
deeds in the same volume (114-32) it 
appears that Christopher Parker made his 
willin 1693, and that the estate descended 
by 1710 to a son of the same name, who 
made a settlement of Bradkirk in that 
year. His sister and heir Catherine wife 
of Thomas Stanley of Cross Hall in 
Lathom in or about 1723 sold to Townley 
Rigby of Middleton in Goosnargh, and be, 
though a Quaker, claimed a seat in Kirk- 
ham Church in 1726 in right of Brad- 
kirk. 

59 The details are recorded in Fishwick, 
Kirkham (Chet. Soc.), 178-80, It appears 
that the real purchaser in 1723 was John 
Richardson of Preston, and Bradkirk 
descended in 1767 to Edward Hurst, 
whose initials ‘E. H. 1761,’ and ‘B. H. 
1764,’ appear on the buildings. He 
devised it to his sister Margaret and her 
husband James Kearsley, the vendor in 
1797. 

7 Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), iii, 261. 

61 Estcourt and Payne, Eng. Cach, Now 

Jurors, 135. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Mowbreck,® which remained the seat of the mission 
till 1809, when it was removed to the chapel opened 
at Kirkham. As an offshoot of this St. Joseph’s, 
Wesham Cross, was opened in 1886.8 


RIBBY-WITH-WREA 

Rigbi, Dom. Bk.; Riggebi, 1226; Rygeby, 1246; 
Ruggeby, 1249. 

Wra, 1226; Wraa, 1329. 

This township has an area of 1,387 acres! Wrea 
or Wrea Green is situated near the centre of the 
northern border, with Ribby to the east of it. The 
surface is higher and more undulating than in most 
of the neighbouring townships, rising to over 100 ft. 
above the ordnance datum in the centre and again in 
the north-east. There is moss land at the west end. 
The population numbered 475 in 1901. 

The chief road is that going west from Kirkham to 
Lytham ; it passes through both hamlets. From 
Wray Green cross roads go south to Warton and 
north to Westby and Blackpool. 

The soil is clayey, and wheat, beans and oats are 
grown, but three-fourths of the land is pasture. 

One of the Ribble guides used to be stationed at 


KIRKHAM 


‘There is a parish council. An infectious diseases 
hospital was opened in 1902. 
Among the members of Earl Tostig’s 
MANORS Preston fee in 1066 was RIBBY, assessed 
as six plough-lands,? so that it included 
the later townships or hamlets of Ribby, Wrea, 
Bryning and Kellamergh. It was afterwards held in 
demesne by Count Roger of Poitou, who in 1og4 
granted tithes from it to St. Martin of Sées.3 Ribby 
proper continued to be parcel of the demesne of the 
honour of Lancaster, and is named in the Pipe Roll 
of 1168-9,‘ and in later accounts as contributing to 
various aids.6 W’REA, however, which was separately 
assessed as one plough-land, was granted in drengage,® 
and was in 1212 held by Richard and Gerard by a 
rent of 65.7 They were probably ancestors of the 
families afterwards using the local name, of whom, 
however, few particulars can be given.’ Ribby, in its 
old form of Rigby, has also given a surname to 
families ® who came into notice in a number of places 
in Lancashire.!° 
In the time of Henry VIII and later there were 
disputes as to the right of pasture,!! and as to the 
bounds of the manors. 
Ribby and Wrea were usually farmed with 


Wrea. 


6? As in other cases practically nothing 
is known of the 17th-century history. 
The existence of the mission in 1669 is 
proved from the report to the Bishop of 
Chester already given in the account of 
Kirkham Church. For convicted re- 
cusants c. 1670 see Misc. (Cath. Rec. 
Soc.), v, 202. 

Robert Westby (d. 1762) is described 
in an anniversary book now at Kirkham 
as the founder of the chapel at Mowbreck, 
and a priest is known to have resided 
there in 1727. In 1774 there was also a 
private school. Ten years later Bishop 
Gibson confirmed fifty-five persons at 
Mowbreck, and the number of communi- 
cants was said to be about 180. See 
Liverpool Cath. Annual (Willows) ; Gillow, 
Haydock Papers, 68, 79. 

in 1769 was printed at Manchester 
‘The Recantation of William Gant, late 
a clergyman of the Church of Rome and 
for many years the officiating priest at 
Mowbreck near Kirkham ; with some of 
the causes which brought on his conver- 
sion to the Church of England.’ The 
Tecantation itself was read in Kirkham 
parish church before the vicar, &c.; 
Preston Guard. Loc. Notes, no. 320. 

58 Liverpool Cath. Annual. 

11,390 acres, including 7 of inland 
water; Census Rep. 1901. 

?V.C.H. Lancs. i, 288a. From the 
later records it would appear that there 
were three plough-lands in Ribby, one in 
Wrea, two in Bryning and one in Kella- 
mergh, or seven in all. 

8 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 290. This 
will account for the 26s. 8d. paid to the 
Prior of Lancaster, as recorded in the 
account of Kirkham Church. 

; ‘Tbid. 12. It contributed in con- 
Junction with Preston, &c. 

5 The king’s demesne of Ribby (three 
plough-lands) was in 1235 granted to 
Master John le Blund, king’s clerk, for 
life ; Cal. Pat. 1232-47, p. 93. In 1226 
Ribby paid half a mark tallage and 9s. to 
the farm of the wapentake ; Lancs. Ing. 
and Extents (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
4 135, 139. In the compotus of the 


Singleton. 


demesne in 1246-8 Ribby appears with 
£8 8s. 11dd. 3 ibid. 170. In 1248-9 in 
a tallage Ribby paid 1 mark ; ibid. 176. 
The ‘manor’ of Ribby is recorded in 
1256-8; ibid. 221. For other notices 
see ibid. 230, 287. The accounts of 
the halmotes of Ribby and Wrea in 1325 
are printed in Lancs. Cr. R. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), 94-5. 

§ For a time Wrea was held by the lord 
of Clifton (q.v.) in exchange for Salwick, 
but was exchanged back in 1200. 

7 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 51. Adam 
de Wrea and Gerard his brother in 1200-1 
gave the king 2 marks for confirmation 
of their tenements ; Ror. de Oblatis (Rec. 
Com.), 124. Wrea paid 6s. in 1226 and 
5s. tallage ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 139, 
135. In 1246-8 one plough-land and three 
drengages in Wrea contributed 19s. 6d. 
to the demesne rents, and the drengs of 
Wrea in 1248-9 paid tallage 20s.; ibid. 
170, 176. In 1256-8 the three dren- 
gages paid 39s. in all, and a new rent of 
213d. was accounted for; ibid. 221-2. 
Ribby and Wrea each contributed 2 marks 
tallage in 1261 ; ibid. 228. 

In 1297 the vill of Ribby and the 
free tenants of Wrea paid in all £19 115. 
yearly to the Earl of Lancaster ; ibid. 289. 

8 The above-named Gerard de Wrea, 
also Richard de Wrea and William his 
son were benefactors of Cockersand 
Abbey ; Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 228-9. 

In 1324 John son of Jordan del Wrea 
claimed a messuage, $ oxgang of land, 
&c., in Wrea against Adam son of John 
Sharples; De Banco R. 253, m. 98. 
Adam and John sons of John son of 
Jordan del Wrea were in 1329 defen- 
dants to a claim for a messuage and 
2 oxgangs of land put forward by the 
representatives of three sisters, of whom 
Agnes wife of Robert del Boot had a 
son Richard ; Margery was wife of John 
son of William son of Simon de Medlar, 
and Margaret was the other; Assize 
R. 427, m. 3; De Banco R. 278, m. 
117d, For the Boot family see also 
De Banco R. 309, m. 13 5 316, m. 459 3 


328, m. 324. 
157 


An extent of Ribby which was made in 


William del Bank unsuccessfully claimed 
two messuages, &c., in Wrea and Newton 
against Adam del Bank and others in 
13513 Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 1, m. 
viiid. In the following year Thomas 
Tauntaler of the Grenes did not prosecute 
his suit against John son of Richard de 
Newton, who seems also to have been 
called John del Wrea; ibid. R. 2, m.j5 
Assize R. 435, m. 4. 

It was recorded in 1618 that John 
Nickson of Kellamergh held a cottage 
and land in Wrea of the heirs or assigns 
of William de Wrea by 14d. rent; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), ii, 88. 

9 In 1311 there was a dispute between 
William son of Anabil de Preesall and 
Thomas son of Robert de Rigby regarding 
waste in Ribby ; De Banco R. 184, m. 3. 

As in Little Hulton, Duxbury, 
Wrightington and Goosnargh. 

11In 1517 inquiry was made, when it 
was found that the free tenants of Wrea 
had always had right of pasture on Ribby 
Moor; Towneley MS. OO (Singleton 
rental). 

12 Duchy of Lanc. Dep. 1 Mary, lxvi, 
Rs5. John Benson and James Davy, 
queen’s farmers of part of Ribby, Cuth- 
bert Clifton of Westby and the lords of 
the manor of Kirkham were the parties 
to the dispute. It was alleged that, 
large parts of the wastes of Westby and 
Kirkham having been wrongfully inclosed 
within the preceding twenty years, the 
tenants of those manors, being short of 
common, had pastured on all the waste 
or moor of Ribby. The bounds of this 
last began at the east end of a close 
adjoining Richard Crook’s house, followed 
an old ditch called Raa Ditch to the east 
end of Tarnbreck, thence west to Tarn- 
breck Cross, then along a running water 
to the east end of a close by Henry 
Hall’s house, and thence along a running 
water westward. 

13 William Skillicorne, farmer of the 
king’s lordships of Ribby, Wrea and 
Much Singleton, not having paid the rent 
due, was in 14.83 ordered to be removed ; 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


13461 shows that the Abbot of Vale Royal had a 
grange there, paying 3s. 4¢. a year for it. Held in 
bondage were 20 oxgangs of land, each of 14 acres 
and paying 16s. 8¢.!° The tenants were bound to 
carry victuals whenever the lord journeyed from Ribble 
Bridge to Lancaster Castle and vice versa. In addition 
there were 4 oxgangs of 13 acres each and render- 
ing 135. 44., held on like conditions. There were 
several cottages let at 12d. rent and a pinfold. The 
survey of Wrea1l® shows seventeen tenants—Adam 
del Wrea, Adam del Sharples, and others—holding 
land in all amounting to 34 oxgangs and 574 acres, 
doing suit to the halmote and paying double rent 
as relief.!7 The rental of Ribby amounted to 
£19 175. §d., and that of Wrea to {1 175. 11d. A 
rental of 1509 also has been preserved,1® 

In 1623 the manors of Ribby, Wrea and Singleton 
were granted in fee farm to Edward Badby and 
William Weltden.!9 Soon afterwards Ribby-with- 
Wrea is found to be in the possession of Alexander 


Rigby, no doubt the owner of Middleton jp 
Goosnargh.”” 

The principal messuage in Ribby seems to have 
been that called Counton or COMPTON”; it was 
acquired by the Parkers of Preston and Bradkirk % 
and on the sale of their estates about 1720 passed a 
a descendant of the above-named Alexander Rigby #? 
and then to Richard Hornby,™ who sold it to his 
nephew Joseph Hornby *° ; from him it has descended 
to his granddaughter Miss Margaret Hornby.% 

The inquisitions show that the Cliftons 2” and some 
other local families had lands in Wrea.?4 

The people of the district in 1650 desired that a 
chapel should be built there 29; but the first in con- 
nexion with the Church of England was that of 
St. Nicholas, built about 1721 29 and rebuilt in 1848-9. 
An ecclesiastical parish was formed for it in 1846. 
The incumbents, styled vicars, are presented by the 
vicar of Kirkham.°®2 

A school was founded in 1693.33 


Duchy of Lanc. Misc. Bks. xix, 123. 
He seems to have been excused for the 
time, but was again dismissed in 1485, 
being indebted to the king in great sums 
of money ; ibid. xx, 70d. 

Sir Richard Hoghton was steward of 
the three lordships about 15503; Ducatus 
Lanc. (Rec. Com.), i, 304. 

14 Add, MS. 32103, fol. 149. 

15 The names of the tenants are given. 
Adam Adamson de Singleton held § oxgang 
for which he paid 6s. 8d., and in lieu of 
ploughing, reaping, &c., he paid 1s. 8d,— 
8s. 4d. in all. He was also to give 
merchet for his son or daughter and leyr- 
wit for his son. At death all his goods 
escheated to the lord, who was to discharge 
debts, mortuaries, &c., and after reserving 
the best beast was to give two-thirds to 
the widow and children. There were 
thirty-six other tenants in Ribby. 

18 Tbid. The first entry shows that a 
tenement comprising a messuage, 18 acres 
of land and 4 acres of pasture had lately 
come into the lord’s hands by default of 
heir to one David of Scotland, and that 
it had been divided into two moieties, held 
by William son of Nicholas and Robert 
son of Jordan, who paid the old rent of 
3s. 1¢d. and 1 mark each in addition. 

W An extent made some time earlier 
is printed in Baines’ Lancs. (ed. 1870), ii, 
692-3. It shows the land divided into 
6 oxgangs and 30% acres, with a total 
rental of 37s. 1d., including 2 marks from 
Adam de Paris for 2 oxgangs of land 
formerly John le Harper’s. 

18 Towneley MSS. OO. This shows 
that of the king’s tenants in Ribby James 
Bradley paid £1 16s., Henry Newsham 
18s., James Bradkirk £1 3s. 4d., a close 
called Racarr 10s., James Cowper 22s., 
Richard Cronkshaw 13s. 4d., nine other 
tenants 18s, each. In Wrea were free 
rents of the Abbot of Vale Royal for a 
barn 3s. 4d., the Earl of Derby ts. and 2d. 
in addition for Beetham lands, the heirs 
of John Pearson 1s. 2d., John Culban 9d., 
William Sharples 8¢., and others; the 
total being 11s. 64d. 

19 Duchy of Lanc. Misc. Bks. xxiv, 1 d.; 
Pat. 20 Jas. I, pt. iii. 

20 In 1670 Alexander Rigby was paying 
a rent of £14 1s. 114d. for the manor of 
Ribby and Wrea ; Pat. 22 Chas. II, pt. ii, 
Ri 

21 Agnes Adlington, widow, in 1537 
complained that William Singleton and 
others had interrupted her right of way at 


Counton in Ribby, Warton Lees and Brown 
Moss; Ducatus Lance. i, 154. About 
twenty years later the tenants of Ribby 
had a dispute with Robert Shaw and 
others respecting title to lands in the 
manor; ibid. i, 303. In 1559 Robert 
Shaw, Alexander Shaw and Mary his 
wife, administrators of Nicholas Becon- 
saw, were plaintiffs in respect of a mes- 
suage called Counton; ibid. ii, 218. 
From another pleading it appears that 
Nicholas had been a lunatic ; ibid. i, 292. 

From the pedigree of Parker of Bradkirk 
it appears that William Parker married 
Margaret daughter of Robert Shaw of 
Compton in Ribby in 1561; Fishwick, 
op. cit. 180, William Parker in 1596 
purchased messuages and lands in Ribby 
and Wrea from Hugh Jollybrand, Isabel 
his wife, Edward Dicconson, Margery his 
wife, Peter Wrooe, Cecily his wife and 
Margaret Rigby; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F. bdle. 59, m. 274. In 1598 William 
Parker and Margery his wife sold a 
messuage and land in Wrea to Richard 
Pateson ; ibid. bdle. 60, m. 111. 

22JTn 1688 John Parker of Preston 
gave to Christopher Parker of Bradkirk 
the capital messuage of Compton in 
Ribby, and by Christopher’s will (1693) 
Compton was to be sold; Piccope MSS. 
(Chet. Lib.), iii, 112 (from the deeds of 
Hugh Hornby of Ribby). In 1709 and 
1719 releases of various interests in 
Compton were made to Alexander Parker, 
executor, and in 1720 the sale seems to 
have been effected ; ibid. 116, 118. 

3 Townley Rigby (the purchaser of 
Bradkirk) and Grace his wife were in 
1742 in possession of the manor of Ribby 
alias Ribby-cum-Wrea, with messuages, 
lands, &c., in Ribby ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F, bdle. 326, m. 100. Robert and 
ohn Porter were the plaintiffs in this fine. 

24 The will of Lieut.-Col. Alexander 
Rigby shows that he had lands in Ribby 
in 1792 (Piccope, loc. cit.) ; but a fine of 
1753 shows that the manor of Ribby was 
then in the possession of Robert Hornby, 
Jane his wife ; Hugh Hornby, Margaret 
his wife ; Richard Hornby and Alice his 
wife; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 348, 
m. 240. The plaintiff in this case was 
James Whalley. 

From the Hornby of Ribby pedigree, 
in Burke’s Landed Gentry, it appears that 
Robert was the father of Hughand Richard, 

% Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1836), iv, 398. 
Joseph Hornby was son of Hugh. 


158 


26 Burke, as above : Joseph Hornby, 
d. 1832 5 -s. Hugh, d. 1849; -s. Hugh 
Hilton, d. 1877—sisters, Margaret Anne 
and Mary Alice. 

27 The tenement in Wrea of Cuthbert 
Clifton of Clifton was in 1512 held of the 
king as of his duchy in socage ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iv, no. 12, That in 
Ribby of William Clifton of Kidsnape in 
1517 was held similarly by a rent of 
20d. ; ibid, iv, no. 11. 

28 Robert de Newsham had land in 
Ribby and Wrea in 1380; Final Conc. iii, 
7- John Newsham of Newsham died in 
1515 holding messuages, &c., in Wrea of 
the king as duke in drengage, doing suit 
at the halmote, and rendering 7d. a year ; 
Duchy of Lanc, Ing. p.m, iv, no, 75. 
George Newsham in 1585 held a mes- 
suage, é&c., in socage by a rent of gd.; 
ibid. xiv, no. 88. His son Robert sold 
to John Bradley in 1591; Pal. of Lane. 
Feet of F. bdle. 53, m. 166, James 
Bradley’s lands in Wrea in 1617 were 
held of the king partly of his honour 
of Pontefract and partly of his manor of 
East Greenwich ; Lancs. Ing. p.m, (Rec. 
Soc, Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 80. 

George Hesketh’s lands in Wrea in 
1571 were held of the queen as of her 
duchy by the rent of 5d. ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. xiii, no. 15. 

James Sharples died in 1593 holding 
a capital messuage, cottages, &c., in Wrea 
of the queen by a rent of 8d. Henry his 
son and heir was twelve years old; ibid. 
xvi, no, 13. 

Nickson was a common surname. John 
son of William Nickson in 1411 gave 
lands in the hamlet of Wrea in the vill 
of Ribby which he had inherited from his 
mother Amery to John Fleetwood ; 
Kuerden MSS. iii, R 12. 

29 Commonw. Ch. Surv, (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), 156. 

80 Bishop Gastrell in 1724 notes that 
it had been built at the expense of the 
inhabitants and that it was intended 
that the schoolmaster should officiate till 
some endowment could be obtained ; 
Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 426, The 
chapel was then part of the school build- 
ing. It was consecrated in 1755 5 Chester 
Dioc. Reg. 

81 By order in Council 21 Jan. 1846. 

83 Fishwick, Kirkham, 63-5 ; a list of 
the incumbents is given. 

88 Notitia Cestr. loc. cit.; End. Char. 
Rep. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


BRYNING-WITH-KELLAMERGH 


Birstatbrinning, 1200; Birstatbrunning, 1239 ; 
Burstad Brining, 1242; Brunigg, 1252; Brining, 
1257. 

y eiceieee 1200; Kelgrimisarhe, 1239 ; 
Kelsimshargt, 1249; Kelgrimesarth, 1254; Kel- 
grimsargh, Kelegrymesarch, 1251 ; Gelgrumysharagh, 
1292; Kelgremargh, 1405 ; Kellermargh, 1444. 

The township has an area of 1,061 acres,! and in 
1901 the population numbered 129. The hamlets 
from which it takes its name are situated in the centre 
of it, Bryning at the north end and Kellamergh at 
the south end of a strip of land rising above the general 
level, though attaining only 64 ft. above the ordnance 
datum. About the same height is attained again on 
the eastern border. 

A road from north to south passes through the two 
hamlets, from each of which other roads go off towards 


KIRKHAM 


At the Conquest BR?NING and 

MANORS Kellamergh were included in Ribby, and 
like it became part of the demesne of the 

honour until, about 1190, they were granted by John 
Count of Mortain to Richard son of Roger, thegn 
of Woodplumpton. They were assessed separately — 
Bryning as two plough-lands and Kellamergh as one— 
and were to be held as the fourth part of a knight’s 
fee. Richard died in 1201, and John as king con- 
firmed his former grant to the five daughters and 
co-heirs.? This part of the inheritance in the main 
descended to the Beethams 3 and then to the Middle- 
tons'; the portion belonging to the Stockport 
family seems to have been given to a John de 
Baskervill,®5 whose descendants continued to hold it in 
the 14th century. George Middleton had a number 
of lawsuits with tenants and others. The manor and 
estate scem to have changed ownership several times 
after 1680,” and nothing is now known of any claim 


Lytham. 


lIncluding 2 acres of inland water ; 
Census Rep. (1901). 

2 Chart. R. (Rec. Com.), go. The 
daughters are named as Maud (wife of 
Robert de Stockport), Margaret, Avice 
(wife of William de Mulhum), Quenilda 
and Amuria. Robert de Stockport had 
in 1200-1 paid part of ro marks (for two 
palfreys) for confirmation of three plough- 
lands in Bryning and Kellamergh ; Farrer, 
Lancs. Pipe R. 132. 

Accordingly in 1212 and 1236 the heirs 
of Richard son of Roger held the fourth 
part of a knight’s fee; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 40, 144. Roger Gernet, Thomas de 
Beetham and Robert de Stockport were 
the heirs in 1242 ; ibid. 153. The share 
of Thomas de Beetham in 1249 was 
9% oxgangs of land, each worth §s. a 
year, and a part of the windmill, 3s. 4d. ; 
ibid.171. It is noted that twelve plough- 
lands there went to a knight’s fee. 
Quenilda widow of Roger Gernet in 1252 
also held 94 oxgangs of land, worth in all 
435.3 ibid. 190. Her share was divided 
between Beetham and Stockport, so that 
Ralph de Beetham in 1254 held 133 ox- 
gangs of land by knight’s service and a 
tent of 17}¢. Each oxgang was then 
worth 6s. a year and the tallage of the 
bondmen 15s.; his three-fourths of the 
windmill was worthless, the mill being 
waste ; ibid. 194, 201. The Beetham 
share was called the seventh part of a 
knight's fee in 1256-8 ; ibid. 221. 

Afterwards a division of the whole of 
Richard son of Roger’s estate seems to 
have been made, and in 1297 the ‘heir 
of Beetham’ held all Bryning and Kella- 
mergh of the Earl of Lancaster, paying 
2s. 6d. (for castle ward), and having in 
1302 the fourth part of a knight’s fee 
there ; ibid. 290, 298, 316. 

3 In spite of the statements quoted in 
the last note the extent of 1324 shows 
that the Beetham family had not obtained 
the whole manor. Thus in Bryning 
Ralph de Beetham held three-fourths of 
the vill and 12 oxgangs of land by the 
service of 15d. and the fourth part of a 
knight’s fee; while John de Baskervill 
held the other part and 4 oxgangs by the 
service of 5d. for castle ward and the 
tenth part of a knight’s fee. In Kella- 
mergh, described as a hamlet of Bryning, 
Ralph de Beetham held 29 oxgangs 
of iand, John de Baskervill 1}, and 
Thurstan de Northlegh in right of his 


to the lordship. 


wife Margery 3 (?8), each paying 13d. 
per oxgang for castle ward and holding 
by knight’s service ; Dods. MSS. cxxxi, 
fol. 40. 

In 1346 Sir Ralph de Beetham held 
two (not three) plough-lands in Bryning 
and Kellamergh by the fourth part of 
a knight’s fee and a payment of 2s. 6d. 
for castle ward; Survey of 1346 (Chet. 
Soc.), 46. At the same time John 
Davenport held a plough-land (?) in 
Bryning and Kellamergh and lands in 
Woodplumpton and Formby ; ibid. 52. 

Just a century later Thomas Beetham 
held the fourth part of a knight’s fee in 
Bryning and Kellamergh, the relief be- 
ing 25s.; Duchy of Lanc. Knights’ Fees, 
bdle. 2, no, 20. 

By 1473 the Beetham manor of Cow- 
burn in Warton had been made to include 
Bryning and others; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Chet. Soc.), ii, 102 ; Chan. Ing. p.m. 
19 Edw. IV, no. 87. 

As in other cases (see Bootle) this 
Beetham manor was afterwards held by 
the Earls of Derby; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. v, no. 68. The tenure is not 
recorded. The Derby rental of the time 
(at Lathom) shows that only 115. 6d. was 
received from tenants. 

4 Gervase Middleton of Leighton in 
Lonsdale in 1548 held lands, &c., in 
Warton, Kellamergh, Bryning and Wrea 
of the king by fealty and the yearly rent 
of 2s.3; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. ix, 
no. Il. 

George Middleton in 1600 held the 
‘manor’ of Kellamergh, with messuages, 
lands, &c., in Kellamergh, Bryning and 
Hollowforth, but the tenure is not re- 
corded; ibid. xvii, no. 51. In 1640, 
however, the manor and estate were 
stated to be held of the king as of his 
duchy in socage by 1d. rent ; ibid. xxix, 
no. 64. 

The Middleton manors in 1654 and 
1666-9 included that of Bryning; Pal. 
of Lance. Feet of F. bdle. 156, m. 135 ; 
176, m. 154 (Sir T. Clifton, plaintiff) ; 
182, m. 94. 

5 For the Baskervill share see a pre- 
ceding note. The family seems to be 
that seated at Old Withington in Prest- 
bury ; Ormerod, Ches. (ed. Helsby), ili, 
717. John de Baskervill was defendant 
in 1275 and 1278 to claims for dower 
put forward by Ellen widow of Robert 
de Stockport in respect (inter alia) 
of 4 oxgangs of land in Bryning and 


159 


Kellamergh ; De Banco R. 11, m. 943 
23,m. 5d. In1372 Richard Mason and 
Margaret his wife, widow of William son 
of William de Baskervill, claimed dower 
in four messuages, &c., in Bryning and 
Kellamergh against Richard le Buntable, 
vicar of Prestbury, and others; ibid. 
448, m. 353d. 

§ Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), iii, 114, 
&c. In 1583 George Middleton of 
Leighton complained that whereas his 
father Gervase and his ancestors had as 
lords of the manor of Bryning held court 
baron there at which the freeholders had 
appeared and done their suit, one John 
Bradley, a freehoJder, had secretly practised 
with Mrs, Middleton, plaintiff’s mother- 
in-law, to get into his hands all the court 
rolls of the manor, intending to with- 
draw his suit. Further orders having 
been given to sever each man’s tene- 
ment by stakes, &c., Bradley had pulled 
up the partitions and stakes and had 
likewise destroyed the common pinfold ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Plead. cxxx, M 13. 

In reply Bradley asserted that his father 
James had been lord of the fourth part 
of the manor of Bryning, so that plaintiff 
was not lord of the whole manor. He 
also asserted that Kellamergh was a 
‘town or manor’ distinct from Bryning ; 
ibid. cxxvii M8. This seems to be 
evidence that the Stockport or Baskervill 
manor was still remembered ; see also 
Bradley inquisition below. Middleton 
in reply denied the assertions; ibid. 
cxxxiii, M 1. 

George Middleton died seised of the 
manor of Kellamergh and Bryning about 
1598, and was succeeded by his son 
Thomas, who soon afterwards made com- 
plaint of James Crook and John Mercer 
as having wrongfully entered certain lands 
and refused to surrender the deeds ; ibid. 
cxcviii, M 6. 

7 The following references are given, 
but may not all refer to the Beetham 
manor :— 

In 1713 Edward Rigby held the manor 
of Bryning-with-Kellamergh, with various 
lands, &c.; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 497, 
m. 5. 
nn 1760 Robert Hesketh, Anne his 
wife, Henry Sharples and Anne his wife 
held the manor or lordship of Bryning- 
with-Kellamergh, courts leet, courts 
baron, views of frankpledge, &c., belong- 
ing to the said manor; also messuages 
and lands in the township and ten cattle- 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


A portion of KELLAMERGH, afterwards described 
as a moiety of the manor,® came before 1246 into the 
possession of the family of Ulnes Walton,’ and was to- 
gether with their principal manor purchased by Henry 
It descended with the 
duchy till 1551, being then sold to Anthony Browne.!! 
This moiety also has disappeared from the records.” 

Bryning is found as a surname, and Kellamergh 
also gave a surname to a local family or families," 
among whom were benefactors of Lytham Priory.'§ 
Another family of long continuance was that of 


Earl of Lancaster in 1347.1 


gates on Freckleton Marsh; ibid. Feet 
of F. bdle. 364, m. 98. 

In 1805 George Cowban, Robert Leach 
and their wives had the manor or reputed 
manor ; ibid. August Assizes, 45 Geo. III 
(fines). 

8 From what has been stated, it must 
have been part of the Stockport share. 

8 Warine de Walton, as shown later, 
warranted in that year; Assize R. 404, 
m. 10 ; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 194. The story is given in 
detailin the accounts of Ulnes Walton, 
Leyland, and Eccleston in Leyland. In 
the fines the estate is called é 305. rent,’ 
but as above stated Thurstan de North- 
legh held 4 oxgangs of land in Kella- 
mergh in 1324. This was half the manor, 

10 Ibid. ii, 124; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
p-m. i, no. §1. 

In 1403 Adam Hogeson of Kellamergh 
died holding a messuage and an oxgang 
of land and meadow (12 acres in all) 
of the king (as of his duchy) of the 
manor of Ulnes Walton by knight’s 
service and a rent of gd. Thomas, the 
son and heir, was six years of age; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 1508. Thomas 
seems to have died soon afterwards, for 
in 1405 the wardship and marriage of 
Roger son and heir of Adam Hogeson 
were granted to John Fleetwood; Dep. 
Keeper’s Rep. xl, App. 532. 

1 Duchy of Lanc. Misc. Bks. xxiii, 
god, 

12 In 1558 there was a settlement or 
partition of the manors of Ulnes Walton 
and Kellamergh, &c. ; half was to belong 
to Anthony Browne and Joan his wife 
and half to William Farington; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 20, m. 4. Four 
years later the Earl of Derby obtained 
one moiety of them from Sir Thomas 
Gerard and Elizabeth his wife, who gave 
warranty against Anthony Browne ; ibid. 
bdle. 24, m. 78. He also obtained the 
reversion of Farington’s moiety ; Pal. of 
Lance. Plea R. 289, m. 19. This part of the 
manor descended to Ferdinando, the fifth 
earl; ibid. It may have been repurchased 
by the Faringtons, for in 1675 George 
Farington held the manors of Ulnes 
Walton and Kellamergh ; ibid. Feet of 
F. bdle. 194, m. 102. 

13-14 William son of Ughtred claimed 
by inheritance in 1246 1 oxgangs of 
land in Kellamergh against Robert son of 
Ughtred, but did not prosecute; Assize 
R. 404, m. 13d, At the same time 
Margaret daughter of Siward de Kella- 
mergh claimed the third part of an 
oxgang of land against Thomas : de 
Beetham and another third against 
Jordan son of Quenilda. Thomas stated 
that he held in right of his wife 
Amiria, and had a son Ralph. Jordan 
summoned Warine de Walton to warrant 
him, and Warine in turn called Richard 
Banastre, who called Robert de Stock- 
port, Roger Gernet and Quenilda his 


Sharples.'® 


wife and Ralph son of the said Amiria, 
These appeared accordingly and stated 
that the land was the villeinage of Hugh 
de Morteyn, and that plaintiff’s father 
had held his 2 oxgangs of him by 
villeinage ; they alleged further that 
Kellamergh was a member of Singleton, 
part of the king’s demesne, where suck 
a writ did not run; ibid. m. ro. 

Richard son of Gilbert de Kellamergh 
was defendant in 1292 and 1294; Assize 
R. 408, m. 57; 1299, m. 16, 18, 
John son of William son of Jordan de 
Kellamergh in 1347 put forward a claim 
to land in the place against John de 
Bradkirk, Robert de Newton, Vicar of 
Kirkham, and John son of William le 
Wower of Kellamergh. The last-named 
John said that his father William had 
had a grant of the land in 1318 from 
plaintiff’s father, and so prevailed ; Assize 
R. 1435, m. 43. 

18 Robert de Kellamergh (son of 
Richard) about 1240 granted the monks 
two butts, lying between land of his 
brother Richard with easements in the 
vill of Kellamergh ; Lytham Charters at 
Durham, 2a, 2 ae, 4ae, Ebor. no. 14. 
Robert the son of Robert afterwards gave 
a release ; ibid. no. 15, 

The above-named Richard son of 
Richard de Kellamergh also gave land, 
and the gift was confirmed by his son 
William ; ibid. no. 17, 18. The same 
Richard gave his daughter Eda, on her 
marriage with Robert son of John the 
Salwaller (or Sauner), a ‘land’ in Kella- 
mergh near the ‘land’ of the little tower 
(turrelli), on the Wallfurlong; ibid. no, 16. 
It is noteworthy that a William ‘del 
Castell’ contributed to the subsidy of 
13323 Exch. Lay Subs. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), 60. John father of the 
bridegroom promised to compensate the 
monks out of his oxgang of land in 
Warton should Eda reclaim the land her 
father Richard had given; Lytham 
Charters, ut sup. no. 22. The brothers 
Richard and Robert also gave and con- 
firmed various parcels of land to the 
monks ; ibid. no. 19. 

A grant by Beatrice daughter of Adam 
de Kellamergh and Clarice to the monks 
is noticeable as having been attested by 
the lords of the place—Robert de Stock- 
port, Roger Gernet and Thomas de 
Beetham—among others; ibid. no. 22. 
It may be added that Robert de Stock- 
port (about 1230) released to the monks 
Simon de Kellamergh, with all his off- 
spring and chattels ; ibid. no. 26. Adam 
Banastre also released to them the homage 
of Robert son of Richard de Kellamergh ; 
ibid. no. 27- Atte 

16 In 1251 Godith widow of William 
de ‘Kelkemath’ claimed dower in Kella- 
mergh against Henry de Sharples, Gilbert 
son of Roger de Freckleton and William 
son of Richard ; Curia Regis R. 145, m. 1, 
5d 


160 


John Bradley" of Bryning was a free. 
holder in 1600." 
repeatedly fined for recusancy ; his eldest son Edward 
was killed at Marston Moor, fighting on the king’s 
side, and a younger son, Richard, born in 
became a Jesuit priest. 
dangerous times he was arrested by the Parliamentary 
soldiers and imprisoned at Manchester, dying there 
before his trial on 30 January 1645-6.” 
estate was sequestered for ‘delingu : 

the Gommaneeclit. es pe or 


James Bradley, his successor," was 


ard, 1605, 
Labouring in Lancashire in 


Part of the 
A pedigree was recorded in 


John the son and Maud the widow of 
Henry de Sharples were defendants in 
1292 to claims to land made by the 
granddaughters and heirs of William son 
of Henry de Kellamergh—viz. Ellen wife 
of Roger son of Avice de Preston, Mar- 
gery wife of Richard de Tulketh, Eve 
wife of Adam son of Margery and Cecily 
wife of Robert de Ribbleton ; Assize R. 
408, m. 7od. 

In 1346 John son of William de Kella- 
mergh and Adam de Sharples seized a 
number of cattle grazing on their common 
of Corcolcar, The owner of the cattle, 
William the Palfreyman of Lytham, 
asserted that they were feeding on Hest- 
holme Carr in Lytham 3 De Banco R. 348, 
m, 242. 

Roger Kellamergh in 1444 complained 
that John Sharples and others had been 
breaking his close ; Pal. of Lance. Plea R. 
6, m, 6. 

Thomas Sharples died in 1527 holding 
a messuage, é&c., in Kellamergh of the 
king as of his lordship of Penwortham by 
arent of 3s. 11d.; William his son and 
heir was fifteen years old; Duchy of 
Lanc, Inq. p.m. vi, no. 43. This pro- 
perty was soon afterwards acquired by 
Thurstan Tyldesley of Wardley and passed 
to his son Thomas, as appears by their 
inquisitions ; ibid. x, no. 44, 27. 

7 One James Bradley in 1560 claimed 
a windmill, &c., in Kellamergh and 
Bryning as son and heir of John, son and 
heir of James, son and heir of William 
(son of Thomas) Bradley and Margaret 
his wife, on whom the tenement had been 
settled in the time of Henry VI; Pal of 
Lance. Plea R. 207, m. gd. 

18 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lance, and Ches.), 
i, 232. John Bradley son of James was, 
as already shown, engaged in suits respect- 
ing lands in the manor of Bryning from 
1583 onwards ; Ducatus Lane. iii, 131, &c. 

19 James Bradley died at Bryning in 
1617 holding messuages, lands and wind- 
mill there, and other lands in Kellamergh, 
Wrea, Freckleton, Kirkham and Warton. 
No share of the manor was claimed. He 
left a widow Ellen and a son and heir 
Edward, then thirteen years of age. It is 
recorded that the Bryning !ands were 
held of the lord of Stockport in socage by 
the rent of a pair of gloves at Easter; 
those in Kellamergh were held of the 
king ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lanca. 
and Ches.), ii, 79, 80. : 

2 Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. i, 
287; Foley, Rec. S. J. ii, 178. 

21 The estate of James Bradley the elder 
was ordered for sale in 16523; Index of 
Royalists (Index Soc.),41. James Bradley 
the younger, ‘having been ever con- 
formable,’ put in a claim, but the estate 
was sold to Bartholomew a eae 
Aughton ; Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. 
Dandi and Ches.), i, 216-17 ; Cal. Com. 
for Comp. iv, 3010. The two Jametes were 
probably the brother and son of Edward. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


1665.22. The inquisitions yield the names of a few 
of the old landholders?’ ; among them was Edward 
Mercer,4 who died in 1637, and whose mother’s 
land in 1652 stood sequestered for‘ popery.’®> John 
Mercer as a ‘ Papist’ registered his freehold estate in 
Kellamergh in 1717.7 A family named Leyland 
occurs in the 18th century.?? 


CLIFTON-WITH-SALWICK 


Cliftun, Dom. Bk. Salewic, Dom. Bk. 

This is a composite township, Clifton lying to the 
south-west and Salwick to the north-east, the respec- 
tive acreages being 2,101 and 1,388, or 3,489 acres 
in all.) Lund, with its chapel, is about midway 
between the two hamlets, but in the Clifton portion. 
This portion has on the south the marshy land by 
the Ribble, and on the north some moss land. From 
the marsh the surface rises at first somewhat steeply, 
the village of Clifton being on the slope ; in general 
the surface continues to rise gradually from that 
point to near the northern boundary, but with many 
undulations, over 100 ft. above sea level being 
attained. In the northern corner the surface falls 
away somewhat ; it is in this part that Pepper Hill 
is situate. The population was 413 in 1901. 

The principal roads are three crossing westward 
through Lund, Clifton and the Marsh respectively. 
The line of another westward road, called the Danes’ 
Pad, is traceable to the north of Lund ; it is supposed 
to be of Roman origin. A cross road goes north 
through Clifton and Salwick to Pepper Hill,? where 
it meets another going north-west from Preston. 
There is also a westerly cross-road near. The 
Preston and Lancaster Canal winds west, north and 


KIRKHAM 


Blackpool runs westward to the south of the canal, 
and has a station named Salwick. 

There was formerly a cross at Lund village.? 

The land is clayey ; wheat, beans and oats are 
grown, but most of the land is in pasture. 

The township has a parish council. 

Robert son of John Gradwell was born at Clifton 
in 1777. Educated at Douay he was imprisoned 
there on the outbreak of the French Revolution. 
Afterwards he was rector of the English college at 
Rome, and in 1828 was consecrated (as Bishop of 
Lydda) to assist Bishop Bramston as vicar-apostolic 
of the London district. He died in 1833.4 At 
Clifton also was born George Hilary Brown (1786) ; 
he was appointed vicar-apostolic of the Lancashire 
district in 1840, and ten years later, on the restora- 
tion of the hierarchy, became Bishop of Liverpool. 
He died in 1856.5 

In 1066 CLIFTON, assessed as two 
MANORS plough-lands, and SALWICK, as one, 
were part of the Amounderness fee of 
Earl Tostig.® They were sometimes regarded as sepa- 
rate manors, probably their original status, but, as they 
were adjacent and held in demesne by one lord, 
Salwick gradually fell into the position of a depen- 
dency of Clifton. After the Conquest they were held 
of the king in thegnage, and in 1212 formed part of 
an estate of ten plough-lands so held, a rent of gos. 
being paid.’ 

The owner in the year named was Walter son of 
Osbert,® who seems to have been in possession by 
1170.9 Walter was followed in 1217 by his son 
William de Clifton,!° who died in 1258 holding ten 
plough-lands in chief of the king—viz. eight in demesne 
and two in service—by a rent of qos. and by finding 
a suitor at the courts of the county and the wapen- 


east through Salwick. 


22 Dugdale, Visir. (Chet. Soc.), 49. The 
descent is thus given : John Bradley —s. 
James (d. c. 1620) -s. Edward (killed at 
Marston Moor, fighting on the king’s 
side) -s. James (aged forty) -s. Edward 
(aged fourteen). 

% The Heskeths of Rufford had land 
in Kellamergh in the time of Henry VIII, 
but the tenure was unknown ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, no. 16 3 vii, no. 14. 
.The tenement of George Hesketh of 
Poulton in 1571 was held of the lords of 
Kellamergh in socage ; ibid. xiii, no. 15. 
Later it was held of the king ; Lancs. Ing. 
p.m. (Rec. Soc.), iii, 366. 

John Nickson of Kellamergh, who died 
in 1618, held a messuage, &c., of the 
heirs or assigns of Jordan de Kellamergh. 
William Nickson son and heir of John 
“ seven years old ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
ii, 87. 

George Browne in 1567 held a mes- 
suage, &c., in Kellamergh as part of his 
Kirkham estate, the Dean and Chapter of 
Christ Church, Oxf., being lords ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xi, no. 4. 

4 Thid. xxix, no. 9. The tenure is not 
recorded. William son and heir of 
Edward was two years of age. 

William Mercer was defendant in 1582 
and 1590, while John Mercer was claimant 
of lands in the manor of Bryning in 1601 ; 
Ducatus Lane. iii, 161, 243, 422. 

%Tn 1645 two-thirds of one-third 
part of the Mercer tenement was seques- 
tered for the recusancy of Elizabeth 
mother of Edward; she died in 1651. 


7 


The railway from Preston to 


take. 


Two-thirds of another third were in 1646 
sequestered for the recusancy of Alice 
Mercer, widow of Edward. William 
Mercer the son made petition in 1652 in 
respect of these portions ; Royalist Comp. 
Papers, iv, 128-9. The claim was allowed ; 
Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 3013. 

26 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath, Non- 
jurors, 89. 

27 Pedigree in Fishwick, Kirkham, 196. 

Richard Bradkirk of Bryning died un- 
married in 1813. A sister Elizabeth 
married John Langton; M. I. at Kirk- 
ham. 

1 The Census Rep. 1901 gives 3,373 
acres, including 17 of inland water ; 
there are also 40 acres of tidal water and 
83 of foreshore. 

2 Thomas Duddell of Pepper Hill in 
Clifton occurs in 16133; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 14. 

8 Lancs. and Ches. Antig. Soc. xx, 187. 

4 Dict, Nat. Biog. ; Gillow, Bibl. Dict. 
of Engl. Cath. 

5 Ibid. i, 320. 

6 Y.C.H. Lancs. i, 2884. 

‘T Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 46. The fee con- 
sisted of Clifton (two plough-lands), Sal- 
wick (one), Westby (two), Fieldplumpton 
(two), and Barton (two). These give only 
nine plough-lands, but in 1226 Westby 
and Fieldplumpton together were called 
five plough-lands; the assessment of 
Barton in 1066 was four, not two. 
Though Salwick became subordinate, it 
occurs occasionally as the leading member. 


161 


His son Henry was of full age and married.™ 


From a tithe suit of 1586 it appears 
that there were then 19 oxgangs of land 
in Clifton proper; Fishwick, Kirkham 
(Chet. Soc.), 73. 

8 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 46. 

® He attested a charter which may be 
dated between 1160 and 11703; Farrer, 
Lancs. Pipe R. 409-11. Theobald Walter 
about 1194 took the land of Salwick from 
him, giving Wrea instead ; but soon after 
the accession of King John he recovered 
Salwick, paying 10 marks and a palfrey ; 
Rot. de Oblatis (Rec. Com.), 115 ; Farrer, 
op. cit. 130. He contributed to a scutage 
in 1205-6 ; ibid. 205. 

Walter son of Osbert and his son 
William were benefactors of Cockersand 
Abbey ; Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 211, 212. 

10 Memo. R. (L.T.R.), 1. Walter son of 
Osbert’s name was copied into the roll of 
1226, as if he were still living ; Lancs. 
Ing. and Extents, i, 139. 

William de Clifton was collector of an 
aid in 1235; ibid. 142. In 1256 he 
agreed with John de Lea and Henry his 
son respecting common of pasture within 
Clifton Marsh ; Dods. MSS. Ixx, fol. 160. 

M Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 212-13. 
The two plough-lands in service were 
those in Barton, as appears from the 
inquest of 1212; ibid. 46, The lands 
were in the escheator’s hands from 
23 April till 4 May, being then delivered 
to Henry, the son and heir. In that 
time £5 13s. gd. was received ; ibid. 222. 

It appears that Henry was a younger 
son, for in 1257 William de Clifton gave 


27 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Of Henry practically nothing is known.) 
was ancestor of three successive Williams, the first 
of whom!® in 1318 obtained a charter of free 
manors of Clifton 
His grandson, another Sir 
William,!® showed himself a lawless and violent man 
in a dispute in 1337 with the Abbot of Vale Royal. 
On arbitration he was ordered to acknowledge his 
guilt and ask for pardon, submitting himself to the 
abkot’s will, to pay 20 marks and compensate for loss. 
Those who had assisted him were to bring a large 
candle, which was to be carried round the church of 


warren in his 


He died in 1323.) 


60 marks of silver to Robert de Hampton 
and Margery his wife for a release of her 
dower of one-third of the manors of 
Clifton, Westby and Plumpton, with 
which Richard de Clifton (formerly her 
husband) had dowered her at the church 
door when he married her, with the 
assent and good-will of William his 
father ; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 130. It appears that Margery 
was daughter and co-heir of Sir William 
de Samlesbury. Before 1278 she had 
married a third husband, Richard Deuias ; 
Assize R. 1277, m. 326. 

12Jn 1282 Henry de Clifton and 
Margery his wife released their right to a 
moiety of the manor of Thurnham; 
Final Conc. i, 158. Margery widow of 
Henry de Clifton was in 1289 the wife 
of Robert de Holland, and was claiming 
dower in a messuage and 4 oxgangs of 
land in Plumpton against Thomas de 
Clifton; De Banco R. 80, m. 1254. 
Thomas was living ten years later ; ibid. 
138, m. 99. 

18 William son of Henry de Clifton 
in 1298 allowed turbary in Salwick or 
Moorhouses to William son of Henry 
de Lea, just as his ancestors had enjoyed 
it; Dods. MSS. lxx, fol. 160. In the 
following year he (as Sir William) approved 
30 acres in Clifton Marsh with the leave 
of William de Lea ; ibid. 

William de Clifton was defendant in a 
claim put forward by Edmund Earl of 
Lancaster in 1291; Assize R. 1294, 
m. 11d. He proved his right ; Plac. de 
Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 380. In 1297 
he rendered the old 4os. thegnage rent ; 
Lanes. Ing. and Extents, i,289. In 1306 
he and Aline his wife, through Eustace 
de Cottesbach, made a settlement of the 
manors of Clifton and Westby, the re- 
mainders being in succession to William, 
Thomas and Henry, sons of William de 
Clifton ; Final Conc. i, 207. 

William son of William de Clifton 
established his right to the manor of 
Salwick in 1313-14 against William de 
Clifton and Aline his wife; Assize R. 
424,m. 1. Sir William de Clifton occurs 
in a bond in 1317-18 ; Kuerden MSS. iv, 
C21. 

M4 Chart. R. 11 Edw. II, m. 5, no. 18. 

15 His two manors, Clifton and Westby, 
were held of the king in socage by suit 
at the county from six weeks to six weeks 
and at the wapentake from three weeks 
to three weeks, and by the rent of qos. 
The capital messuage of Clifton was worth 
25.3 4 oxgangs were in demesne, each 
oxgang containing 18 acres of arable land, 
worth 1s. an acre ; also 8 acres of meadow, 
each worth 1s. 6d.; a fishery in the 
Ribble worth 6s. 8d. a year, a water-mill 
13s. 4d., a horse-mill the same, and a 
windmill 26s. 8¢. Tenants at will held 
12 oxgangs, valued as above, 24 acres of 
meadow and twelve cottages. In a 


He 


and Westby.!4 


hamlet called the Moor were eight cot- 
tages and 80 acres of arable land, worth 
44s. in all, and in another hamlet called 
the Scales were six cottages and 60 acres 
of arable land, worth in all 33s. His 
heir was his son William, aged twenty- 
eight ; Ing. p.m. 17 Edw. II, no. 32. 

William de Clifton in 1324 held the 
manors of Clifton, Westby and Barton 
by the ancient tenure of 4os., &c. 3 Dods. 
MSS. cxxxi, fol. 394. 

16 In 1346 Isabel widow of William 
de Clifton had a dispute with William 
son of William as to dower. The fine of 
1306 wasreferred to. William and Alice 
(Aline) were dead ; also William the son 
therein named, whose widow had entered 
into four messuages, 4 oxgangs of land, 
&c., parcel of the manor of Westby, 
contrary to the fine, as was alleged by 
the third William. Isabel alleged that 
William the grandfather (son of Henry) 
had given two-thirds of them to John de 
Venables, with the reversion of the other 
third (held by Katherine de Singleton as 
dower), and they had been then given to 
her on her marriage with William (the 
father of defendant). An allegation that 
the senior William was of unsound mind 
at the time was rejected by the jury; De 
Banco R. 348, m. 733; 350, m. 122. 
Katherine de Singleton was probably the 
second wife of the first William. 

W Fishwick, Kirkham (Chet. Soc.), 
34-5, quoting Harl. MS. 2064, fol. 144. 
Sir William wished to purchase the tithes 
of Clifton and Westby for 20 marks, 
which the abbot refused. He drove away 
the tithe collectors, and the abbot’s tithes 
were left in the fields to waste ; he even 
entered the church and assailed the priests 
and clerks, and in contempt of the 
rectorial rights had had his child baptized 
elsewhere than in the parish church. 
Further, with the approval of a number 
of associates, he had had the abbot’s 
clerk beaten in the Preston streets. 

William de Clifton appears in 1346 
as holding two plough-lands in Westby, 
two in Fieldplumpton (Great and Little), 
three in Salwick and Clifton and two in 
Barton, in socage, paying 40s. yearly at 
the four terms, giving relief at death, and 
doing suit to the county and wapentake ; 
Survey of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 46. 

In 1348 Sir William complained that 
Edmund de Dacre had entered his free 
warren at Clifton and hunted therein 
without his licence, carrying off game ; 
De Banco R. 355, m. 19. Sir William 
and Margaret his wife were in 1359 
engaged in suits with Adam de Hoghton 5 
Duchy of Lane. Assize R. 7, m. 7. 

18 Note by Canon Raines citing Epis. 
Reg. Zouche. 

19In 1375 Robert de Clifton made a 
feoffment of his manors of Clifton and 
Salwick, receiving them back the next 
year; Close, 49 Edw. III, m. 46; 50 


162 


Kirkham on Palm Sunday and offered to St. Michael,” 
He appears in another light in 1349, obtaining from 
the Archbishop of York licence for his oratories at 
Clifton, Westhy and Lund.!® 

Sir William was about 1370 succeeded by his son 
Sir Robert,!? who died in 1401 holding the manors 
of Clifton, Salwick and Moorhouses, also the manor 
of Westby and various lands of the king in socage by 
the service of gos. yearly. ‘The heir was his nephew 
Thomas son of Sir Nicholas de Clifton, then twelve 
years of age.2? The manors descended regularly to 
Cuthbert Clifton,”! who died 14 August 1512, leaving 


Edw. III, pt. i, m. 3. In 1385 Sir Robert 
was alleged to have carried off wreck of 
the sea at Freckleton; Lancs, Ing. pom. 
(Chet. Soc.), i, 22. 

In the following year he went to Ireland 
on the king’s service; Cal, Par. 1385-9, 
p. 214. 

In 1390 he made acknowledgement of 
a debt before William de Walton, then 
mayor of Preston; Pal. of Lanc. Chan, 
Misc. 1/9, m. 134. 

® Towneley MS. DD, no. 1453. 

The date of the inquest is given as 18 
Mar. 1 Hen. IV; it should probably be 
2 Hen. IV, as Thursday in the first 
(? second) week of Lent could not be 
3 Mar.—the day of death—in 1400, 

Sir Nicholas de Clifton was made keeper 
of Bolsover Castle in 13963 Cal, Pat, 
1391-6, p. 662. 

The pedigree given in the inquisitions 
of 1512 and 1514 (hereafter cited) is as 
follows: William de Clifton -s, Sir 
William -s. Nicholas -s. Robert -s. 
Thomas -s. Richard -s, James ~s, Robert 
-s. Cuthbert (who died in 1512). The 
Robert son of Nicholas appears to be an 
error, but there is no independent proof 
of several of the steps. 

Richard Clifton and John Clifton, each 
described as ‘esquire,’ were in 1445 
accused by Henry Fleetwood of waylaying 
him with intent to kill him at Kirkham; 
Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 8, m. 2, Richard 
obtained licence for his oratories at Clifton 
and Westby in 14.44; Raines MSS. (Chet. 
Lib.), xxii, 373. He was in possession 
in 1445-6, holding Westby, Fieldplump- 
ton, Salwick and Clifton by the ancient 
service ; the relief was 40s.; Duchy of 
Lanc. Knights’ Fees bdle, 2, no. 20. He 
seems to have been succeeded by his 
son James between 1479 and 14825 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc), ii, 118. 
The writ of diem cl. extr. after the death 
of James Clifton was issued 20 Feb. 
1495-6 ; Towneley MS. CC (Chet. Lib), 
no. 639. For James's possessions see 
Lancs. and Ches, Rec. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 29. 

21 In 1498-9 Alice widow of James 
Clifton in conjunction with Cuthbert, 
next of kin and heir of James, granted to 
Henry Clifton son of James a moss called 
Westgrims in Clifton for his life; Kuerden 
MSS. iv, C21. Cuthbert Clifton in 1504 
gave land in Whittingham (purchased by 
his grandfather James) in exchange for a 
burgage in Kirkham; Towneley MS. 
DD, no. 1884. Alice, the widow 
named, was one of the daughters of 
Robert. Lawrence of Scotforth ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R. 163, m. 20. Hoh 

A rental of the estates compiled io 
1509 has been preserved by Towneley 
(OO). It gives the names of the tenants 
and the various rents due from each ; thus 
Thomas Ryley in Clifton paid 19! 10d 
two days’ ‘shearing’ or 444 two day?’ 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


an only daughter Elizabeth, the heir male being his 
brother William.”? A division ensued, Clifton going 
to the daughter and Westby to the brother, and 
thus the Cliftons became known as ‘of Westby.’ 
Elizabeth by her second husband Sir William Moly- 
neux?! had a daughter and heir Anne,25 whose 
grandson Cuthbert Halsall had a daughter and co-heir 
She married Thomas Clifton of Westby, and 
the whole estate became reunited.*6 

It will thus be convenient to give in this place the 
William Clifton 
died in 15 37,2” and was succeeded by his son Thomas, 
who died in 1551, leaving a son and heir Cuthbert, 


Anne. 


descent of the manor of Westby. 


ploughing or 15. two days’ harrowing or 
8d., leading four ‘ foder’ of turves or 64., 
two hens or 3d., and a goose or 2d. In 
Salwick-with-Moorhouse the New Hall 
with three closes and two doles and a half 
in the Broadmeadow was worth £2 15. a 
year, and the Old Hall with half a dole 
in the Broadmeadow {2 10s. The 
Westgrims Moss is named. 

A full description of the boundary of 
the lordship of Clifton and Salwick is 
added. It went through the middle of 
the moor between Clifton and Lea, 
“straight betwixt the hepping stones in 
Sidgreaves Lane and the nook of the new 
intake.” The Harestones, Wagging 
Birch, Raholme and Graystone seem to 
have been on the north-west border of 
Salwick. 

It is noted that the friars of Preston 
paid 1s. to the lord of Westby for certain 
lands at the Maudlands and a pound of 
pepper (or ts.), and that the lord of 
Barton paid 8s. for that lordship. 

28 Two inquisitions were made. That 
in 1512 (Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iv, 
no. 12) gives the pedigree as already 
recorded and recites several deeds. By 
one of them (without date) the feoffees of 
Sir William de Clifton gave to William 
de Clifton the son the manors of Clifton 
and Westby, with messuages, windmill, 
lands, rents in various places and homages 
of Sir Nicholas Boteler for a tenement in 
Whittle, of John de Barton for Barton, 
and of Richard de Shireburne for Inskip. 
By another Sir William de Clifton gave 
to his son Nicholas messuages and lands 
in Goosnargh and English Lea (including 
one in Sidgreaves). Cuthbert Clifton gave 
certain lands to trustees to pay Lawrence 
Henreson to celebrate in Kirkham Church 
for him and his wife, &c., for ten years, 
when the lands were to go to his brother 
William. All his messuages, &c., in 
Kirkham, Newton, Scales, Great and 


Little Plumpton, Warton, Wrea, Elswick, _ 


Greenhalgh, Esprick, Ashley and Barker 
in Goosnargh were to go to his said 
brother, together with certain lands in 
Salwick, Clifton and Westby. The 
manors of Clifton and Westby and the 
lands there were stated to be held of the 
king as of his duchy by the yearly rent of 
40s. Salwick is called a ‘manor’ at the 
beginning but not afterwards. 
_ The second inquisition, in 1514 (ibid. 
Iv, no. 48), quotes the fine of 1306, and 
recites that Richard son of Thomas Clifton 
was seised of certain messuages, &c., in 
Clifton, Westby, Salwick and other places 
which descended to Cuthbert as his heir 
(viz. son of Robert, son of James, son of 
the said Richard), and should descend to 
his daughter Elizabeth, who was nine years 
old at her father’s death. 

Elizabeth Clifton became the king’s 
ward, but William Clifton had possession 


Marton.*8 


Halsall. 


of some or all of the estates, and in 1516 
Richard Hesketh, the king’s attorney for 
the county palatine, appeared before the 
barons of the Exchequer for instructions ; 
ibid. iii, no. 3. 

28 In May 1515 it was agreed between 
Richard Hesketh and Elizabeth his wife, 
daughter and heir of Cuthbert Clifton, on 
the first part, and William Clifton brother 
of Cuthbert, on the other, that the manor 
of Westby, demesne lands, &c., property 
in Much and Little Plumpton, Wrea, 
Elswick, Poolhouses in Warton, Green- 
halgh, &c., and the chantry at Kirkham 
lately made by Sir Richard Davy, vicar 
thereof, were to be taken for half the 
inheritance. The other half consisted of 
the manor of Clifton, with various lands, 
the tithe barn there, fishery in the Ribble, 
lands, &c., in Salwick and other places, 
chief rents and services of the free chapel 
and lands of St. Mary Magdalen nigh 
Preston, the chief rent of Barton, the 
chantry of Lund Chapel, and other lands. 
Richard and Elizabeth were allowed six 
months in which to make choice of one 
of the moieties ; Kuerden MSS. iv, C21. 

24 Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 155, m. 8d. 

25 Sir William Molyneux of Sefton died 
in 1548 holding the manor of Clifton, &c., 
in right of his wife Elizabeth, who was 
mother of Thomas Molyneux the heir. 
Elizabeth died nine months before her 
husband, viz. on 5 June 1547, and Thomas 
was of full age. The manor and other 
lands were held of the king as of his 
duchy bya rent of 20s. 4d. a year ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. ix, no, 6. 

It appears from the pedigrees that there 
were several children of the marriage, but 
that Anne, a daughter, was eventually the 
heir and married Henry Halsall of Halsall, 
by whom she had a son Richard ; Visit. of 
1567 (Chet. Soc.), 94, 104. Settlements 
of the manor appear to have been made 
by Henry Halsall and Anne his wife in 
1557 and 15713; Pal. of Lane, Feet of F. 
bdle. 17, m. 55 5 33, m.76. Richard was 
succeeded by his illegitimate son Sir Cuth- 
bert Halsall, who had two daughters, Anne 
and Bridget ; see V.C.H. Lancs. iii, 195 5 
Visit. of 1613 (Chet. Soc.), 59. The 
manor of Clifton, held by the rent of 
20s. 4d.. is named in the possessions of 
Henry Halsall in 1574 ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. xiii, no. 34. 

Sir Cuthbert Halsall as lord of the 
manors claimed services in 1600 ; Ducatus 
Lanc. (Rec. Com.), iii, 420. 

2% An agreement as to the manors of 
Clifton and Westby was made in 1612 
between Sir Cuthbert Halsall and Cuthbert 
Clifton ; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 307, m. gd. 
The manors were granted to the Earl of 
Derby and other trustees ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 80, no. 24, 25. 

27 His will is printed in Wills (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 70-3. He desired 


163 


twelve years ot age.?8 
1577, his income being stated at 100 marks a year.” 
He died in 1580, leaving a son Thomas, eighteen 
years of age,*° who at his death only five years later 
was followed by his son Cuthbert, three years old.*! 
This son, the purchaser of Lytham, was made a 
knight at Lathom in 1617, and died in 1634 
holding the manors of Westby, Lytham and Little 
‘Thomas, his son and heir, was twenty- 
nine years of age, and, as above stated, had recovered 
the manor of Clifton and the other moiety of the 
ancient family estate by his marriage with Anne 
Pedigrees of the family were recorded at 


KIRKHAM 


Cuthbert was a recusant in 


to be buried in Kirkham Church, where 
his ancestors were buried. Thomas, his 
son and heir, was under age ; William, 
the younger son, was to be kept to the 
school until twenty-one; the daughter 
Ellen is named. Isabel his wife was to 
have the manor-place of Westby and the 
demesne thereto belonging. ‘A certain 
pasture called the Peel’ is mentioned. 

Isabel married John Holcar and in 1538 
was claiming dower; Pal. of Lanc, Plea 
R. 164, m. 3d. 

28 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. ix, no. 18; 
xX, no. 473 xii, no. 12. Thomas died 
seised of the manor of Westby, messuages, 
windmill, &c., in Westby, Great and Little 
Plumpton, &c. The manor of Westby and 
its appurtenances were held of the king as 
of his duchy in socage by a rent of Los. 
This was only a fourth part of the old 
service of 4os.; Clifton rendered 20s. 4d. 
There is nothing to show how the re~ 
mainder was paid, but the chief rent of 
Barton (85.) may account for most of it. 

The accounts of Thomas Clifton’s 
executors are printed in Piccope, Wills 
(Chet. Soc.), iii, 73-80. He left 205. to 
the grammar school. To the vicar of 
Kirkham 10s. was paid as a mortuary, 
and £4 os. 4d. was paid at the church the 
day of his burial. 

29 Gibson, Lydiate Hall, 215, quoting 
S. P. Dom. Eliz. cxviii, 451. The William 
Clifton, gent., of this and later lists was 
no doubt his uncle, the younger son named 
in the will of 1537 above quoted. 

80 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xiv, no. 76. 
The tenure of Westby is given as beforc. 
A messuage called Ballam there had been 
assigned to Cuthbert’s brother William. 

81 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 21. 
This recites the will of Thomas Clifton, 
dated 3 Feb. 1584-5, in which are given 
particulars of a settlement of his estates. 
His wife was Jane daughter of Sir John 
Southworth ; he had three brothers— Wil- 
liam, John and Cuthbert; his uncle, 
William Clifton of Ballam, was living. 

Thomas Clifton as a recusant was in 
1584 required to provide a light horse- 
man, armed, for the queen’s service in 
Ireland ; Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 
Bere of entry to Cuthbert son and 
heir of Thomas Clifton was given in 
1605-6 ; Kuerden MSS. iv, C 21. 

32 Metcalfe, Bk. of Knights, 171. Sir 
Cuthbert Clifton obtained a general pardon 
on the accession of Charles I; Kuerden, 
loc. cit. 

88 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvii, 
no. 43. The tenure of Westby is recorded 
as before. ‘The Peel’ was said to be 
held of the king as of his duchy by knight’s 
service. A settlement made in 1611 is 
recited, the remainder being to Thomas 
the son and heir and heirs male. There 
was a younger son Cuthbert. Jane Stanley, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


the heralds’ visitations in 
1665." 

The Cliftons adhered to 
Roman Catholicism,”’ and in 
the Civil War to the king’s 
side.38 Thomas Clifton had 
his estates sequestered as a re- 
cusant and delinguent,*? and 
at length they were sold by 
order of the Parliament.*? 
His eldest son, Colonel Cuth- 
bert Clifton, was taken 
prisoner at Liverpool in 1644, 
and died at Manchester,*! and 
three other brothers are stated 
to have lost their lives in the 
king’s service.’? 


widow, formerly wife of ‘“homis Clifton 
(father of Cuthbert), and Dorothy, Cuth- 
bert’s widow, were living at Westby. 

The younger son, Cuthbert, entered 
the Society of Jesus in 1630 and laboured 
in the Lancashire mission from 1642 till 
his death in 1675. He is stated to have 
reconciled the seventh Earl of Derby to 
the Roman Church while on his way to 
execution at Bolton, 1651; Foley, Rec. 
S.J. vil, 139. 8 F7sit. (Chet. Soc.), 42. 

3% Ibid. 88. 86 Thid. 86. 

37 Sir Cuthbert was present at the 
meeting (or pilgrimage) at Holywell in 
1629. It was then stated that he had two 
priests at his house, at which place were 
kept Fr. Arrowsmith’s clothes and the 
knife that cut him up; Foley, op. cit. iv, 
534, citing S. P. Dom. Chas. I, cli, 13. 
Two of his daughters were nuns. 

It may have been this Cuthbert to 
whom in 1636 licence to travel abroad 
was given, Rome being the place for- 
bidden ; Cal, S. P. Dom. 1635-6, p. 341. 

385 Thomas Clifton was one of the 
‘ recusants convicted’ who petitioned the 
king on the outbreak of the war to be 
allowed to provide themselves with 
weapons ; Civil War Tracts (Chet. Soc.), 
39. He entertained the Earl of Derby 
at Lytham Hall in 1644; War in Lancs. 
(Chet. Soc.), 26. 

39 Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 47-63. Major 
John Wildman, esq., contracted for the 
purchase of the manors of Clifton-with- 
Salwick, Westby, Lytham and Little 
Marton. 

Other members of the family also 
suffered. The estate of Dorothy widow 
of Sir Cuthbert was sequestered in 1647 
for her recusancy ; ibid. 43. The annuity 
of John Clifton, a lunatic, was suspended 
for a time ; ibid. 46. 

40 Index of Royalists (Index Soc.), 30; 
under an Act of 1652, for the use of the 
navy. 

41 He married in 1641 Margaret daugh- 
ter and heir of George Ireland of South- 
worth, and his estate was seized by the 
Parliament in 1643: Royalist Comp. 
Papers, ii, 60. Colonel Clifton—who 
must have been very young for such a 
post—was made governor of Liverpool 
after the capture of that town by 
Prince Rupert, and was taken prisoner 
at its recapture 1 Nov. 1644. He and 
the others ‘were carried to Manchester 
and there kept. Some of them died 
within a little time after, as Colonel 
Cuthbert Clifton of Lytham and Captain 
Richard Butler of Rawcliffe with 
others’; War in Lancs. 60; Civil War 


MM 
’ 


1567 


Thomas died in 1657, and his 


1613 °° and 


second son Thomas succee-teJ.3 


He was made a 


baronet in 1601 as a recognition of his family’s 


of Clifton 
and Westby. Sable ona 
bend argent three mullets 
pierced gules. 


CuiFTon 


Tracts, 205. For an anecdote of him see 
Wear in Lanes. §1. 

2 Gillow, Bibl. Dict, of Engl. Cath. i, 
516-17. Their mames are given as 
Francis (killed at Newbury 1643), John 
and Lawrence. Another brother, Ger- 
vase, was with the king’s forces till the 
taking of Shelford Manor, when he was 
captured; ‘as to his recusancy, as he 
was but young before the first wars he 
could not be convicted, but his father 
and all the family being ever Papists, 
they (the investigators) believed he could 
never make it appear that he was con- 
formable, nor was he then so far as they 
knew’ ; Royalist Comp. Papers, ii, 56, 45. 

48 The details in the later part of the 
descent are taken in the main from 
Foster’s Lancs, Ped. ‘Mr. Thomas Clifton 
of Lytham’ was buried at Lytham 
17 Dec. 1657; Reg. 

“ G.E.C. Complete Baronetage, iii, 170. 

49 Sir Thomas and Lady Bridget his wife 
were indicted for recusancy in 1678-9 ; 
Hist. MSS, Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 109. 

Sir Thomas, then a very infirm man, 
was arrested on suspicion in 168g, and 
kept in Mr. Patten’s house in Preston, 
where he avowed his contentment with 
the government. Again he was captured 
at Wrea Green 17 July 1694 and lodged 
at Kirkham, being taken next day to his 
own house at Lytham, then by Wigan 
to Chester Castle. Afterwards he was 
kept in the Tower of London till the 
trial at Manchester ; Jacobite Trials (Chet. 
Soc.), 98, 46. 

His brothers William and James were 
also arrested in 1689; Hist. MSS. Com. 
Rep. xiv, App. iv, 314. Lunt, the informer 
and chief witness, at the trial pointed to 
Sir Rowland Stanley as Sir Thomas 
Clifton and vice versa; ibid. 371. 

The manors of Lytham, Westby-with- 
Plumpton, Clifton-with-Salwick and 
Little Marton were held by Sir Thomas 
Clifton in 1692; Pal. of Lanc, Plea 
R. 455, m. 1135 Feet of F. bdle. 228, 
m. 127. 

46 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurors, 11§ ; also Bridget Clifton, 94. 

An agent of the government writing 
from Preston in 1716 says: ‘The family 
of Thomas Clifton of Lytham, esq., a 
Roman Catholic of very considerable 
estate, seems to have been very deeply 
engaged in the late rebellion. George 
Clifton, his brother, is actually outlawed 
on account of that rebellion and I have 
the copies of several depositions taken 
against the eldest son of the said Thomas 
Clifton and one Mr. Mayfield his steward 
that are very plain and direct |’ 


164 


loyalty,“ and he was accused of treason after the 
Kevolution.*® He died in 1694, and his son having 
died before him the baronetcy expired, while the 
manors descended to his nephew Thomas Clifton 
of Fairsnape, who registered his estates in 1717 
as a ‘Papist,” the annual value being given as 
£1,548 175. 24.4% 
manors of Clifton and Westby descended regularly to 
his great-great-grandson, another Thomas Clifton," 
who became a Protestant in 1831,48 and was sheriff in 
1835. He died in 1851, and his son John Talbot Clif. 
ton, who represented North Lancashire 1844~47 49% 
and was sheriff in 1853,°' died in 1882, having 
returned to the Roman Catholic religion.52 
succeeded by his grandson Mr. John Talbot Clifton,5? 


He died in 1720, and the 


He was 


Again, ‘The eldest son of the said 
Thomas Clifton has absconded ever since 
the action at Preston and is said also 
to be fled to France. ... There are 
also some depositions against the said 
Thomas Clifton himself, and I have been 
assured by a clergyman of the Church of 
England in his neighbourhood, a very 
zealous man for the government, that 

» was there but proper encourage- 
ment given there might be a cloud of 
witnesses produced that would fix the 
matter plainly upon him’; Payne, Engl. 
Cath, Rec. 87, Loo. 

‘7 The descent is thus given in Foster, 
op. cit.: Thomas, d, 1720 -s, Thomas, 
d. 1734 —s. Thomas, d. 1783 -s, John, 
d. 1832 -s. Thomas, 1788-1851. 

It was the second Thomas Clifton who 
married Mary daughter and co-heir of 
Richard (fifth) Lord Molyneux. The 
same ‘Thomas, as son and heir of Thomas 
Clifton and nephew and devisee of James 
Clifton of Preston, in 1727 transferred 
to William Clifton (son of Cuthbert, 
eldest son of said James) and John 
Winder land on the Freshes of the River 
Potomac in the province of Virginia, 
lately in the possession of James Clifton 
and of Thomas his second son; Piccope 
MSS. ‘Chet. Lib.), iii, 232, from rolls 
1 & 2 of Geo, II at Preston. For the 
will of Thomas Clifton, 1734, see ibid. 
256, quoting 2nd sth roll of Geo. II; it 
mentions Mary his wife daughter of 
Richard Lord Molyneux and his four 
daughters. Eleanor, one of the daughters, 
was a nun at the Bar Convent, York, 
1720-85 ; Misc.(Cath. Rec, Soc.), iv, 360. 

The third Thomas in the descent 
married Anne daughter of Sir Carnaby 
Haggerston in 1752. The marriage 
covenant, from which it appears he owned 
Fairsnape and Todderstaffe, is abstracted 
by Piccope (ibid. 278) from R. 26 of 
Geo. II, He had made a settlement of 
his manors of Clifton, Salwick, Westby, 
&c., in 17503; Pal. of Lanc, Plea R. $7% 
m. 7. The last Thomas similarly occurs 
in 1809 ; Draft Docquets, bdle. 27,R 10. 

48Some particulars are related in 
Gillow’s Haydock Papers, 237- 

49-50 Burke, Landed Gentry (1 906)y 335- 

5] Ibid. : 

69 His brother Charles Frederick took 
his wife’s surname of Abney-Hastings 
and was raised to the peerage in 1880 a 
Lord Donington. He died in 1895, his 
son being the Earl of Loudoun, a heir 
of his mother; G.E.C. Complete Peerage, 
iil, 137+ 

"3 Hie of Thomas Henry Clifton, who 
died in 1880. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


born in 1868, the present lord of the manor. The 
principal residence of the family has been at Lytham 
since early in the 17th century. Mr. Clifton’s pos- 
sessions include the whole of the townships of Clifton- 
with-Salwick, Westby-with-Plumptons, and Lytham 
(ancient) ; also Little Marton, part of Great Marton 
and much of Warton. Manor courts have long ceased 
to be held, but juries of the farmers in the several 
townships assemble yearly to make arrangements for 
the clearing of the watercourses, and officials named 
constables, byelaw-men, &c., are nominated as a 
matter of form.” 

The Cliftons being the only landowners in the 
township, there is little to record besides. Richard 
Clitheroe of Clifton paid £10 on declining knight- 
hood in 1631.°° One Thomas Threlfall had two- 
thirds of his house and land sequestered for recusancy 
in the Commonwealth time.°® Several people of 
Clifton and Salwick registered estates as ‘ Papists’” in 
1717, in addition to the squire. 

Of Salwick there is little to record.58 There were 
disputes between the lords of Lea and Clifton as to 
pasturage on Salwick Waste, Grimes Moss and Clifton 


Marsh.®9 William Duddell was a freeholder in 
1600. 

LUND was the site of an oratory in 
CHURCH 1349, as above stated. The chapel is 


named again in the partition of the 
Clifton estates in 1515.6! Nothing is known of its 
earlier history ; it is not named among the chantries 
suppressed in 1547-8, and probably ceased to be used 
for service ©? till the time of the Commonwealth, 
when, the Cliftons’ estates being under sequestration, 
Lund Chapel was rebuilt ®* and occupied by one 
Joseph Harrison, ‘a godly, diligent and painful 
pastor,” who received £40 a year from the Com- 
mittee of Plundered Ministers.°* Afterwards it re- 
verted to the Cliftons, but in 1687 was claimed by 


KIRKHAM 


to have prevailed, probably owing to the Revolution, 
for in 1689 Thomas Ryley, ‘conformable,’ was 
minister there.“® Bishop Gastrell about 1717 found 
that there was an income from recent endowments of 
£6 18s. 4d. and that the master of Kirkham School 
preached and read prayers there ‘every Sunday, 
Sacrament days excepted.’ 87 Curates were appointed 
regularly from 1732. The chapel became ruinous,® 
and was replaced by the present church of St. John 
the Evangelist in 1825. A district parish was attached 
to it in 1840,°° and the vicarial tithes have been 
assigned to the incumbent, who is presented by the 
Dean and Canons of Christ Church, Oxford.”® The 
following have had charge 7! :— 


1717. Edward Manwaring 

1726 Thomas Cockin 

1749 Benjamin Wright 

1774 Cuthbert Harrison 

1790 Joshua Southward 

1790 Charles Buck, M.A. (St. John’s Coll., 
Camb.) 

1808 ‘Thomas Stephenson 

1820 Richard Moore, M.A.” (Brasenose Coll., 
Oxf.) 

1886 Charles Fullerton Smith, M.A. (Christ 
Ch., Oxf) 


Ward’s House, near Salwick Hall, was formerly the 
seat of a younger branch of the Clifton family, of 
whom several became Jesuits, and mass was said in the 
chapel there in the 17th 78 and 18th centuries,” until 
the chapel at Lea was built in 1801.78 


NEWTON-WITH-SCALES 


Neutune, Dom. Bk. ; Neuton, 1242. 
This township occupies a long strip of ground 
running north from the Ribble, with an area of 


Mr. Clegg, vicar of Kirkham,® and this claim seems 


54 Information of Mr. James S. Fair. 
: 53 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 222. 

© Cal. Com. for Comp. v, 3202. Threl- 
fall was dead, but had been succeeded by 
another of the same name. The claim 
of Thomas Cottam in 1654 was allowed 
‘unless the County Commissioners find 
that Margaret wife of Thomas Threlfall 
is the Margaret Threlfall of Poulton who 
has been convicted of recusancy.’ 

37 Of Clifton—Robert Hoskar, James 
Hoskar and Robert Gradwell ; Estcourt 
and Payne, op. cit. 103, 133, 136. Of 
Salwick— James Hardman and Anne 
widow of John Charnock ; ibid. 92, 140. 

58 The New Hall and the Old Hall in 
Salwick are named in 1591; Ducatus 
Lanc. (Rec. Com.), iii, 256. 

® Ibid. 113, 3233 Lancs. and Ches. 
Rec. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 279. 

_ © Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 232, 

S' Quoted in a former note. See 

Raines’ notes in Notitia Cestr. (Chet. 
Soc.), ii, 424. 
_ The chantry chapel and its lands, 
including three messuages in Kirkham 
and the 4 acres and a windmill in Clifton, 
certainly came into the hands of the 
Crown, for James I sold them in 1606 
to William Brown and others (Pat. 
3 Jas. I, pt. xvi), who no doubt sold to 
the lord of Clifton. 

In 1645 an allowance of £40 out 


1,5224 acres.! 


of Thomas Clifton’s sequestered tithes 
was voted for the maintenance of a 
minister, ‘when the said chapel of Lund 
shall be re-edified’ ; Plund. Mins. Accts. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 9. The 
grant became effective in 1648 ; ibid. 62. 

54 Commonw. Ch. Surv. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), 155. The allowance 
was increased to £50 ; Plund. Mins. Accts. 
i, 94, 245. 

Harrison was ‘a good scholar and a 
methodical preacher; fixed in a dark 
corner, where he was wonderfully fol- 
lowed and very useful’ ; Calamy, Nonconf. 
Mem. (ed. Palmer), ii, 97. For his 
family see Lancs. and Ches. Hist. and Gen. 
Notes, ii, 159. 

6 Raines, ut sup. quoting Cartwright’s 
Diary (Camden Soc.), in which the 
bishop states he dismissed the claim for 
want of evidence. The claim must have 
originated somewhat earlier, for in 1680 
Alice Clitherall left £5 towards an en- 
dowment ; in 1682 John Dickson left 
money, half the interest on which was 
“to be paid to such minister as should be 
legally authorised to teach and preach in 
the chapel of Lund, according to the 
Church of England,’ or in default to the 
poor; and in 1685 Thomas Smith left 
£20 for ‘a lawful minister’; while in 
1690 Alice Hankinson left £2 for the 
use of the chapel; End. Char. Rep. 
(Kirkham), 18. 

The chapel was first repaired at the 


165 


The village of Newton is near the 


charge of the parish in 1688 ; Fishwick, 
Kirkham (Chet. Soc.), 56. 

66 Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 
229. Ryley is not named in Stratford’s 
visitation list, 1691, so that he did not 
stay long. 

87 Notitia Cestr. loc. cit. 

68 The royal brief for a collection on 
behalf of the rebuilding, dated 1822, is 
printed in Lancs. and Ches. Antiq. Notes, 
li, 200. 

69 Order in Council, Aug. 1840. 

70 Raines’ notes, Notitia Cestr. The 
benefice was declared a vicarage in 1866 ; 
Lond. Gaz. 25 May. 

71 This list is from the church papers, 
Chester Dioc. Reg. 

72 Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 303. 

73 See the account of Kirkham Church. 

74 Foley, Rec. S. J. vii, 140-1. In 
1716 it was reported ‘that Lowick 
[?Salwick] Hall, the reputed inherit- 
ance of Thomas Clifton esq. of Lytham, 
about four miles from Preston, belongs 
to some popish priests or is appropriated 
to some other superstitious use’ ; Payne, 
Engl. Cath. Rec. 89. 

75 John Cliiton (d. 1832) suppressed 
Salwick Chapel, and made an unsuccess- 
ful claim for the plate and vestments ; 
Gillow, Haydock Papers, 237, 207. 

1 The Census Rep. 1901 gives 1,472 
acres, including 7 of inland water ; there 
are also 15 acres of tidal water and 4o of 
foreshore. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


centre, 


border of Clifton. 


was 2 29. 


The road from Preston to Kirkham passes through 
Scales and Dowbridge, with a loop round by Newton ; 
and the road from Preston to Lytham crosses the low- 


lying ground to the south. 


The soil is clayey and loamy, with subsoil of sand ; 
wheat, beans and oats are grown, but nearly all the 


land is used for pasture. 


The township is now governed by a parish council. 
There was formerly a curious inscription on the 


High Gate Inn.? 


2 Printed in N. and Q. (Ser. 6), ii, 336, 
from a local paper. 

8 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 2884. 

4 Ibid. 335- 

5 One of the moieties of Newton was 
in 1202 held of Roger de Freckleton by 
William de Winwick and Maud his wife ; 
Feet of F. Yorks. 4 John, no. 45. The 
other moiety was probably that held by 
Gunilda (or Quenilda), described as ‘ lady 
of Newton’ in the Cockersand charters. 

Alan de Singleton and Warine de 
Whittingham held the Freckleton moiety 
in 12423 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 152. 

In 1292 Alice daughter of Richard de 
Marklan and widow of William de Newton 
claimed dower in two-thirds of three 
messuages and 3 oxgangs of land in New- 
ton against Henry de Lacy Earl of Lin- 
coln, Maud daughter and heir of John son 
and heir of William de Newton and wife 
of William de Beconsaw, and others. 
Adam de Freckleton claimed the lordship, 
and stated that William de Newton had 
held of him by knight’s service, and John 
his son also ; Maud the daughter and heir 
of John was under age, and the tenement 
was given to the Earl of Lincoln, who 
allowed one-third to Almorica, John’s 
widow. The jury, however, found for the 
plaintiff under a grant made by William 
de Newton ; Assize R. 418, m. 9d.3 419, 
m, 12d, 

In 1384 Robert de Freckleton granted 

ohn de Newton a messuage and 1} ox- 
gangs of land in Newton and Warton for 
life ; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), iii, 24. 

§ Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 30, 152, 
316. It continued in the families of 
Prees and Skillicorne till the 17th century. 

In 1292 Margery widow of John Fran- 
ceys claimed dower in half an oxgang of 
land in Newton against Robert de Prees ; 
Assize R. 408, m. 43d. 

William son of William de Prees, a 
minor, in 1361 recovered a messuage and 
land in Newton against Adam Wodebridde, 
Alice his wife and William Browning ; 
De Banco R. 408, m. 79. 

Margery de Prees in 1401 held 2 ox- 
gangs of land in Newton of the king as 
of his honour of Penwortham by knight's 
service 3 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 
76. John Skillicorne in 1478 held nine 
messuages, 100 acres of land, &c., in New- 
ton of the king, paying 6d. a year ; ibid. ii, 
105. The family had an earlier interest in 
Newton, for in 1357 Adam Skillicorne 


Scales lying to the north-east of it, on the 
t The southern end has been 
reclaimed from the Ribble, and about a third of the 
remainder is flat ground, under 25 ft. above sea 
level; north of this the surface rises sharply to over 
50 ft., Newton being situated on the slope, and then 
the ground again becomes even, descending a little 
at the northern boundary. The population in 1go1 


In 1066 NE/S'TON was a member 

MANORS of Earl Tostig’s fee, and assessed as two 
plough-lands.® 

cluded in the barony of Penwortham, and found to 
be divided equally between the fees of Freckleton 
and Preese, held by knight’s service.‘ 
moiety was held by Singleton and Whittingham of the 
lord of Freckleton.’ The other moiety long descended 


Afterwards it was in- 


The former 


like Preese.6 This was sold in 1608,” and in 1617 was 


Abbey.?® 


held by James Townend and Edmund Hankinson.‘ 
There were immediate tenants who assumed the 
local surname, and were benefactors to Cockersand 
A small part of Newton descended from 
Bradshagh © to Coppull, and was in the time of 
Henry VI sold to Thomas Stanley of Lathom, so 


descending to the Earls of Derby.!? 


purchased an oxgang of land, &c., there 
from William de Thornton and Maud his 
wife ; Final Conc. ii, 155, 180. 

Nicholas Skillicorne in 1606 still held 
the ‘manor’ of Newton-with-Scales ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 70, no. 83. 
Soon afterwards it must have been sold, 
for in a Skillicorne fine of 1609 it is not 
named ; ibid. bdle. 76, no. 31. 

7 In Aug. 1608 James Townend and 
Edmund Hankinson paid £5 for licence 
to agree with Nicholas, John and William 
Skillicorme respecting the manor of New- 
ton-with-Scales,a windmill, &c. ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R. 301, m. gd. 

8 James Townend of Weeton (Ducatus 
Lance. iii, 407) died in 1618 holding a 
moiety of the manor of Newton-with- 
Scales, and various messuages, lands, &c., 
of the king as of his duchy by the hundredth 
part of a knight’s fee. William his son 
and heir was fourteen years old 3 Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 
97. Some Townends occur in the Preston 
Guild Rolls. 

Edmund Hankinson died in 1619 hold- 
ing a moiety of the manor, various lands, 
&c., of the king as of his duchy by the 
twentieth part of a knight’s fee. The 
heir was his son Robert, three years old ; 
ibid. 123. 

For the Hankinson family see Preston 
Guard. Loc. Notes, no. §46. Hugh Hornby 
of Kirkham is said to have married Mar- 
garet daughter and eventual heir of Joseph 
Hankinson of Kirkham (she died 1804), 
and thus probably the moiety of the manor 
descended to Hornby of Ribby; Burke, 
Landed Gentry. 

In 1652 one moiety of the manor of 
Newton-with-Scales and messuages, wind- 
mill,&c., there was held by Thomas Davy, 
Margery his wife, Robert Clifton and Jane 
his wife; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 151, m. 108. 

A moiety of the manor was held in 
1753 by the Hornbys of Ribby; ibid. 
bdle. 348, m. 240. 

Nothing further is known of any manor 
of Newton. 

9 Adam son of Leysing de Newton 
and Robert his son were benefactors ; 
Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 201, 
205. Summerbrook Furlong, Dounanes- 
breck, Fretlands, Avenams, Aldefield and 
Feredale are names occurring in their 
charters. 

Gunilda daughter of Richard son of 
Swain and wife of Robert son of Huck 
gave land in Lumland, as also did her 


166 


Newton occurs but seldom in the records!3; the 
‘manor’ is named in 1563.!4 
also was spoken of as a manor.!5 


In 1580 SCALES 
In 1794 the lords 


son Jordan de Newton ; ibid. i, 203-4. 
William son of Albert with his witc 
Siegrith daughter of Robert de Newton 
also gave land in Summerbrook Furlong ; 
ibid. 205, 

Another benefactor was William son 
of Richard de Bispham, who gave the 
canons the eastern moiety of Dalebridge 
Head, in part bounded by the ‘great 
street,’ from Dalebridge at Lund to the 
Carr ; ibid. i, 205. 

The abbey’s rentals 1451-1537 are 
printed ibid. iii, 1262-3. 

10 Adam son of Richard de Bradshagh 
and Margaret his wife in 1331 settled a 
messuage and 14 oxgangs of land in 
Newton upon Adam’s son William and 
Ellen his wife ; Final Conc. ii, 79. 

11 William Coppull the elder sued for 
the manor of Newton-in-Amounderness, 
with twelve messuages, 200 acres of land, 
&c., in Warton, Kirkham, Kellamergh, 
Wesham, Greenhalgh, Elswick and Ham- 
bleton ; the defendant was John Coppull ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 20, m. 14 (about 
1456). 

John son of William Coppull told to 
Thomas Stanley lands in Newton, Freckle- 
ton, Kirkham, Warton, é&c., which had 
descended to him from his mother Alice 
daughter of John son of William de 
Bradshagh ; Kuerden MSS. iii, C 33. 

12The Derby rental of 1522 (at 
Lathom) shows 54s. 8d. received from 
the tenants in Newton; also ten hens 
valued at 15d. ae 

Henry Earl of Derby was plaintiff in 
1591 respecting lands, &c., and the repair 
of Proud Bridge in Newton, Scales, Clifton 
and Freckleton; Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. 
Com.), iii, 253. 

13 William del Bank claimed two mes 
suages, &c., against Adam del Bank in 
13513 Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 3, 
m. 1d, (July), 8d. (Mich.). 

John le Spenser of Newton in 1375 
made complaints of depasturing ; De 
Banco R. m. 341. 

About roe oe disputes between 
John Grimboldston and members of the 
Elston family respecting a tenement 1D 
Newton-in-Scales ; Pal of Lanc. Writs 
Proton. Lent, 32 Hen. VII; Sessional 
P. 33 Hen. VIII, Writs of Assize, Ang. 
36 Hen. VIII. -_ AA 

“In a claim by William Skillicorne, 
who held by inheritance, respecting 
common ; Ducatus Lanc. ii, 27°. 

15 [bid, iii, 92, in a petition by James 
Browne. The Browne family had bad 


me : ae b, = 
ae a 
| Bernie 


Cuirton witH Satwick: Lunp CuHurcu, Roman Attar usep as Font 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


of the manor of Newton-with-Scales were Joseph 
Hornby, Richard Birley and Bertie Markland.1® The 
names of some of the former landowners may be re- 
covered from the inquisitions.1’7 The Hospitallers had 
land in Newton from an early time.!8 

John Browne of Scales and Thomas Davie of 
Newton-with-Scales paid £10 each in 1631, having 
declined knighthood.!® 

A school, known as the Blue Coat School, was 
founded in 1707.79 


FRECKLETON 


Frecheltun, Dom. Bk. ; Frequelton, 1212; Frekel- 
ton, 1242; Frekilton, 1244. 

Formerly this township was bounded by two brooks 
flowing south to the Ribble, which forms the boundary 
on that side, and the Naze was a projecting point in 
the south-east corner. A large tract of land reclaimed 


KIRKHAM 


centre and north, attaining about 85 ft. above the 
ordnance datum. ‘The large but somewhat straggling 
village of Freckleton lies near the centre, having a 
mill by the brook to the east. The area of the town- 
ship measures 2,417 acres,! and the population in 
Igor numbered 1,239. 

The principal roads are one going west through 
the village from Preston to Lytham and another 
going from the village to Kirkham on the north. 
Other roads lead south to the Ribble. 

Sailcloth and sacking used to be manufactured in 
the village ; rope and twine are now made there, 
and there is a cotton manufactory. 

Sites of two ancient crosses are known.? 

There is a parish council. 

Before the Conquest FRECKLETON, 
assessed as four plough-lands, formed 
part of Earl Tostig’s Preston lordship,® 
and afterwards became a member of the barony of 
Penwortham,’ being head of a knight’s fee of eight 


MANORS 


from the Ribble has been added to the township to 
The highest ground is in the 


the east of the Naze. 


lands in Newton from 1419 ; Towneley 
MS. DD, no. 1791, 1882, 1884. 

George Browne died in 1567 seised of 
six messuages, &c., in the Scales and 
Newton, held of William Skillicorne by 
a rent of 144. ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
xi, no. 4. The estate went to James 
Browne, a cousin. 

Another George Browne in 1572 
purchased a messuage, &c., from Ellen 
Taborner, widow ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F. bdle. 34, m. 32. 

In pleadings of 1580 Scales is called a 
‘manor.’ James Browne, then claiming, 
stated that his grandfather James Browne 
of ‘Houghton’ had held it, and had 
settled it on his son William, with 
remainders to younger sons Henry and 
Alexander. William had two sons, Evan 
(who had one son Richard, s.p.m.) and 
George (s.p.m.), and the younger James 
claimed as son and heir of Henry. It 
appeared that on George Browne’s death 
his brother Evan’s daughters had shared ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Plead. 22 Eliz. cxvi, B 19. 

James Browne died in 1586 holding 
land of William Skillicorne by rd. rent, 
and two closes of the queen as of her 
duchy by the hundredth part of a knight’s 
fee ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 42. 

John Browne in 1595 purchased a 
messuage in Newton-with-Scales from 
William Skillicorne and Joan his wife ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 57, m. 68. 

Henry Browne of Scales was a free- 
holder in 1600 ; Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 233. 

James Browne of Newton in 1621 
held his messuage and land there of the 
king by knight’s service as of the fee of 
Penwortham, and by 34. rent. His son 
John, aged thirty, was the next heir ; 
Lanes. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), ii, 239. 

In the case of the Cliftons of Clifton 
their tenement in Scales (once called a 
‘manor') appears to have been regarded 
as part of the manor of Clifton, Scales 
being on the border, but in Newton they 
held land of the Earl of Derby in socage 
or by knight’s service ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. iv, no. 12,48. Henry Halsall, 
however, in 1575, was found to have 
held land in “Newton in le Scales,’ as 
part of Clifton, of the queen ; ibid. xiii, 
No, 34, 


plough-lands.® 


16 Licence for gamekeeper ; Preston 
Guard. Loc, Notes, no. 1129. 

W Adam de Bradkirk in 1349 held 
Ig oxgangs of land in Newton of the 
duke as of the fee of Penwortham by 
knight’s service, sake and ward ; another 
4 oxgang of Richard the Harper by 
knight’s service and a rent of 7}d.; and 
the fourth part of an oxgang of William de 
Prees by knight’s service and 154.5 Ing. 
p-m. 28 Edw. III (2nd nos.), no. 1a. 

The Newsham family had land in the 
township in 1380; Final Cone. iii, 7. 
George Newsham in 1585 held two mes- 
suages in Newton-in-Scales of William 
Skillicorne by a rent of 2¢.; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 88. 

William Westby of Mowbreck in 1551 
purchased two messuages, é&c.. from 
Christopher Colborne ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F, bdle. 14, m. 253. This tenement was 
in 1557 found to be held of Sir Richard 
Hoghton in socage by the rent of a pepper- 
corn ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. x, no. 17. 
The statement is repeated later. The 
origin of the Hoghton lordship is un- 
known ; it may have resulted from their 
manor in Whittingham. 

George Hesketh of Poulton in 1571 
held land, &c., in Newton of William 
Skillicorne by 14d. rent; ibid. xiii, no. 
15. In 1622 this estate was held ‘of the 
lords of the said town’ by the same rent 
of 13d. ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), iii, 366. 

Robert Hankinson died in 1604 holding 
cottages in Newton of Nicholas Skillicorne 
as of his manor of Newton-with-Scales 
by 3d. rent. Edmund his son and heir 
was twenty-six years of age ; ibid. i, 135. 
This Edmund, as already stated, acquired 
a moiety of the manor. 

John Browning in 1617 held land in 
Newton of the king as of his manor of 
East Greenwich by 18s. rent. Margaret, 
his daughter and heir, was five years old; 
ibid. ii, 225. 

Robert Hesketh of Rufford died in 1620 
holding a messuage and land in Newton- 
with-Scales of the king as of his duchy 
in socage. Thomas Stanley afterwards 
occupied the same ; ibid. iii, 357-8. 

18 In 1246 the Prior of St. John 
claimed warranty from William de Prees 
respecting 14 oxgangs of land ; Roger and 
Richard, sons of Jordan de Newton, were 


167 


the surname of Freckleton.® 


This was held by a family assuming 


In 1242 Richard de 


the prior’s sureties ; Assize R. 404, m. 4. 
The place is mentioned among the Hos- 
pitallers’ lands in 12923 Plac. de Quo 
Warr, (Rec. Com.), 375. 

19 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 221-2. 

20 John Hornby, the founder, who lived 
in Newton, directed that the children 
were to be instructed freely ‘in learning 
and in the principles of the Protestant 
religion,’ and taken to Kirkham Church 
every Sunday ; End. Char. Rep. Kirkham, 
24. 

12,207 acres, including 6 of inland 
water; Census Rep. 1901. There are 
also 67 acres of tidal water and 135 of 
foreshore. 

2 Hall Cross and Higher House Cross ; 
Lancs. and Ches. Antiq. Soc. xx, 186. 

8 V.C.H. Lanes, i, 2882. 

4 Ibid. 335,n.1. The Earl of Lincoln 
in 1292 claimed wreck of the sea at 
Freckleton and Warton in right of his 
fee of Penwortham ; Plac. de Quo Warr. 
(Rec. Com.), 382. See also Lancs, Ing. 
pom. (Chet. Soc.), i, 22. 

5 Freckleton, four plough-lands ; Whit- 
tingham, one; Newton, one; and Els- 
wick, two, 

6 The earliest member of it known is 
Roger de Freckleton, tenant in 1199, 
when he confirmed to Richard de Freckle- 
ton (who appeared by a brother, Adam) 
the sixteenth part of a mill and fishery 
in the township; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), i, 7. In 1200-1 Roger 
appears as holding by knight’s service ; 
Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R.134. At the same 
time he paid § marks for having the 
pasture of Brethough Moor, to which his 
claim had been allowed ; ibid. 132. He 
is named also in the Pipe Roll of 1203-4 ; 
ibid. 176. In 1202 he confirmed to 
William de Winwick and Maud his wife 
the lands they held of him in Whitting- 
ham and Elswick, and added 8 oxgangs 
more, they releasing to him all claim in 
his tenement and giving g acres in 
Brechou (Brethough) in Freckleton ; 
Feet of F. Yorks. 4 John, no. 45. 

It is possible that he was the Roger son 
of Jordan who gave 2 acres on the south 
side of Freckleton, together with his body, 
to the canons of Cockersand; Chartul. 
(Chet. Soc.), i, 198. He had a son 
Richard and a brother Swain, who also 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Freckleton,’ who was a benefactor of Cockersand 
Abbey “and Lytham Priory,® held in demesne 2} 
plough-lands in Freckleton, while another plough- 
land was held by Alan de Singleton and Swain de 
Freckleton, and the remaininz half plough-land by 
Gilbert de Mco!l:, Roger de Nutshaw and William 
Amid so many subdivisions the succession 


de Pool.!” 


had a son Richard (perhaps the Richard 
of the fine of 1199); ibid. 199. Rog:r 
attested several of Quenilda de Warton's 
grants to Lytham Priory ; D. at Durham. 
To another charter, perhaps somewhat 
later, the witnesses included Roger and 
Richard de Freckleton and Robert son of 
the lady of Freckleton; ibid. 1a, 2ae, 
4ae, Ebor. no. 45. 

A third Richard (son of Waldeve) had 
lands in Freckleton about 1200-20; 
Cockersand Chartul. i, 200. 

7In 1212 Richard son of Roger de 
Freckleton held one plough-land in Thorp 
in Bretherton ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 34. 
Richard lord of Freckleton attested a 
number of the Lytham Priory charters ; 
in one (c. 1234) a Richard de Freckleton 
attested before Richard son of Roger de 
Freckleton; D. at Durham, 1a, 2ae, gae, 
Ebor. no. 42. Ina later one Richard is 
entitled Sir; ibid. no. 34. 

At an inquisition made about 1253 it 
was recorded that Richard de Freckleton 
held a knight's fee, but his ancestors had 
enfeoffed many persons of portions of it, 
so that his own residue was not worth 
£15 a year; Ing. pm. Hen. III, ‘de 
annis incertis,’ no. 33. By a fine of 1227 
Richard son of Roger obtained a release 
to himself of 5 oxgangs of land in 
Freckleton to which Maud daughter of 
Robert had some claim; Final Conc. i, 
50. Richard was living in 1258 ; Lancs. 
Ing. and Extents, i, 212. 

5 As Richard son of Roger de Freckleton 
he gave the canons various lands, includ- 
ing Lyolfscroft and 4 selions at the Moor 
next the Hospitallers’ lands ; Cockersand 
Chartul. i, 197-8. 

®° As Richard son of Roger, lord of 
Freckleton, with the assent of Alice his 
wife and of his heirs, he (about 1230) 
gave his land between the lands of Richard 
son of Robert del Moor and William son 
of Hawise and confirmed the gift of Swain 
son of Osbert; Lytham D. at Durham, 
3a, 2ae, 4 ae, Ebor. no. 8. This deed has 
a seal with the legend +s’ rici pn DE 
FREKEL’. Other grants by him in the 
same collection name lands on Scortefald- 
wrynges, Ulvesbothe Furlong, the Out- 
lane Wra in Freckleton Field, the House- 
steads, Curtasfaldwrigis, Tustehorn Fur- 
long, the field called Strick, and an acre 
on Longrodes in Freckleton Field, extend- 
ing from the road called Phusthor to the 
moor. In two of the charters (no. 11, 30) 
he describes himself as ‘brother’ of the 
house of St. Cuthbert of Lytham, though 
he does not seem to have been a monk 
there ; in another (no. 13) his mother 
Sara is named. 

Richard's widow was Hawise daughter 
of Hugh de Mitton, who released her 
dower right in certain land to the monks; 
ibid. no. 21. Robert son of Hawise de 
Freckleton and brother of Richard de 
Freckleton was no doubt her son ; ibid. 
no. 22, 23. In another charter Hawise 
is described as formerly lady of the vill ; 
no. 36. 

10 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 152. The 
Swain named is probably the Swain son 


of Osbert already mentioned. From 
charters already referred to it appears that 
he was a benefactor of Cockersand and 
Lytham. Two of his charters are pre- 
served at Durham (no. 31, 33), one of 
them bearing his seal. Swain son of 
Osbert recovered a parcel of land in 
Freckleton in 1246 against Richard de 
Freckleton, Adam de Singleton and Adam 
his son ; Assize R. 404, m. 8d. 

Gilbert de Meols and Adam his brother 
attested a number of the Lytham Priory 
charters. This share seems to have 
been acquired by the Butlers of Rawcliffe. 

William de Pool is probably the William 
son of Roger del Rise who, in conjunction 
with his wife Margery, released to the 
monks the land near Warton Pool in the 
field of Freckleton which he and his father 
had held of them by fee farm of 2s. 3 the 
monks had given him 5 marks in his 
great need; Lytham D. no. 28, 29. 

For Nutshaw (Nottesagh) see the 
account of Penwortham parish. 

11 Richard lord of Freckleton and 
Richard his son attested a local charter 
c. 1246; Lytham D. no. 36. 

Richard son of Roger, lord of Freckle- 
ton, granted 4 oxgangs of land in Freckleton 
and 1 in Elswick to Richard his son and 
heir, who was to marry Margaret daughter 
of Robert de Molyneux ; Kuerden MSS. 
iv, F13. Sir Adam de Molyneux was a 
witness. 

Richard son of Richard de Freckleton 
in 1259-60 claimed half-acres against 
Robert son of Richard de Freckleton and 
Adam de Singleton, so that he probably 
succeeded his father about that time; 
Curia Regis R. 166, m. 17d. A year or 
two later the defendants’ names are given 
as Robert son of Richard and Adam de 
Freckleton ; ibid. 171, m. 76. At the 
same time Richard de Freckleton claimed 
the services due for their free tenements 
from John son of Richard, Gilbert de 
Meols and Margery his wife, Richard son 
of John and Joan his wife ; ibid. Adam 
son of Alan de Singleton acquired the 
land pertaining to 2 oxgangs of land from 
Michael de Thornton about 1240 ; Dods, 
MSS. liii, fol. 93. 

John de Freckleton appears just after- 
wards as attesting charters and as juror ; 
Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 231, 234 
(1262-5). 

1? Thid. i, 290, 298; he held the Earl 
of Lincoln's knight’s fee in Freckleton of 
the Earl of Lancaster and paid 10s. yearly 
for castle ward. In 1302 also he held the 
fee in Freckleton, Whittingham, Newton 
and Elswick of the Earl of Lincoln ; ibid. 
i, 316. Adam was still tenant in 1311, 
paying 4s. as sake-fee and doing suit to 
Penwortham Court ; De Lacy Ing. (Chet. 
Soc.), 22. 

Adam de Freckleton gave to Adam his 
son and Ellen his wife a messuage (bought 
of Sir William de Clifton) and 3 oxgangs 
of land in Freckleton; Kuerden MSS. 
iii, F3. Adam the son was outlawed in 
1315 for the death of Henry de Bury in 
the rising of Adam Banastre ; Lancs. Ing. 
and Extents, ii, 159. He was living 
twenty years later ; Coram Rege R. 299, 


168 


is not clear.!! In 1297 Adam de Freckleton was the 
principal holder,!? succeeded before 1324 by Ralph 
de Freckleton,!* who was living in 1346. 
year Queen Isabella had a knight’s fee in Freckleton, 
&c., of the inheritance of Alice Countess of Lincoln 
and by Ralph de Freckleton her tenant sendered 
tos. for castle ward yearly.™4 


In that 


Afterwards an heiress, 


m. 20 Rex. In 1322-3 Adam ton of 
Adam de Freckleton released to his 
brother Ralph all right in his lands in 
Freckleton, except an oxgang which 
Edmund de Rigby and Joan his wife held 
for Joan’s life ; Kuerden loc. cit. 3 Dods 
MSS. cxlix, fol. 116. Ellen the widow 
of Adam son of Adam de Freckleton in 
1337 claimed 2 oxgangs of land and an 
eighth part of another against James son 
of Robert de Freckleton, and against 
Nicholas son of Robert son of Michael de 
Freckleton the fourth part of an oxgang; 

De Banco R. 311, m. 82, 82d, Again 

in 1351-4 she claimed the same estate 

against John son of Robert de Freckleton 

and many others ; Duchy of Lane. Assize 

R. 1, m. 3d.5 2, m. 3d.5 3,m. 5. She 

had in the former case made an appeal on 

the ground of error ; Coram Rege R. 316, 

m. 18d. ; 326, m. 20. 

'S From the last note it appears that 
Ralph was a son of Adam the elder. In 
1324 the heir of Adam de Freckleton held 
the knight's fee of Alice de Lacy, doing 
suit to county and wapentake and paying 
castle ward ; Dods. MSS, exxxi, fol. 394, 

The subdivisions of the fee are shown 
in a list of those distrained to do homage 
in 1322: Ralph de Freckleton himself held 
three plough-lands and 4 oxgangs in the 
four townships ; Nicholas le Boteler, one 
plough-land and 3 oxgangs in Freckle- 
ton; Adam Banastre, one plough-land in 
Freckleton and Elswick, é&c. ; Lancs, Ing, 
and Extents, ii, 135. In the ministers’ 
accounts of 1341-2 for Penwortham 
appear payments from Nicholas Boteler 
4s. 2d., Robert de Shireburne 3d. (for 
2 oxgangs and 3 roods of land), Adam 
Banastre 1$d. (2 oxgangs), Edmund de 
Rigby and Joan his wife 14d.; Mins 
Accts, bdle. 1091, no. 6. 

In 1335 Ralph de Freckleton granted 
Adam his son and Emma his wife land in 
the Cross-flat, &c. in Freckleton ; 
Kuerden MSS. iii, F 3. 

M4 Survey of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 44- 

In 1355 the tenants were scparately 
named: Ralph de Freckleton, Nicholas le 
Boteler, Thomas Banastre, Richard de 
Shireburne, Richard de Newton and Sir 
Adam de Hoghton; Feud. Aids, iii, 87. The 
same persons held it in 1361; Inq, p.m 
35 Edw. III, pt. i, no. 122. 

Emmota widow of Adam son of Ralph 
de Freckleton in 1374 released to Ralph 
her son 40 acres she had received in free 
marriage ; Kuerden MSS. ut sup. It 
was probably this younger Ralph who 
made a feoffment of lands in Freckleton 
and Elswick in 1369 and had the manor 
of Freckleton, demesne of Elswick, lands 
in Kirkham, &c., regranted to him in 
1371; ibid. Inthe same year he demised 
his fishery at Freckleton to John Boteler 
for sixteen years ; from a bond it appeart 
that his wife was named Agnes; Towneley 
MS. C8, 5, Edw. III, no. 8, 9- 

Ralph de Freckleton in 1374 com- 
plained of depasturing by John Boteler of 
Marton and others; De Banco R. 45% 
m. . 

hes an agreement was made for 
the marriage of Jubn son of Ralph de 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Joan, daughter of a later Ralph, carried the manor 
to William Huddleston about 1427,!5 and he held 
The Huddleston estate, not 
described as a manor, was sold to the Earl of Derby 


the manor in 1446." 


in 1496.” 


Alan de Singleton’s estate descended to Banastre 
of Bretherton and so to the heirs of Balderston." 
Their right in part was granted to the Earls of 


Freckleton and Alice daughter of Adam 
de Bradkirk ; it shows that Ralph had 
mills in Freckleton and lands in Aughton, 
Maghull, &c.; Kuerden, loc. cit. In the 
following year Ralph made a feoffment of 
the manor of Freckleton, &c.; ibid. 

In 1428 William Huddleston and 
Joan' his wife were in possession of the 
manor ; Final Conc. iii, 94. The name 
is here spelt Hodelston. In 1431 William 
Huddleston held a moiety of the manors 
of Freckleton and Elswick by the service 
of half a knight’s fee; Feud. Aids, 
ili, 95. 

16 William Huddleston and Joan his 
late wife held a knight’s fee in Freckleton, 
&c. the relief being 1oos.; Duchy of 
Lance. Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, no. 20. It 
was, perhaps, the husband who had died, 
for the writ ‘diem clausit extr.’ after the 
death of Joan was not issued till 1454 ; 
Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxvii, App. 175. In 
it che was described as ‘daughter and heir 
of Ralph de Freckleton.’ 

Vv Towneley MS. C 8, § (Chet. Lib.), 
Hen. VII, no. 1. Thomas Earl of Derby 
vy. William Huddleston nine messuages 
in Freckleton, &c. Land, &c., in the 
township is named in the possessions of 
Thomas the second earl in 1521, but the 
tenure is not stated ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
pm. v, no. 68. 

The rental of 1522 (at Lathom) shows 
that 109s. gtd. was received from the 
estate purchased from William Huddle- 
ston, including 2s. 4d. for fisheries in the 
Ribble and 4s. 4d. profits of the court held 
during the year. In addition 19s. 9d. 
was received from the lands purchased 
from John Coppull. The estate descended 
to Ferdinando the fifth earl ; Add. MS. 
32104, fol. 406, 

18 See the accounts of those townships. 
Adam de Hothersall gave Thomas Ban- 
astre and Joan his wife half an oxgang of 
land in Freckleton; Kuerden MSS. ii, 
fol. 257. Thomas Banastre granted a 
capital messuage and the moiety of 2 ox- 
gangs of land in Freckleton to Roger son 
of Robert the Forester of Preston ; Dods. 
MSS. liii, fol. 94. No tenure is recorded for 
Sir Thomas Banastre’s lands in Freckleton 
in 1385; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 
14. Nor again in the case of Richard 
Balderston in 14.57 ; ibid. ii, 63. 

From the inquisitions of the time of 
Henry VIII it appears that the following 
held lands in Freckleton of the Balderston 
inheritance, but no details are afforded : 
Edmund Dudley, Thomas Radcliffe of 
Winmarleigh (held of Osbaldeston) and 
Sir Alexander Osbaldeston. 

Other Singletons appear in the town- 
ship, one of them having been named 
above, Alice widow of Alan de Singleton 
claimed an acre in 1246 against Ellis son 
of Herbert, but Richard de Freckleton 
warranted the land, being of his demesne, 
whereupon the plaintiff remitted her right 
for 4od.; Assize R. 404, m.14. Adam 
son of Alan de Singleton granted land in 
Racarr to the same Ellis ; Kuerden MSS. 
iv, F 3. Ellis about 1260 granted various 


7 


KIKKHAM 


Derby,” who thus became the principal holders in 
the 16th century. 


Richard le Boteler of Rawcliffe obtained a portion 
of the vill in 1259 from Richard son of Richard de 


Freckleton,” and this descended in his family till 


lands to Gilbert son of Alan de Meols; 
Dods. MSS. liii, fol. g5. Later Maud 
widow of Ellis made a grant to Gilbert de 
Meols ; Kuerden MSS. loc. cit. 

Maud widow of Adam de Singleton in 
1294 and later claimed dower against 
Thomas Banastre of Bretherton and others 
in respect of 14 oxgangs of land, &c.; De 
Banco R. 106, m. 8; 153, m. 410. 

Gilbert de Singleton of Broughton in 
1326 held his lands in Freckleton of 
Adam Banastre by the sixty-fourth part 
of a knight’s fee, paying 2d. for castle 
ward. There were a messuage worth 
12d. a year and an oxgang of land con- 
taining 12 acres, each worth 12d. ; Ing. 
pm. 19 Edw. II, no. 67. Thomas son 
of Gilbert de Singleton gave his brother 
John all his land in Freckleton in 1332; 
Dods. MSS. cliii, fol. 73. The same 
Thomas granted a lease of the fourth 
part of an oxgang of land to James the 
Tailor in 1348; Kuerden MSS. iii, 
F35 

19 Pat. 4 Hen. VII; in a grant of Sir 
James Harrington's lands to the first 
earl. Some land also descended to 
him by virtue of the purchase from 
Coppull, mentioned in the account of 
Newton. 

William Earl of Derby and Edward 
Stanley sold a messuage, &c., in Freckle- 
ton to Cuthbert Sharples in 1597 (Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 58, m. 360), 
but the manor was reputed to be held by 
the earl years afterwards, as appears by 
the inquisitions. It must have been 
alienated before the Civil War, asit is not 
named in the Royalist composition papers, 
or later. 

20 Richard de Freckleton granted 2 
oxgangs of land (which his father Richard 
had given to the grantor’s brothers, 
Robert and William), and seems to have 
added in 1259 24 oxgangs recovered 
from his brother John ; Dods. MSS. liii, 
fol. go 3 cxlix, fol. 117d. 

The Botelers made a number of other 
acquisitions, Thus Richard son of Michael 
de Thornton gave Richard le Boteler 
the service of Gilbert de Meols for 2 
oxgangs of land, a pair of gloves being 
the rent; Kuerden MSS. iv, S204. To 
the same Richard land was given by 
Richard son of John son of Alice de 
Warton, and Richard de Pemberton 
granted Sir Richard le Boteler half an 
oxgang of land; ibid. F13. John son of 
Robert de Hothersall in 1348 gave land 
to Master Nicholas Boteler ; ibid. The 
above-named Richard de Pemberton is 
named in some Lytham Priory charters 
as a tenant in Freckleton. 

In 1276 William de Meols, nephew 
of Gilbert, claimed 2 oxgangs of land, 
&c., in Freckleton and Hutton against 
Richard le Boteler and the Abbot of 
Cockersand ; Assize R. 405, m. 2. 

Adam de Meols and William his son 
attested charters about 1265; Lytham 
D. at Durham, 3 a, 2 ae, 4. ae, Ebor. no. 20, 
44. Lands formerly belonging to Margery 
widow of Gilbert de Meols were acquired 


169 


1541, about which time part of the inheritance was 
divided among the daughters of John Butler.” The 
shares were further subdivided by sales,” but the 


by Sir Adam de Hoghton ; Dods. MSS. 
exlii, fol. 584, 50; Add. MS, 32106, 
no. 688 ; Kuerden MSS. iii, W 30. They 
are not named in the Hoghton inquisi- 
tions. A moiety of Margery’s lands 
went to Richard le Boteler ; Dods. MSS. 
exlix, fol. 117. 

In 1364 a settlement of the manor of 
Freckleton was made by Richard son of 
Sir Nicholas Boteler (Ralph de Freckleton 


_ being a witness), the remainder being 


to John le Boteler of Marton; ibid. 
fol. 115. Sir John (son of Nicholas) 
Boteler of Rawcliffe somewhat later 
recovered a moiety of the manor against 
Nicholas de Croft and Ellen his wife; 
ibid. fol. 116. John de Cottam in 1395 
obtained a mill and an oxgang of land in 
Freckleton against Nicholas and Ellen de 
Croft ; Final Conc. iii, 46. 

The lands of Sir John Boteler in 14.04 
were said to be held of Ralph de Freckle- 
ton by knight’s service and 2s, 6d. rent ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 1460. Those 
of John Butler, who died in 1488, were 
in 1502 found to have been held of the 
Earl of Derby by knight’s service ; Duchy 
of Lanc, Ing. p.m. iii, no. 45. 

41 In the year named Nicholas Butler 
claimed as brother and heir male; Pal. 
of Lanc. Plea R. 172, m. 11. A large 
part of the estate was in 1572 divided 
among representatives of the four daugh- 
ters, and the manor of Freckleton became 
part of the share of Thomas Standish of 
Duxbury and James Anderton of Clayton ; 
ibid. 231, m. 8. 

In 1599 the lands of Thomas Standish 
in Freckleton were said to be held of the 
queen as of her duchy by the hundredth 
part of a knight’s fee; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. xvii, no. §4. As earlyas 1552 
James Anderton (father of the Hugh who 
married Grace Butler) was said to hold 
of the heir of Michael de Freckleton 
(cf. Michael de Thornton above) in socage 
by $d. rent ; ibid. ix, no. 14. 

Some particulars of the Shireburne 
estate may be added. This was of varied 
origin. Adam son of Adam de Freckle- 
ton gave land to Robert de Shireburne 
in 1324-53; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 86. 
In 1441 Richard Shireburne was stated 
to have held in demesne two messuages, 
40 acres of land, 20 acres of meadow 
and 100 acres of pasture in Freckleton, 
of the king in socage ; Lancs. Rec. Ing. 
p-m. no. 30, 31. Later, however, the 
tenure was recorded otherwise; thus 
Robert Shireburne (1492) held his land 
in Freckleton of John Butler in socage ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, no. 92. 
A similar statement was made in later 
inquisitions. 

#2 James Anderton and Dorothy his 
wife made sales in 1573 (Pal. of Lane. 
Feet of F. bdle. 35, m. 23, 98); Thomas 
Standish and Margaret his wife in 1580 ; 
ibid. bdle. 42, m. 134. 

In 1631 Richard Butler, who on de- 
clining knighthood was fined £10, was 
described as ‘of Freckleton’ ; Misc. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 222. 


22 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Sharples family seem to have acquired part,” and 
in 1618 a ‘manor’ of Freckleton was held by 
Nothing further is known of it. 

The other fragments of the manor in 1242 dis- 
appear from view very quickly. The surname of 
Freckleton * occurs often but not prominently. In 
the 16th and 17th centuries Clifton of Westby,” 
Hesketh of Poulton,” Cowburn,” Browne” and 


them.” 


others held lands in Freckleton.” 


% George and James Sharples purchased 
a messuage and land in 1548 from John 
Browne ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 13, 
m.1g1. John Sharples was among the 
purchasers in 1573, and John Sharples the 
elder, John Sharples the younger and 
James Sharples in 1580, as above. John 
Sharples also acquired three messuages 
&c., from James Anderton and Henry 
Marsden in 1580 ; ibid. bdle. 42, m. 156. 
John Sharples was the only freeholder 
tecorded in the township in 1600 ; Mise. 
(Kec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 232. 

4 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. go, no. 
48. The deforciants were John Sharples 
the elder, Arthur Sharples, Alice his wife 
and Cuthbert Sharples. Freckleton and 
Warton are named together, but in the 
later fine (1652) Warton only is named. 

#5 Some notes have been preserved by 
Kuerden (MSS. iii, F 3): Adam son of 
Osbert released to Richard de Freckleton 
(c. 1230) all right in an oxgang of land. 
Richard son of Osbert de Freckleton gave 
a messuage to Robert son of Thomas. 
Margery daughter of John de Freckleton 
released her right in half an oxgang of land 
to Stephen son of William del Carr. 
Maud daughter of Geoffrey de Pool gave 
to John son of Adam de Freckleton all 
her father's land in the Pool field; 
William son of Nicholas, the reeve of 
Freckleton, was one of the witnesses. 

Richard de Freckleton in 1325 gave 
a rood on Threperth to John son of 
Thomas de Plumpton, Ralph and Robert 
de Freckleton being among the witnesses ; 
Towneley MS. C 8, 5, Edw. II, no. 5. 

Among the charters of Lytham Priory 
some other early families appear. Richard 
Waldeve was a bencfactor, the charters 
naming Thuftthorn Furlong, Stubbiholm, 
Elvive Furlong, Weselbutts, all in the 
fields of Freckleton ; Rutheditch and the 
Housesteads ; D. at Durham, ja, zae, 4ac, 
Ebor. no. 35-40. Eve his widow gave 
iands to William son of Roger de Rise ; 
no. 24. Richard del Moor gave land to 
Michael son of Hugh de Hambleton and 
Michael gave to the priory ; no. 44, 20. 
Adam son of Richard son of Margery de 
Freckleton occurs in 1346; no. 25, 26. 
See also Final Csvc. ii, 131, 170. 

Richard son of James de Freckleton in 
1232 demised land to Nicholas son of 
William Bussel; Kuerden fol. MS. 131. 
Elizabeth widow of Robert son of Adam 
son of Nicholas de Freckleton was plaintiff 
in 1365; De Banco R. 421, m. 205d. 

James Freckleton died in 1586 holding 
a messuage, &c., in the township, but the 
tenure is not stated ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
p-m. xv,no.49. Gr:gory his son and heir, 
then aged twenty-four, occurs frequently 
among the jurors in the time of James I. 

Ralph Freckleton died in 1587 holding 
two messuages, &c.—one of the queen as 
of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem 
by a rent of 6d., and the other of Thomas 
Holcroft as of the priory of Lytham by a 
rent of 2d. Henry his son and heir was 
twenty-six vears of age ; ibid. xiv, no. 35. 
Hyaory Freckleton died io 1626 holding 


In addition to Cockersand and Lytham the abbey 
of Diculacres*! had some land in the township, as 
had also the Knights Hospitallers.” 

There are 230% cattle-gates on the marsh, but 
231 are let yearly, the odd half-gate existing by a 
fiction for the benefit of the charity.¥ 

For the worship of the Church of England Holy 
Trinity was built in 1839, services having begun 


in 1834. A separate ecclesiastical parish was formed 


of the king and of Cuthbert Clifton, the 
heir being his nephew Ralph (son of 
Richard brother of Henry), aged twenty- 
four ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 
426. Ralph died in 1632, leaving a son 
Henry as heir, three years old ; ibid. 428. 

76 Cuthbert Clifton in 1580 was said 
to hold of the heirs of Richard formerly 
lord of Freckleton by a rent of 4d.; but 
his son Thomas five years later was said 
to hold partly of the queen by knight's 
service and partly of Thomas Holcroft 
by a rent of 4d.; Duchy of Lane. Inq. 
p-m. xiv, no. 76, 21. 

37 George Heskcth in 1571 held of the 
Earl of Derby by a rent of gd. ; ibid. 
xill, no. 15. His son William, however, 
in 1622 was said to hold of Thomas 
Holcroft by 1d, rent; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 366. 

% Two messuages, &c., in Freckleton 
were in 1552 obtained by William Cow- 
burn, clerk (probably as trustee), from 
Christopher Cowburn ; Pal. of Lance. Feet 
of F. bdle. 14, m. 109. Christopher's 
wife Joan occurs in 15543; ibid. bdle. 15, 
m.15. Henry Cowburn the elder pur- 
chased from James and Dorothy Anderton 
in 1573; ibid. bdle. 35, m. 98. John 
Cowburn in 1578 obtained a messuage, 
&c., from William Cowburn ; ibid. bdle. 
40, m. 192. 

John Cowburn died in 1578 holding a 
messuage, &c., of the queen as of the late 
abbey of Dieulacres bya rent of 84d. His 
heirs were his sisters, Janet wife of Richard 
Butler and Ellen wife of Henry Freckleton, 
aged thirty-cight and thirty in 1588; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 30. 

Some disputes in the Colburn or Cow- 
burn family are referred to in Ducatus 
Lanc, (Rec. Com.), ili, 214, 233, &c. 

Lawrence Cowburn died in 1604 hold- 
ing a messuage, &c., of the Earl of Derby 
by 34. rent, leaving a son and heir Henry, 
ten years old; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. 
Soc.), i, 32, 44. 

Henry Cowburn died in 1605 holding a 
messiage, &c., partly of the king by 
knight's service and partly of the Earl of 
Derby by the fortieth part of a knight's 
fee and 2d. rent ; his heir was a daughter 
Jusith, a year old ; ibid. i, 45. 

Lawrence Cowburn died in 1622 at 
Freckleton holding a messuage, &c., 
partly of the king in socage, as of his 
manor of East Greenwich, by 12d. rent, 
and partly of the king as of his duchy by 
the two-hundredth part of a knight's fee. 
Wiliam his son and heir was eight years 
old ; ibid. fii, 317-19. 

29 William son of Robert Browne of 
Freckleton in 1313-14 unsuccessfully 
claimed a messuage and land against 
Adam son of Alan de Pool, who had been 
enfeoffed by Agnes daughter of Jordan de 
Freckleton ; Assize R. 424, m. 2d. 

Wiiiam Browne died at Freckleton in 
1617 holding a messuage and land there 
of the king as of his duchy by the two- 
hundredth fart of a knight's fee. His 
son Richard having died shortly before 
him, the heir was his grandson William 


170 


Browne (son of Richard), aged sixteen ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.) ti, 86, 
Richard Browne dicd in 1639, leaving as 
heirs two nicces—Janct, aged twenty-five, 
wife of William Cowburn and widow of 
Thomas Hall, being daughter of Eliza- 
beth sister of Richard Browne ; and Ellen 
Derham, aged thirteen, daughter of Janct, 
another sister; Towncley MS. C8, 13 
(Chet. Lib.), 79-80. 

80 Thomas Boteler of Warrington(1522) 
held lands, but the tenure was unknown; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, no. 13. 

Gabriel Hesketh of Aughton, who died 
in 1573, held his land in Freckleton of 
the Earl of Derby by a rent of 2d. ; ibid. 
xii, no. 32. In 1597 it was sold to John 
Bradley of Bryning (Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F. bdle. 58, m. 3238), and at his death in 
1617 the same tenure was recorded ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 80. 

James Hall died in 1609 holding a 
messuage and land of the king by a rent 
of 6d. His son and heir Thomas was 
twenty-six years old ; ibid. i, 124. 

Peter Mason of Lathom in 1570 pur- 
chased a messuage, &c., in Freckleton 
from Richard Chisnall and Christopher 
Anderton, they giving warranty against 
Thomas Dicconson of Eccleston and the 
Master of the Savoy ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F. bdle. 32, m. 99. This land had 
belonged to Eccleston Chantry ; Lanes. 

and Ches, Rec. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and 
Ches.), ii, 252. The purchaser died in 
1612, and then his land, &c., in Freckle- 
ton was stated to be held of the Earl of 
Derby in socage, but on his son’s death 
later in the same year this was corrected, 
the lands being held of the king as of his 
manor of East Greenwich; Lancs. Ing. 
pom. (Ree. Soc.), i, 215, 237- 

Nicholas Badger died in 1612 holding 
a tenement of the king as of his duchy 
by 6d. rent. Thomas his son and heir 
was of full age; ibid. i, 217. Thomas 
Badger died in May 1637, when the 
tenure was recorded as of the Earl of 
Derby; the heir was Thomas's son 
Nicholas, aged thirty; Duchy of Lanc 
Ing. p.m. xxx, no. 83. 

Thomas Hankinson died in 1628, 
leaving a daughter and heir Ellen, aged 
nine; the tenure of his messuage, «c., 
was not stated; ibid. xxvii, no. 32. In 
another copy he is called John Hankin- 
son; the tenure was ‘of the king’; 
Towneley MS. C 8, 13, p. 516. 

Thomas Taylor died at Freckleton in 
1640 holding land there of James Lord 
Strange in socage, and leaving a brother 
Nicholas, aged sixty-eight, as heir ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxx, no. 15. 

31 Adam de Singleton gave ‘lands’ in 
the field called Hwldismont upon Ribble- 
bank, with appurtenant easements in the 
vill of Freckleton ; Dieulacres Chartul. 
(Staffs. Hist. Coll.), 349. See the Cow- 
burn inquisitions above. 

32 Mentioned in 12923; Plac. de Quo 
Farr. (Rec. Com.), 375- 

3 End. Char. Rep. for Kirkham, 85. 

* Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1834,, iv, 395 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


in 1874," and the patronage is vested in the Dean 
and Chapter of Christ Church, Oxford. The building 
contains an old oak pulpit 
removed from Kirkham.*° 

The Wesleyan Methodists 
had a chapel in 1814; their 
present one was built in 1885. 
The Primitive Methodists 
have one dating from 1861." 
The Congregationalists 
formerly held services there, 
but do not seem to have 
established themselves.*® 

The Society of Friendshad 4... a cheavron be. 
a meeting place from 1668. tween three covered cups 
They still have two ancient or. 
burial-grounds, and a meeting 
house, first built in 1720. No meetings are now 
held, but the room was in 1903 let to the Plymouth 
Brethren.“ i 

Roman Catholics have the small school-chapel of 
the Holy Family, served from Kirkham. 


Butrer of Raweliffe. 


WARTON 


Wartun, Dom. Bk. ; Warton, 1242. 
This township lies along the Ribble, and much of 


KIRKHAM 


and on it the village is situated. Warton Bank and 
Warton Brow overlook the river, and formerly there 
was a ford from this side to Hesketh, a guide being 
stationed there to conduct travellers across. The 
area is 2,5404 acres,’ including 8 acres of salt marsh. 
In 1901 there was a population of 446. 

The principal road is that going west from Preston 
to Lytham, which divides into two branches after 
passing through Warton village, these joining again 
later. Cross roads go south to the Ribble and north 
to Wrea Green. 

The soil is clay, and the land is almost entirely in 
pasture. 

The township has a parish council. 

Before the Conquest WARTON, then 


MANORS assessed as four plough-lands, was one 
of the members of Earl Tostig’s Preston 
lordship.’ After the creation of the barony of Pen- 


wortham it is found incorporated therewith,’ passing 
from Bussel to Lacy and the Earls and Dukes of 
Lancaster. By the Bussels it appears to have been 
granted to a younger member of the family to be 
held by the third part of a knight’s fee, for about 1190 
it had come into the possession of Quenilda daughter 
of Hugh son of Acard Bussel, who was married to 
Roger le Boteler,* and had a number of children 
—Richard, Stephen, Thomas, Adam, Roger and 


the surface in the south-west is less than 25 ft. above 
In the east and north-east is higher land 


sea level. 


85 Lond. Gaz. 30 Jan. 1874. 

86 Fishwick, Kirkham (Chet. Soc.), 67. 

37 Baines, loc. cit. 

38 Lewis's Topog. Dict. 1831-44, as- 
signs them a chapel. 

59 Information of Mr. R. Muschamp. 

In 1689 Lawrence Coulborne’s house 
at Freckleton was a certified Quaker 
meeting-place ; Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. 
xiv, App. iv, 230. 

49 Quaker Char. Rep. 1905, p.29. The 
1720 room was pulled down in 1870. 
The meetings ceased before 1800 ; Baines, 
loc. cit. 

1The Census Rep. 1901 gives 1,633 
acres, including 3 of inland water; there 
are also 87 acres of tidal water and 697 
acres of foreshore, 

7 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 288a. The later 
assessment was three plough-lands only ; 
possibly one plough-land may have been 
added to Ribby. Sometimes Warton 
was stated (as will be seen) to have three 
plough-lands and a third; but this may 
be an error, due to the ‘third part of a 
knight’s fee’ being taken to refer to a 
fee of ten plough-lands instead of nine. 

3 Ibid. 335, n. 1. The lords of Pen- 
wortham retained part in their own hands 
for some time, for about 1154 Richard 
Bussel confirmed grants to Evesham 
Abbey of two-thirds of the demesne tithes 
of Freckleton and Warton ; Farrer, Lancs. 
Pipe R. 323. This explains the £2 
teceived from the tithes of Kirkham by 
the Prior of Penwortham in 1291. 

‘Lytham Charters at Durham, 1a, 
2ae, 4.ae, Ebor. no. 46 3 a confirmation 
of the grant of an oxgang of land which 
Quenilda’s husband Roger had given to 
the priory, Roger’s grant (no. 47), made 
‘with the consent of my wife Quenilda 
and my heirs,’ was attested by ‘Stephen 
my son, Martin my brother,’ and others. 
The easements included rights in tur- 
baries, moors, marshes, waters, sands and 
fisheries. Quenilda lady of Warton, with 
the consent of her heirs, gave to Lytham 


Siegrith.® 
religious 


the homage ot Henry son of Efward ; 
ibid. no. 11. 

A son of Acard (perhaps Hugh) attested 
an agreement on behalf of Warine Bussel 
of Penwortham c. 1145 ; Farrer, op. cit. 
321. Roger le Boteler attested charters 
of the time of Henry II, one at least as 
early as 1164; ibid. 375, 409. He paid 
half a mark in 1177 for some default ; 
ibid. 38. In 1184-7 he appears to have 
claimed Claughton ; ibid. 56. His wife 
is sometimes called absolutely ‘the lady’ 
or ‘Lady of Warton,’ at other times 
‘le Boteler’ or ‘de Warton.’ She 
rendered account in 1200-1 for part of 
the scutage due from the fee of Pen- 
wortham ; ibid. 132. She occurs again 
in the Pipe Rolls of 1202-4 (ibid. 170, 
178), but seems to have died before 
Oct. 1207, when Richard her son was 
defendant to the claim by Hugh de 
Morton and his wife ; Curia Regis R. 45, 
m. 3. As Quenilda daughter of Hugh 
she, with the consent of Richard her son 
and heir, granted § acres in Warton, 
with the land between Baunebreck and 
the ditch, and between the road called 
Highgate and Goschecarr, to the canons 
of Cockersand; Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), 
i, 196. She and her husband had for- 
merly given the canons 3 acres; ibid. 
i, 195. : 

A William le Boteler, their contem- 
porary, was, with Aline his wife, a bene- 
factor of Lytham ; Charters, ut sup. no. 5. 
The seal shows a man standing, holding 
a cup in his right hand. A similar seal 
was used by some of the Botelers of 
Warton. 

5 Richard, Stephen, Thomas and Adam, 
as sons of Quenilda, witnessed her Lytham 
grant above quoted (no. 46) ; Roger and 
Siegrith are known from other deeds. 
Thomas does not occur again. 

Stephen le Boteler (or de Warton) gave 
to Lytham Priory half an acre in Redcarr- 
furlong upon Stubbegate, and a perch in 
the marsh between Blakefield and Stubbe- 


£71 


The family were benefactors of the 
houses 


at Lytham and _ Cockersand, 
gate; Lytham Charters, 1a, 2ae, 4 ae, 
Ebor. no. 4. About 1240 he gave land 
in Wallfurlong and elsewhere ; ibid. 
no. 42. As Stephen son of Roger he 
gave to the same, with the consent of 
Ivetta his wife, the house in Warton in 
which he lived, with land by the shore 
between Oubeck (or Howbeck) and Crow- 
pool ; ibid. no. 33. It appears that this 
was ‘at the Bank’ from a further charter 
by Stephen made about 1247 ; no. 36. 

Quenilda daughter of Stephen le 
Boteler released her right to certain lands 
held by Lytham Priory; ibid. 2, 2 ae, 
4ae, Ebor. no. 5. Adam son of the 
priest of Lytham granted to the priory 
certain lands purchased from Stephen le 
Boteler ; ibid. 1 a, 2 ae, 4 ae, Ebor. no. 8. 
This benefactor may be the Adam son of 
Roger the chaplain of Lytham of another 
deed ; Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 143. 

Adam is named in grants to Cockersand 
by his brother Richard; he had held 
3 oxgangs of land by the gift of Quenilda ; 
Cockersand Chartul.i,192. Alice daughter 
of Adam son of Roger de Warton, who 
gave land to Henry son of William the 
Carpenter of Kirkham, may have been 
his daughter; Lytham Charters, no. 6. 
In 1246 Alice, as daughter and heir of 
Adam de Warton, recovered 4 acres in 
Warton ; Assize R. god, m. 4d. Mabel 
widow of Adam le Boteler in 1251 claimed 
dower against Maud daughter of Richard 
de Newton (half an oxgang), John son of 
Alice (1 acre), and Robert de Conyers and 
Alice his wife (14 oxgangs) ; Curia Regis 
R. 145, m. 41d., 43d. John son of 
Alice de Warton was a benefactor of 
Lytham, giving land (with house) on the 
Bank, between the toft which had be- 
longed to Stephen le Boteler and the 
three thorns ; Lytham Charters, no. 44. 
Avice as widow of John son of Alice de 
Warton released her claim in or about 
1285 ; ibid. no. 12. Richard son of this 
John had a grant from Roger Collan and 
Alice his wife ; ibid. no. 14. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Quenilda’s husband becoming a monk of the 
former,’ and the descents can be traced for some 
time,’ but the manor of Warton appears to have 
been alienated about 1220-40 to some of the Wood- 
plumpton family,® and thus in 1242 it was recorded 
that Thomas de Beetham held the third part of a 
knight’s fee in Warton of the Earl of Lincoln’s fee 
(of Penwortham).° 

The Beetham estate, known as the manor of 
CO/’BURN or Cowburgh,! descended regularly in 
the family till the time of Edward IV. An estate 
first acquired by Adam de Yealand about 12301} 
and held after him by Conyers and Singleton of 
Broughton !” came in time to be regarded as a moiety 
of the manor of Warton. ‘Thomas de Beetham on 
acquiring Warton gave a general confirmation to the 


monks of Lytham of the lands they held.3 He died 
in 1248 or 1249, and it was found that he held 
three plough-lands of the Earl of Lincoln by the 
third part of a knight’s fee, receiving only 4s. 4d. a 
year and certain white gloves, others having been 
enfeoffed freely.!4 Sir Ralph his son and heir died 
about five: years afterwards ; his daughter Joan was 
only seven years old!® and appears to have died a 
little later, for at inquisitions made in 125518 and 
1257 it was found that Ralph’s brother Robert was 
his heir.27 

Sir Robert de Beetham confirmed the Lytham 
charters, and agreed with the monks as to the bounds 
of Bryning and Warton on the Lytham side!®; he 
also gave land in the Bankhouses to Stanlaw Abbey." 
He was succeeded by his son Thomas before 1302,” 


To Roger her son Quenilda lady of 
Warton gave 2 oxgangs of her land ; ibid. 
no. 7. Roger with the consent of Eda 
his wife gave to Lytham land near 
Stubbegate and Blakefield ; ibid. no. 38. 
Roger son of Roger son of Quenilda gave 
the priory a selion called Dreng, lying 
between lands of Sir Robert de Conyers 
and of Roger son of Haward, and stretch- 
ing from the ditch of Howbeck to the 
butts of Rucditch ; ibid. no. 39. 

Siegrith de Warton daughter of Roger 
le Boteler of Warton, with the good will 
of her husband Roger son of Eward, gave 
land on Redlinch and in Warton field 
upon Stupelgate to St. Cuthbert of Lytham; 
ibid. no. 45, 53. Roger and Siegrith 
gave a ‘land’ to Cockersand also ; Chartul. 
i, 197. 

® This is stated in the Lytham charter 
already quoted ; no. 46. 

7 Richard le Boteler son of Quenilda de 
Warton gave to Lytham, with the consent 
of his heirs, the homage of Adam son of 
Efward, his free man ; Lytham Charters, 
no. 27. The seal shows the ‘ Butler’ as 
described above. He also gave an oxgang 
of land in alms, &c.; ibid. no. §5, 52. 
He was a benefactor to Cockersand also, 
giving among other parcels land between 
Markpool and Warton Pool, 2 acres on 
the field of Stubbegate next the ditch 
between Warton and Kellamergh, nearer 
Flitholm ; Cockersand Chartul. i, 192-4. 

Eustace the son of Richard le Boteler 
of Warton confirmed a gift which his 
father had made to Lytham, viz. 3 acres 
in ‘Cuburch’ next the land of Roger 
de Freckleton ; Lytham Charters, no. 50. 
Stephen and Adam le Boteler were wit- 
nesses. The seal is like his father’s. 

Adam son of Richard le Boteler of 
Warton, and therefore brother of Eustace, 
appears to have succeeded. He granted 
to Richard son of his uncle Roger half 
an oxgang of land in Warton in return 
for 3 marks of silver given him in his 
great need, which land had formerly 
belonged to the grantor’s uncle Robert. 
Easements were allowed except on the 
lands formerly given in alms and in 
2 acres which another uncle (Stephen) 
had for peace made between them. The 
service to be done to the lord was the 
proportion of knight’s service pertaining 
to half an oxgang where nine plough-lands 
made a knight’s fee; ibid. no. 31. By 
another charter Adam released to the 
monks of Lytham the land he held of 
them upon the Bank in Warton, they 
having given him 17s. in his great 
need ; ibid. 2 a, 2 ae, 4.ae, Ebor. no. 3. It 
was possibly his daughters who put for- 
ward a claim to the manor in 1291-2, 


but apart from this there is no record of 
the permanence of this branch of the 
family. The Butlers of Rawcliffe in the 
16th century held lands in Warton, but 
the tenure is not stated ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. iii, no. 109, &c. 

In 1301 Adam de Claughton released 
to Thomas de Beetham all right in lands 
and rents formerly held by Richard le 
Boteler of Warton, his great-grandfather 
(proavus) ; Dods. MSS. cxlix, tol. 1446. 

® There was probably some connexion 
between Quenilda de Warton and Richard 
son of Roger the lord of Woodplumpton, 
for one of his daughters was named 
Quenilda, At all events, she gave to 
another of his daughters, Margaret, 
1 oxgang of land in Warton together 
with the service of Stephen le Boteler 
for the 4 oxgangs he held of her. Mar- 
garet was to perform the knight’s service 
pertaining to § oxgangs where nine 
plough-lands made a knight's fee ; Final 
Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 28. 
Richard le Boteler, the heir of Quenilda, 
assented to this charter, and was in 1207 
called upon by Margaret and her husband 
Hugh de Morton to warrant the land to 
them, and in the following year he did 
803 ibid. 

Margaret's estate probably passed to 
her sister Amuria, who married Thomas 
de Beetham, but how the lordship of the 
rest was transferred is unknown. Per- 
haps Adam son of Richard sold it in his 
necessity. 

% Lancs. Ing, and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 151. The Prior of 
Durham in 1305-6 called upon Thomas 
de Beetham to acquit him of the service 
demanded by Henry de Lacy; De Banco 
R. 160, m. 101; 163, m. 261. 

10 The name occurs (1200-1300) in 
various forms in the Lytham and Cocker- 
sand charters—Cuburch, Cuburne, Cou- 
burgh—and Richard de Warton described 
it as an island; Cockersand Chartul. i, 
192. As a surname it appears as Cow- 
burne and Colborne. 

ll Adam gave to Cockersand Abbey 
2 oxgangs of land, one purchased from 
Stephen le Boteler and the other from 
Roger son of the Lady; ibid. i, 190. 
Another oxgang he obtained in 1227 
from Adam son of Walter, apparently 
claiming by inheritance; Final Cone. 1, 
52. Alice his daughter and heir married 
Robert de Conyers ; ibid. i, 107. 

12 Gilbert de Singleton in 1300 pur- 
chased a toft and 40 acres in Warton 
from Alice daughter of William de 
Conyers; ibid. i, 191. He died in or 
before 1326 holding lands, &c., in War- 
ton of Sir Robert de Conyers by fealty 


172 


and rendering a pair of white gloves 
yearly, also by the service of the twenty- 
fourth part of a knight's fee and paying 
44d. sake fee and 10$d. for castle ward. 
There were acapital messuage (worth 2s, 
a year), 6 oxgangs of land each of to 
acres (worth 4os.), and the fourth part of 
a fishery (6s, 8d.) ; four free tenants paid 
16d. yearly ; Ing. p.m. 19 Edw, II, no. 
67. Gilbert seems to have had a feurth 
part of the manor, though doing only the 
eighth part of the knight's service, 

Thomas de Singleton and Elizabeth his 
wife in 1425-6 gave the manor of War- 
ton, &c., to Nicholas his son and Mar- 
garet his wife ; Kuerden fol. MS, p. 381. 

In the 16th century the Singletons of 
Broughton were stated to hold their 
manor of Warton of the king as of his 
duchy by knight’s service; Duchy of 
Lance, Ing. p.m. iv, no. 70 ; v, no. 45, &e. 

18 The charter is named in the old 
catalogue of Lytham charters at Durham, 
but is now missing. 

M4 Lancs, Ing, and Extents i,171. Ralph 
died 8 Mar. 1253-4. 

16 Ibid. i, 195; the value is given as 
2s. 4d. Joan's marriage was worth £30. 

16 Thid. 202. 

17 Thid. 203. Robert was of full age. 

18 Durham catalogue as above. 

19 Whalley Couch. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 
453-4. The gift was made for the soul 
of Robert’s deceased wife Maud. 

2 Lancs. Ing. and Extent, i, 3165 
Thomas de Beetham held the third part 
of a knight’s fee in Warton of the Earl 
of Lincoln. 

In the same year John son of Richard 
de Warton claimed a messuage, an oxgang 
of land, &c., and a mill in Warton against 
Thomas de Beetham and another oxgang 
against Gervase Avenel and Emma his 
wife ; De Banco R. 144, m. 3334. 

Thomas was in possession as early as 
1290, when Godith and Avice daughters 
of Adam le Boteler claimed against him 
2 oxgangs in Warton and two-thirds of 
the manor of Cowburgh as their inherit- 
ance. Their father was brother and heir 
of Richard le Boteler, and the claim was 
respited because Thomas de Beetham was 
under age; Assize R, 1288, m. 134.5 
407, m. 1. The claim was renewed in 
1292, when Thomas, still a minor, 
alleged that his father Robert had died in 
seisin; ibid. 408, m. 4. This is the 
last appearance of the Botelers. A Godith 
wife of John Ward occurs in 1300; De 
Banco R. 132, m. 193d. ‘The heir of 
Beetham’ in 1297 was liable for castle- 
ward rents of 3s. 4d. in Warton and 
2s. 6d, for Kellamergh and Bryning; 
Lancs. Ing. and Extent, i, 290 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


and Thomas by his son Ralph in or before 1317, in 
which year William de Tours and Emma his wife 
called upon him to warrant to them certain land 
in Warton claimed by John de Astenthwaite and 
Margaret his wife as dower, Margaret being widow 
of Thomas de Beetham.?!_ In 1346 it was recorded 
that Queen Isabella, in right of the fee of Pen- 
wortham, held three plough-lands and a third for 
the third part of a knight’s fee in Warton which 
Sir Ralph de Beetham and Thomas son of Gilbert de 
Singleton held of her in moieties, rendering 35. 4¢. 
yearly for castle ward.22. In 1361 Robert de Beetham 
and his tenants held the third part of a fee of the 
Duke of Lancaster.” 

Thomas Beetham of Beetham held a moiety of the 
manor in 1431 by the sixth part of a knight’s fee, 
Nicholas Singleton of Broughton holding similarly 
the other moiety*4; while in 1445-6 Thomas 
Beetham and Thomas Singleton held three and 
one-third plough-lands for the third part of a fee, 
paying relief equally.2* Thomas Beetham was suc- 


KIRKHAM 


ceeded by his son Sir Edmund, who conveyed his 
manor of Cowburn, which extended into Bryning, 
Kellamergh and Ravenshaw, with his other manors, 
&c., to trustees, with remainders to his brothers 
Roger, William and Richard, and then to his cousin 
John. He died in 1472 and his brother William 
succeeded,”6 but Richard was in possession in 14.83.27 

From this time the Beetham Manor disappears 
from the records and its lands were said to be held of 
the Crown in right of the duchy, though Gervase 
Middleton still retained some land in 1548.28 The 
Singletons sold their moiety of the manor to James 
Gerard in 1598,”9 and John Gerard of Haighton had 
an estate there in 1635 °°; but the manor with much of 
the land seems to have been acquired by the Sharples 
family,*! and was in 1652 sold to James Ashton.*? It 
is not mentioned again, 

The land was from an early time divided among a 
number of freeholders,3# as appears from the inquisi- 
tion of 1249 above cited. Warton *4 and Collan * 
occur among the early surnames ; and the inquisitions 


Sir Thomas de Beetham was in 1311 
found to hold lands, &c., in Warton, 
Bretherton and Newsham by the service 
of a knight’s fee, paying 18d. for sake 
fee and doing suit to the court; De Lacy 
Ing. (Chet. Soc.), 22. 

1 De Banco R. 221, m. 2194.3 226, 
m. 1453 230, m. 105d. Margaret's 
claim was for dower in eighteen messuages 
and 12 oxgangs of land in Warton. The 
defendants produced a charter of Thomas 
de Beetham’s granting all his tenement 
in Kellamergh, also 14 oxgangs and 
4 oxgang in Warton, to William de 
Tours and Emma for Emma’s life. 

There is some error in the extent of 
1324, which reads thus: ‘ Ralph son and 
heir of Robert de Conyers holds of Alice 
de Lacy the manor of Warton of the fee 
of Penwortham by the service of 3s. 4d. 
yearly for ward of Lancaster Castle, the 
third part of a knight’s fee and suit to 
the county and wapentake’ ; Dods. MSS. 
cxxxi, fol. 394. ‘Thomas de Beetham’ 
has perhaps been omitted after son and 
heir; thus the double tenancy of the 
manor would be recognized for the first 
time. 

2 Survey of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 44. 

The Singletons may have acquired the 
Conyers part of the manor by marriage. 
Thomas de Singleton in 1331 complained 
that Ralph de Beetham had seized his 
cattle at Stainacregrene, a place outside 
Ralph’s fee. Ralph replied that William 
de Conyers had formerly held ten mes- 
suages and 12 oxgangs of land of his 
grandfather Robert de Beetham by the 
service of the fourth part of a knight’s 
fee and a rent of 2s. and that William’s 
heirs were his daughters Agnes and Joan; 
De Banco R. 287, m. 448 d. 
_ In theaid of 1346-55 Richard Banastre 
is joined with Beetham and Singleton as 
tenant of Warton ; Feud. Aids, iii, 87. 
By a charter some years earlier Agnes 
widow of Richard Banastre gave to 
Richard her son land at Warton, with 
Ribble Water ; Kuerden MSS. iv, W 5. 

8 Ing. p.m. 35 Edw. III, pt. i, no. 122. 
The yearly value was 335. 4d. 

_Sir John de Beetham and Christiana 
his wife occur in 1403-4 and Sir John 
in 14205 Final Conc. iii, 67, 86. In 
1401 Margery de Prees held 2 oxgangs 
in Warton of Sir John de Beetham by 
knight’s service and a rent of 12d. ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 76. The 


same was held of the heir of Sir Edward 
Beetham in 1479 ; ibid. ii, 106. 

%% Feud. .dlids, iii, 95. Thomas was 
the son and heir of Sir John ; Final Conc. 
iii, 85. He was in possession by 1429 ; 
Lancs, Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 23. 

35 Duchy of Lanc. Knights’ Fees, bdle. 
2, no. 20. A Roger Beetham occurs in 
14503; Final Conc. iii, 117. 

26 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 1025 
Chan. Ing. p.m. 19 Edw. IV, no. 87. 
It appears that Roger left a daughter 
Agnes, who married Robert Middleton. 

27 Duchy of Lanc. Misc. Bks. cxxx. 

28 Messuages, &c., in Warton, Kella- 
mergh, Bryning and Wrea were held of 
the king by fealty and a rent of 2s. 5 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. ix, no, 11. 
George Middleton sold his estate in Cow- 
burn and Warton to William Skillicorne 
in 1567 ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 29, 
m. 74. <A settlement of it was made by 
William Skillicorne and Nicholas his son 
and heir in 1590; ibid. bdle. 52, m. 34. 
The tenure of William’s estate in Warton 
in 1600 was not known. 

Richard Skillicorne in 1534 held land 
in Warton of the king by 1d. rent; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. x, no. 25. 

William Clifton of Kidsnape died in 
1517 holding lands in Warton of the 
Earl of Derby by fealty only ; Duchy of 
Lane. Ing. p.m. v, no. 21. This may be 
an indication that the earl succeeded to 
the Beetham estate here for a short time. 
It appears, however that an estate in 
Warton, Freckleton, &c., was sold by 
John Coppull to Sir Thomas Stanley in 
the time of Henry VI; Kuerden MSS. 
iii, C 33. 

29 Pal, of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 60, 
m. 55. The deforciants were Thomas 
Singleton, Cecily his wife and Edward his 
son and heir. The estate included mes- 
suages, windmill, lands and moiety of the 
manor and a moiety of the view of 
frankpledge. 

30 Duchy of Lanc. Ing, p.m. xxvii, no. 
20. He held four messuages of the king 
by the two-hundredth part of a knight's 
fee and a free fishery in the Ribble. The 
change of lordship appears in other ways. 
Thus in 1571 George Hesketh of Poulton 
held lands, &c., in Warton of Edward 
Singleton of Broughton, while his son 
William Hesketh in 1622 held of John 
Gerard ; ibid. xiii, no. 15 ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc, Lancs, and Ches.), iii, 366. 


173 


31 At the time of selling the manor the 
Singletons also sold two messuages, &c., 
to William Threlfall and Jenet his wife ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 60, m. 51. 
They also gave to trustees or mortgagees 
another part of their estate—probably the 
remainder—and one of the trustees was 
John Sharples ; ibid. m. 96. 

In a fine of 1617 respecting the manors 
of Freckleton and Warton, with messuages, 
lands, windmill, &c., there and in Newton- 
with-Scales, Stalmine, Preesall, Hamble- 
ton, Catterall, Goosnargh and Wood- 
plumpton, and a free fishery in the Ribble, 
the deforciants were John Sharples the 
elder, Arthur Sharples, Alice his wife 
and Cuthbert Sharples; ibid. bdle. go, 
no. 48. 

32 Thid. bdle. 150, m. 253 the defor- 
ciants were John Sharples, Dorothy his 
wife, John Browne and Isabel his wife. 

33 This appears from previous notes. 
In 1219 Gilbert son of Reinfred gave 2 
oxgangs in Warton (formerly belonging to 
Robert de Treales) to William son of 
Robert in part exchange ; Final Conc. i, 42. 

William de Bradkirk in 1366 purchased 
a messuage and land in Warton from 
Ralph son of William de Freckleton and 
Tsabel his wife ; ibid. ii, 170. 

John son of Richard Carus and 
Katherine his wife had land in 1398 ; 
ibid. ili, 55. 

Thomas Hesketh purchased 14 acres, 
&c., in Warton in 1514 from John 
March and Beatrice his wife ; Pal. of 
Lance. Feet of F. bdle. 11, m. 237. The 
tenure was unknown ; Duchy of Lance. 
Inq. p.m. v, no. 16. 

84 From the Lytham Charters (quoted 
above) it would appear that some of the 
Wartons were descendants of the younger 
sons of Quenilda, while others came from 
four sons of Efward or Eward—Henry, 
Robert, Adam and Roger. 

35 Among the Lytham Charters at 
Durham are several relating to Roger 
Collan and Alice his wife, ranging from 
about 1230 to 1280; they had a son 
Adam ; 1a, 2 ae, 4.ae, Ebor. no. 14-19. 

In 1278 Alice widow of Roger Collan 
claimed lands against Adam son of Robert 
del Bank, Thomas son of Roger and 
several others; De Banco R. 27, m. 
135d. 

Juliana Collan granted Richard son of 
John le Spenser a messuage, &c., in the 
Bankhouses ; Kuerden MSS. iv, W 15. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


of the 16th and 17th centuries show a number of 
landowners,*> but few of them seem to have been 
resident. The Singletons at one time had a house at 
Warton, and a John Singleton * died in 1592 hold- 
ing a messuage there and land in Whittingham. 
James Browne of Lower Birches,*> William Dixon,*® 
William Dobson,#° Richard Noblett,*? James Smalley# 
and John Thistleton #3 had small estates in Warton. 
Robert Thistleton the son of John had his estate 
sequestered ‘for his popery’ in the Commonwealth 
time ; he died in 1653.4! Two ‘ Papists’ registered 
estates in 1717. 

The Lytham Priory lands were after the Dissolution 
held by the Cliftons.46 The abbeys of Cockersand *7 
and Whalley*® and the Knights Hospitallers *® also 
had lands in Warton. 

In connexion with the Church of England the 
former St. Paul’s was built in 1722,5° and consecrated 
in 1725, being replaced by the present building in 
1885-6. A separate parish was assigned to it in 
1846.5! The vicars are presented by the Dean and 
Canons of Christ Church, Oxford. 


WESTBY-WITH-PLUMPTONS 


Westbi, Dom. Bk. ; Westby, 1226. 
Pluntun, Dom. Bk.; Plumton, 1226. 
This township is divided into five hamlets. Westby 


known as Fieldplumpton for distinction from Wood- 
plumpton, occupy the northern part, Great Plumpton 
lying to the north of Little Plumpton.  Ballam 
(Higher and Lower) and Brown Moss Side in the 
south-west are considered parts of Westby. The 
measurements are as follows: Westby, 8774 acres; 
Ballam, 6664; Brown Moss Side,! 724$-2,2684 ; 
Great Plumpton, 665 ; Little Plumpton, 664 ; or in 
all, 3,597% acres? The population in 1go1 was 
532. There is some comparatively high land in the 
north, Great Plumpton being 100 ft. above sea level ; 
but the surface falls away to the south-west, and the 
greater part of Ballam and Moss Side is below the 
25 ft. line. 

Two roads cross the township from Kirkham to 
Lytham and Blackpool, and there are cross-roads 
uniting the different hamlets, one of them going north 
to Weeton. The railway from Preston to Blackpool 
crosses the northern end of the township, and that 
from Preston to Lytham runs along near the south- 
western border, having two stations called Wrea 
Green and Moss Side. 

The soil is clayey; about a third of the land is 
arable, the rest being pasture. 

There was formerly a stone cross in Westby.3 

Two presidents of Ushaw College were born at 
Westby—John Gillow, 1811-28,4 and Charles New- 
sham, 1837-63.° 


is the central one. 


It may be added that among the other 
Warton benefactors of Lytham Priory 
were the families of Midhope and Salt- 
weller. 

36 George Kirkby of Upper Rawcliffe 
held his land in Warton of Edward Single- 
ton by 1d. rent ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
xi, no. 8. 

Gilbert Latewise (Latus) in 1568 held 
of Thomas Singleton in socage by td. 
rent; ibid. xii, no. 11. 

George Allen of Poulton in 1579 held 
of Thomas Singleton (a minor) by 
knight's service, which Thomas held the 
manor of Warton of the queen as of her 
duchy by knizht’s service; ibid. xiv, no. 80. 

Evan Haughton in 1608 held land 
in Warton of the king by 44. rent ; Lancs. 
Inj. pom. (Rec. Soc, Lancs. and Ches.), i, 
126, 

James Bradley of Bryning in 1617 also 
held in Warton of the king by the 
hundredth part of a knight's fee, a rent of 
6d., and suit at Penwortham Court ; ibid. 
ii, 80. 

Thomas Worthington of Blainscough 
in 1619 held his land in Warton of the 
king by knight's service ; ibid. ii, 174. 

87 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvii, no. 
89; the estate was held of the queen as 
of her duchy. Richard the son and heir 
was four years old in 1596, and Eliza- 
beth the widow had married Thomas 
Walmesley. 

38 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 122. 
James Browne died in 1619; his land 
had belonged to Lytham Priory, for it 
was held of Cuthbert Clifton as of his 
manor of Lytham by the two-hundredth 
part of a knight’s fee and 13d. rent. 
The heir was a brother William, then 
aged six years, who died in 1624 holding a 
somewhat increased estate, including a 
windmill and kiln, &c., in Warton and 
Cowburn ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. 
Lib.), 73. Elizabeth, his daughter and 

heir, was thirteen years old. 


The two Plumptons, anciently 


William Browne of Freckleton also had 
land in Warton in 1617, held of the king 
by a castle-ward rent of 4d. 3; Lancs. Ing. 
p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 87. Richard Browne 
died in 1639 holding an acre of Thomas 
Clifton as of his manor of Warton ; 
Towneley MS. C8, 13, pp. 79-80. 

8 He died in 1619 holding land of the 
king by 14d. rent, and leaving as heir a 
son James, aged twenty-five ; Lancs. Ing. 
pom. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 125. Richard Dixon 
died in 1638 holding a messuage and land 
of Thomas Clifton as of his manor of 
Lytham. The heir was his grandson 
Richard (son of James son of Richard), 
aged ten years; Towneley MS. C8, 13, 
P- 343- 

* Loid. 342. He died in 1639 holding 
land of the king. His son Robert was 
seventeen years old. He may have been 
of Warton in Lonsdale. 

‘Ibid. 913. Richard Noblett died in 
1625 holding two messuages and land of 
the king by the two-hundredth part of a 
knight’s fee. His son and heir Robert 
was twenty-six years old. 

* Thid. 1069. He died in 1639, leaving 
a son and heir George, aged twenty-six. 
His messuage and land were held of 
Thomas Clifton as of his manor of 
Lytham. 

43 Nicholas Skillicorne and Margaret his 
wife in 1596 sold a messuage, land, &c., 
in Warton to John Thistleton; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 59, m. 258. John 
Thistleton died at Warton in 1621 hold- 
ing of Sir Cuthbert Clifton as of his 
manor of Lytham by the two-hundredth 
part of a knight’s fee and the rent of 6d. 
Robert, his son and heir, was twenty-five 
years old; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), 
ii, 249. The Skillicornes had held of 
Beetham. 

44 Cal. Com. for Comp. v, 3217. 

48 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurars, 89 ; they were Robert Mercer 
and Edward Hardman. 


174 


The township is governed by a parish council. 


46 Thomas Eccleston in 1592 held land 
in Warton of Thomas Holcroft as of his 
manor of Lytham ; Duchy of Lane, Ing. 
p.m. xvi, no. 38. Inquisitions already 
cited show that the Cliftons acquired 
lands in Warton together with the manor 
of Lytham. Apart from this, however, 
the family had long had lands in Warton, 
for Cuthbert Clifton in 1512 held them 
of the king in socage ; ibid. iv, no. 12, 
and later inquisitions. 

47 For their rentals 1451-1537 sce 
Cockersand Chartul. iti, 1262-3. 

48 William Noblett held the Whalley 
lands at Bankhouses about 1540, paying 
4s. a year; Whalley Couch, iv, 1234. 

49 Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 375- 
In the Lytham charters the lands of the 
Hospitallers are named, They seem to 
have passed into the possession of the 
Shireburnes of Stonyhurst with other 
parcels of the Stidd estate; Duchy of 
Lane. Ing. p.m. xxvi, no. 4. 

50 Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 427. Land called Little Moorhey was 
given by Joseph Shaw of Liverpool in 
fulfilment of the intention of his brother 
William Shaw of Preston ; Chester Dioc. 
Reg. For description and list of curates 
and vicars see Fishwick, Kirtham (Chet. 
Soc.), 65-6. 

51 By Order in Council 21 Jan. 
1846. ; 

1 Brown Moss adjoined Lythe Carr in 
a release of claim (by Henry de Clifton in 
1259) ; the calendar speaks of ‘common 
in the moss called Brown Moss outside 
Lythe Carr,’ but the name is not in the 
deed itself ; Lytham Charters at Durham, 
2a, 4.ae, Ebor. no. 31. 

2 3,600 acres, including 1§ acres of 
inland water ; Census Rep. 1901. 

3 Foxlane Ends Cross ; Lanes. and Chet. 
Antig. Soc. xx, 187. ; 

Dice Nat. Biog. ; Gillow, Bibl. Dict. 
Engl. Cath. 

* Gillow, op. cit. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


In 1066 WESTBY and PLUMP- 
MANORS TON, each assessed as two plough-lands, 
formed part of Earl Tostig’s Preston lord- 
ship.6 Later they are found to be held of the king 
in thegnage as part of the estate of the lords of 
Clifton.? In 1372 Robert de Clifton and his men 
were charged with having seized one William Garlick 
at Little Singleton, carried him off to Westby and 
there imprisoned him for a fortnight, carrying off 
also his corn and other goods. In defence it was 
pleaded that Garlick was a villein as of Clifton’s 
manor of Westby and had absconded.§ Except for 
about a century—from 1512 onward—the manors, 
usually regarded as one, viz. Westby-with-Field Plump- 
ton, have descended like Clifton, in the account of 
which will be found also the story of the exceptional 
period referred to. During that time Westby was 
the residence of the Clifton family. 
In the 14th century Great Plumpton appears to 
have been held by a junior branch of the Clifton 


KIRKHAM 


of Field Plumpton was held by Thomas Lathom in 
1370.19 The Singleton family had a part of Plump- 
ton,!! and one or two other estates occur in the 
inquisitions, !” 

Cockersand Abbey had a little land in Plumpton.!8 

James Sanderson and a number of others registered 
their estates as ‘ Papists’ in 1717.14 

‘The Cliftons maintained a priest at Westby 
throughout the days of persecution. If he was not at 
all times resident in the hall, owing to the surveillance 
of the pursuivants, he was not far distant ; and per- 
haps sometimes there was more than one priest attend- 
ing to the wants of the district.’!° About 1700 
James Barrow, a Jesuit, had charge. In 1716, after 
the defeat of the Jacobites at Preston, he was con- 
victed of recusancy and declared an outlaw. He 
escaped capture.!6 The Jesuits remained in charge till 
1791, and were succeeded by Benedictines and then 
by the secular clergy. A chapel was built at the west 
end of the hall in 1741, but closed by Thomas 


family, using Plumpton as a surname.® 


6 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 2884. 

7 See the account of Clifton. Richard 
de Holland and Margery his wife claimed 
4 acres of brushwood and 150 acres of 
moss against the Priors of Durham and 
Lytham, who proved that the 4 acres 
were in Lytham, and alleged that Henry 
de Clifton, formerly husband of Margery, 
had allowed them common in the moss, 
but on this point the verdict was for the 
plaintiffs ; Assize R. 407, m. 3. 

In 1323 the capital messuage of Westby 
was worth god. a year ; in demesne were 
72 acres of arable land, worth 84. each, 
and 6 acres of meadow, worth 12d. each, 
a water-mill, a horse-mill, and a wind- 
mill, each worth 13s. 4d. Tenants at 
will held eight cottages, 96 acres of arable 
land and 4 acres of meadow. In Little 
Fieldplumpton were eight cottages and 
96 acres of arable land held by tenants at 
will, and in Great Fieldplumpton two 
cottages and 32 acres, held similarly ; 
Ing. p»m. 17 Edw. II, no. 32. 

The rental of Westby (Towneley MS. 
OO) shows that the demesne was worth 
£12 a year in 1509 ; the tenants’ rents 
and services were valued at £12 135. 74d. 
The field-names include Gude Marton, 
Stanall, Prestoft, Humbur and Smerdell. 

Peel in Marton and Ballam are men- 
tioned in the account of Clifton. The 
former pasture belonged to the Earl of 
Derby, and was about 1520 occupied by 
William Clifton, who paid £2 a year, 
as appears from the rental at Lathom. 

5 De Banco R. 446, m. 96. Plaintiff 
said his grandfather William Garlick had 
come to Westby from Hoole in the time 
of Edward I. 

9 Thomas de Clifton seems to have held 
4 oxgangs of land in Great Fieldplump- 
ton in 1289—that would be a fourth part 
of Plumpton ; De Banco R. 80, m. 125 d. 

In 1299 Egelina widow of Walter de 
Clifton claimed dower in a messuage, &c., 
anu 4 oxgangs of land in Great Field- 
plumpton against Gilbert de Singleton, 
who called Thomas de Clifton to warrant 
him; ibid. 127, m. 114d. Afterwards 
Thomas called John son of Walter de 
Clifton to warrant him ; ibid. 138, m. 99. 
Isabel widow of William de Clifton 
claimed dower in two messuages, &c., and 
4 oxgangs of land in Field Plumpton in 
1324-5 against William son of William de 


a i and recovered; Assize R. 426, 
m. 8 


A ‘manor’ 


Nicholas del Marsh in 1327 com- 
plained that John son of Walter de Clifton 
and William his son had carried off certain 
goods of his at Great Plumpton; De 
Banco R, 269, m. 63d. Then in 1345 
Joan widow of John son of Walter de 
Plumpton claimed dower in a messuage 
and 4 oxgangs of land in Great Field- 
plumpton against William son of John 
de Plumpton ; ibid. R. 342, m. 336d. 

This was probably the estate of six 
messuages, 4 oxgangs and 8 acres of land, 
and 60 acres of pasture, which was in 
1359 settled upon Robert Griffin and 
Joan his wife and their heirs male, with 
remainders to Thomas Tittele, to the 
issue of Joan, and to Sir William de 
Clifton ; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 160. 

It may be added that Denis son of 
Nicholas del Marsh was plaintiff and 
William de Clifton defendant in a dispute 
as to land, &c., in Westby in 1322; 
De Banco R. 244, m. 128. 

10 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. ii, no. 7. 
It is recorded that Thomas de Lathom 
‘died seised of the service of Robert de 
Clifton, who held of him the manor of 
Field Plumpton in socage, rendering 
yearly 6s. 8¢., which manor Thomas held 
of the manor of Penwortham by the said 
service.’ This last clause seems to be 
erroneous, but it is possible that the 
Robert de Clifton here named as tenant 
was the Robert Griffin of the last note. 

11 Gilbert de Singleton of Broughton 
has been named above. In 1325 he held 
a fourth part of the vill of Great Plump- 
ton, which Nicholas del Marsh held of 
him for life by the service of a rose at 
Midsummer ; Inq. p.m. 19 Edw. II, no. 67. 

In the 16th century the Singletons of 
Staining held land in Plumpton, but the 
tenure is not stated. 

12 Thomas Earl of Derby in 1521 held 
lands in Plumpton, but the tenure is not 
recorded ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. v, 
no. 68. This may have been the ancient 
estate of Thomas de Lathom in Field 
Plumpton. In the Derby rental of the 
time (preserved at Lathom) appears ‘£4 
from the farm of the manor and 8 ox- 
gangs of land with the appurtenances’ in 
Plumpton demised to John Skillicorne. 
The name appears again in 1653 among 
the confiscated estates of the seventh 
earl; Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 237. 


175 


Clifton, who had become a Protestant, in 1845. The 


George Allen of Poulton died in 1579 
holding messuages, &c., in Plumpton 
of Cuthbert Clifton in socage ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 80; Lancs. Ing. 
p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 198. 

The tenure of the lands of Shireburne 
of Stonyhurst is not stated. 

Anthony Billington died in 1631 hold- 
ing a messuage, &c., in Plumpton of 
Robert Bannester ; John his son and heir 
was nineteen years of age; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxx, no. 70. 

18 Walter son of Osbert gave the canons 
the house which had been Alan Taylor's, 
with the croft, also a moiety of Pilate- 
furlong, with common in the vill of 
Plumpton ; Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 211. William son of Walter 
confirmed the gift. Richard son of 
Richard Russel seems to have been the 
tenant in 1268; ibid. 212, The rental 
is printed ibid. iii, 1262. 

4 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Non-jurors, 90,96,97- The other names 
were William Lund, William Hodgson, 
Grace Thompson, widow, Roger Taylor, 
John Postlethwaite, Thomas and Richard 
Kirby, Thomas Blackhurne of Great 
Plumpton, William Bamber, George Ball, 
Edward Parkinson of Ballam (under the 
will of Gregory Crook), George Cowburn 
of Little Plumpton, and William Lathom 
(at Tarbock). 

15 Gillow, Haydock Papers, 31. ‘In the 
days of persecution mass was said at two 
farm-houses in this district, one at Moss- 
side, the other at Little Plumpton, where 
William Hodgson used to live, one room, 
containing theological books, being always 
kept locked’ ; Estcourt and Payne, op. 
cit. go. 

16 Gillow, op. cit.232-4. The govern- 
ment’s officer gives a lively account of his 
search for the priest and his spoliation of 
the chapel, in which he had been assured 
there was good quantity of plate; ‘this 
I gathered,’ he says, ‘from one of the 
dragoons who was of these congregations 
about four years since, but now a true 
Protestant, and was privy to all those 
secret places.’ He did not find the 
plate, and the people vainly endeavoured 
to rescue the books, &c., which he took. 

Fr. Barrow had £12 from the college 
(i.e. his order) and £6 from Sir T. Clifton 
and others; his successor in 1751 had 
the more liberal stipend of £80 tos. ; 
Foley, Rec. S. J. v, 321-5- 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


congregation was then joined to Kirkham until in 
1860 the present church of St. Anne was opened.!” 


WEETON-WITH-PREESE 


Widetun, Dom. Bk.; Whiteton, 1205; Wytheton, 
1236; Wythinton, 1286; Wetheton, 1382. 

Midehope, Dom. Bk.; Mithop, 1212; Methop, 
1286. 

Pres, Dom. Bk.; Prees, Preez, Peres, 1278; Prese, 
1338. 

Suartebrec, 1249 ; Swartebreke, 1286. 

The area of this township is 2,9724! acres, and its 
population in 1901 was 374. It is curious to note 
that Preese, which has recognition in the official 
name, has no separate measurement, while Mythop or 
Mythorp, the western corner, has its area recorded 
as 677 acres, though it is not recognized in the town- 
ship name ; it is divided from Weeton by moss land. 
Weeton proper occupies the southern half of the 
township, the northern half containing Preese on the 
west and Swarbrick on the east. Each of the four 
places named occupies a piece of rising ground, one 
piece being divided by depressions from the others ; 
at Weeton 112 ft. above the ordnance datum is 
attained, at Swarbrick and Preese 100 ft. and at 
Mythop 50 ft. 

A road from Kirkham goes west and north through 
Weeton and Swarbrick to Singleton ; from Weeton 
a cross road gocs west through Mythop to Blackpool 
and another east to Greenhalgh. The old Danes’ Pad 
is traced in Mythop, running north-west. The rail- 
way from Preston to Fleetwood and Blackpool also 
runs north-west through the township, and a branch 
line to Blackpool crosses the south-west corner. 

The Fylde Waterworks have large reservoirs at 
Weeton. 

Charles Earl of Derby procured a charter for a 
weekly market at Weeton in 1670,” and a fair for 


cattle and small wares used to be held on the Tuesday 
after Trinity Sunday.’ 

The township has a parish council. 

The soil is sandy, with subsoil of clay ; wheat, oats, 
beans and barley are grown, but more than half the 
land is devoted to pasture. 

A ‘hairy ghost’ is associated with Weeton.* There 
is an ancient burial cairn. 

William Barrow,® known better as Waring or Har- 
court, was born in 1610, and educated at St. Omers. 
In 1632 he joined the Society of Jesus, and was sent 
on the English mission in 1644, labouring in the 
London district till the outbreak of the Oates Plot. 
He was arrested in May 1679, and executed the 
following month with several other victims. 

In 1066 Weeton, Preese and Mythop, 
assessed as three, two and one plough- 
land respectively, formed part of the 
Amounderness lordship of Earl Tostig." Afterwards 
the lordship was divided, Weeton becoming head of 
the fee of the Butler of Ireland in Amounderness,’ 
and Preese and Mythop being added to the fee of 
Penwortham.® 

WEETON contributed 215. 8d. to the tallage in 
1205-6, the heir of Theobald Walter being a minor 
in ward to the king.® In 1242 the heir held the 
third part of a knight’s fee in demesne and the 
sixth part in service! From extents of Theobald le 
Boteler’s lands made in 12491! and 1286 it appears 
that at Weeton was a well-built manor-house ; half 
the land, 12 oxgangs, was in demesne, and the other 
half was held by free farmers at the will of the lord ; 
there were three mills.’? The manor continued in 
the Boteler family till about 1400}; it was then 
acquired by Sir John Stanley of Lathom,'* who ob- 
tained a charter for free warren thcre,'® and it has 
continued in his family to the present time,!® the Earl 
of Derby being lord of the manor. ‘The rental of 1522 '7 
shows that Weeton was then the head of a lordship 


MANORS 


Y Full particulars will be found in 
Gillow, op. cit. 236-8; Hewitson, Our 
Country Churches, 345. Bishop Gibson 
visited Westby in 1754 and confirmed 
78 persons ; the number of communicants 
was given as 360. 

' 2,972 acres, including 14 of inland 
water ; Census Rep. 1got. 

3 Cal. S. P. Dom. 1670, p. 267. 

® Baines, Lares. (ed. 1870), ii, 493. 

4 Ibid. 482. 

8 Diet. Nat. Bisg. 3; Gillow, Bibl. Dict. ; 
Foley, Rec. §. J. Under the name of 
William Harcourt the cause of his 
beatification was in 1886 allowed to 
proceed at Rome ; Peien, Acts of Martyrs, 
382. 6 2.C.H. Lancs. i, 2882. 

7 Ibid. 350. The Weeton lordship in- 
cluded also Treales, Greenhalgh; Raw- 
cliffe and Wesham. 8 Ibid. 335, nm. 1. 

9 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 222. 

"0 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 152-3. The 
demesne lands were in Weeton and 
Treales ; the sixth part was in Thistleton, 
Preese and Greenhalgh. 

Ibid. 173. In 1249 there was 
only one mill Certain land belonging 
to Weeton, called Quinschalcishurede, was 
worth 35. yearly, and a plot of meadow 
3d. For the dower of Margery widow of 
Theobald le Boteler in Weeton, &c., see 
Close, 64, m. 19. 

2 Lancs. Ing. and Extent, i, 264-6. In 
1291 Theobald le Boteler was commanded 


t» do homage to Edmund the king's 
brother for his lands held of the honour 
of Lancas:er; Duchy of Lane. Royal 
Charters, 175. 

18 See Piac. de Quo Warr. (Ree. Com.), 
385. Edmund le Boteler in 1302 held half 
a knight's fee in Weeton of the Earl of 
Lancaster ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 316. 

James son of Edmund le Boteler of 
Ireland in 1324 held the manor of 
Weeton with Little Marton, &c., by 
knight’s service and the yearly rent of 
tos. for a goshawk, §s. for castle ward, 
and 13s. 4d., doing suit to the county and 
wapentake ; Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 40. 

The manor of Weeton was included in 
a feoffment by James le Boteler Earl of 
Ormonde and Eleanor his wife in 1329 3 
De Banco R. 278, m. 180d. See also 
325, m. 380. 

The Earl of Ormond in 1346 held the 
fishery of Marton Mere by tos. rent, two 
(not three) plough-lands in Weeton, three 
in Little Marton, three in Treales, two in 
Wesham and Mowbreck by half a knight's 
fee, rendering 135. 4d.; Survey of 1346 
(Chet. Soc.), 52-4. 

Eleanor Countess of Ormonde held in 
1355 3 Feud. Aids, iii, go. She wasa plain- 
tiffin 1356 (Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 5, 
m. 26d.), and tenant of Weeton in 1361; 
Inq. p.m. 35 Edw. III, pt. i, no. 122. 

The Earl of Ormonde in 1378 paid 10s. 
to the aid as for the moiety of a fee in 
Weeton, Greenhalgh, Treales, Thistleton, 


176 


Out Rawcliffe, Bradkirk, Medlar and 
Esprick ; Harl. MS. 2085, fol. 421, &c. 

In 1384 John (James) son and heir of 
James Boteler, late Earl of Ormonde, had 
livery of 100 marks rent from the manor 
of Weeton; Kuerden fol. MS. p. 56. 
See also Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 
359) 363. 

4 Sir John Stanley was lord of Weeton 
in gor 3 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 76. 

The grant was made in 1408 to 
John Lund and Thomas Charnock, chap- 
lains ; Chart. R. 9 Hen. IV, no. 6, 

16 John Stanley in 1431 held the moiety 
of a knight’s fee in Weeton, Treales, 
Wesham and Thistleton ; Feud. 41ds, iii, 
95. In 1445-6 Sir Thomas Stanley held 
in Weeton of the inheritance late of the 
Earl of Ormonde (and) the fishery called 
Marton Mere, rendering 20s. yearly or a 
sor goshawk ; Duchy of Lanc. Knights’ 
Fees, bdle. z, no. 20. 

Thomas the second Earl of Derby in 
1§21 held the manors of Weeton and 
Treales of the king by the service of half 
a knight's fee and the rent of 135. 4d, 
The clear value was £30; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, no. 68. 

The manors of Weeton and Treales 
occur at various times in fines and re- 
coveries of the earl’s estates; ¢.g. Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 276, m.7§ (171533 
Pal. of Lanc. Pea R. 623, m. 14 (1776). 

‘In the possession of the Earl of 
Lathom. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


comprising also Treales, Wesham, Out Rawcliffe, Little 
Marton, Greenhalgh, Plumpton and other lands. A 
court had been held during the year. 
were paid rents resolute of 13s. 4¢. for the lordships 
of Weeton and Treales, 1os. for the fishery at Marton 
Mere and 4s. for the township of Wesham.!8 
PREESE was held, together with a portion of 
Newton-with-Scales, by a local family, having been 
given by Warine Busse] to Gillemichael son of Efward, 


18 The free tenants of Weeton paid 
41s. 2fd. 5 also 35. sake-fee. The tenants 
of Treales paid 5s. gd. sake-fee ; those of 
Wesham paid 4s.; and John Boteler of 
Out Rawcliffe paid 1d. as the price of a 
pair of gloves for that estate. The tenants 
at will in Weeton paid £13 16s. 84.5 the 
value of the works and boon hens was 
gs. 9d. The profits of the court amounted 
to 8s., but the steward’s expenses absorbed 
2s. 4d. of that sum. 

19 Lancs, Ing. and Extents,i, 29. The 
heir in 1212 had three of the original 
four plough-lands, and was a minor in 
ward of the Archdeacon of Stafford and 
William de Harcourt. 

Robert son of Gillemichael (ibid. i, go) 
gave an oxgang in Preese, viz. the 
sixteenth part of the whole vill, saving 
his demesne of Wray, to the canons of 
Cockersand in free alms; Chartul. (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 200. He as Robert de Whitting- 
ton added three parts of a field called 
Wray lying between Preese and Ayk- 
scough ; ibid. 201, 

Gillemichael had a son Gospatrick, who 
gave land in Burton in Kendal to Cocker- 
sand; ibid. iii, 1008. Gospatrick Prat 
in 1212 held land in the adjacent Dalton ; 
Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 90. William 
son of Henry or William de Hothwaite 
had land in Burton and Dalton in 1228 ; 
Final Cone. i, 54.3 Cockersand Chartul. iii, 
1o10. He may be the William de Prees 
of 1235; Final Conc. 71. 

The heir of the above-named Robert 
was probably the William de Prees acting 
as juror in 1242, when he held the fourth 
part of a knight’s fee in Preese and 
Newton of the fee of the Earl of Lincola 
(Penwortham) ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, 
i, 151-2. He occurs down to 1258 (ibid. 
i, 212) and Robert de Prees in 1286 
(ibid. i, 265), another William acting as 
Juror in 1297 and holding the fourth part 
of a fee in Preese and Newton in 13023 
ibid. i, 289, 316. 

There were three Roberts contem- 
porary; for in 1278 Maud widow of 
Robert son of Austin de Prees claimed a 
messuage, toft and oxgang of land against 
Robert son of William de Press, who 
called Robert son of Robert son of Austin 
to warrant him, which younger Robert 
appeared accordingly ; De Banco R. 27, 
m. 38; 30, m. 13. He had then to 
give dower to Maud; ibid. 31, m. 44. 
Maud claimed dower in Preese against 
Robert son of William de Singleton in 
Tespect of a messuage, toft and 2 ox- 
gangs of land, and against Robert son 
of William de Prees; ibid. 27, m. 60. 
Robert de Prees was defendant in another 
plea of dower in 1292; Assize R. 408, 
M. 30. 

% William de Prees, as stated already, 
was tenant in 1297 and 1302. He was, 
no doubt, the William distrained to do 
homage to Edward II in 1322 for two 
plough-lands in Preese held by the fourth 
part of a knight’s fee; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents, ii, 136. It should be noticed 
that Robert de Prees was to do homage for 


7 


a knight’s fee.!9 
To the king 


Skillicorne.?? 


the plough-land in Newton ; ibid. William 
de Prees and Amery his wife were plaintiffs 
in 1323-4; Assize R.425,m.2. Amery 
daughter of Henry de Walley in her 
widowhood in 1328 eranted to one of her 
sons, Henry de Hacconsall, part of her 
father’s land with remainder to John son 
of another of her sons, Robert de Prees ; 
Towneley MS. C8, 5 (Chet. Lib.), Edw. 
III, no. 12. 

In 1338 William de Penereth and Emma 
his wife did not prosecute a claim for a 
messuage and 2 oxgangs of land in Preese 
put forward against Robert de Prees, Alice 
his wife, William the son of Robert, 
Maud his wife, Edmund son of Robert, 
Henry de Hacconsall and Ellen his wife. 
Henry was in possession, having entered 
by Robert de Prees; Assize R. 1425, 
m, 2d., 6d. 

A Robert de Middleton seems to have 
been in possession about 1358 as bailiff 
for William de Caton and Joan his wife ; 
Assize R. 438, m. 4, 14. 

In 1361 the heir of William son of 
Robert de Prees held the fourth part of a 
knight’s fee in Preese and Newton ; Inq. 
p-m. 35 Edw. III, pt.i,no. 122. Cf. Feud. 
Aids, iii, 87. 

21 Between 1354 and 1361 the Duke 
of Lancaster granted to Adam Skillicorne 
the custody of the lands of William son of 
Robert de Prees, deceased, with the 
marriage of John son and heir of William ; 
Dep. Keeper's R.p. xxxii, App. 344. There 
are other allusions to Adam in the same 
report ; it appears that he became coroner 
for the county and died probably in 1383, 
when a new officer was appointed ; ibid. 
356. John Skillicorne probably suc- 
ceeded, but he died in 1385; ibid. 358. 

Adam son of William Skillicorne gave 
2 marks for a writ of entry in June 1364 5 
Fine R. 165, m. 11. Lands, &c., in 
Newton and Preese were in the hands of 
Adam Skillicorne in 1371, but nothing is 
said of any manor ; Final Cone. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 180. 

A little earlier (1368) William son of 
William de Prees, in right of his brother 
John, had established his title to a mes- 
suage, &c., in Weeton against Adam de 
Skillicorne and William de Becconsaw, 
who had entry by Robert de Middleton 
and Alice his wife; De Banco R. 431, 
m. 309. 

22 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 76. 
The guardianship of the heir was granted 
to William de Rigmaiden ; Dep. Keeper's 
Rep. xl, App. §31. It seems probable that 
Adam Skillicorne had married his daughter 
to John de Prees, at the same time 
securing the manor to her and her heirs. 
Nicholas de Prees put in a claim soon 
afterwards ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. i, 75. 

A story at variance with the above 
record was related in 1535, it being stated 
that various lands and the manor of Preese 
were through William de Southworth, 
vicar of Poulton, settled on Adam Skilli- 
corne and Alice then his wife, with re- 
mainder to his son Edmund; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. vii, no. 3. The fine 


177 


KIRKHAM 


who had married his daughter, as the fourth part of 
It descended in the Prees family,2° 
of whom little is known,”! until about 1360. In 
1401, after the death of Margery de Prees, it was 
found that she had held the manor of the king as of 
the honour of Penwortham by knight’s service and 
12d. rent, and that the heir was her nephew, Edmund 
It descended to Nicholas Skillicorne, 
who heads the pedigree recorded in 1567,8 and then 


above cited, referring apparently to the 
same act, says nothing of a ‘ manor.’ 
The same inquisition recites a settlement 
by Edmund Skillicorne and Margaret his 
wife. 

The writ of diem cl. extr. in the case 
of Edmund Skillicorne was issued 12 
Mar. 1400-1; Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxiii, 
App.2. The inquisition states that he 
held burgages, &c., in Lancaster in con- 
junction with Margery his wife, daughter 
of Thomas Rigmaiden. William Skilli- 
corne, his son and heir, was fifteen years 
old ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 75. 

William, born at Wedacre in Garstang 
on 8 Sept. 1385, proved his age in 1408 ; 
ibid. i, 91. He held the manor of Preese 
by the fourth part of a knight’s fee in 
14313; Feud. Aids, iii, 95. The writ of 
diem cl. extr. after his death was issued 
6 July 14373; Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxiii, 
App. 37- His son was the John Skilli- 
corne who died in 1478 holding the 
manor of Preese and lands, &c., in Newton 
of the king as of his duchy by a rent of 
6d., also lands, &c., in Warton, Preston 
and Lancaster. William his son and heir 
was forty-eight years old ; Lanes, Ing. p.m. 
(Chet. Soc.), ii, 105. John Skillicorne, 
William his son, Richard and James sons 
of William Skillicorne, were burgesses at 
the Preston Guild of 1459; Guild R. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 12. 

William, who married Agnes Lawrence 
of Scotforth (Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 163, 
m. 20), died before 20 Feb. 1495-6, when 
the writ diem cl. extr. was issued ; 
Towneley MS. CC, no. 638. The inquisi- 
tion stated that he held the manor of 
Preese and 2 oxgangs of land in Newton 
of the king’s honour of Penwortham by 
knight’s service and 6d. rent; Towneley 
MS. ‘Lancs. Tenures’ (in possession of 
W. Farrer), 8. 

William was succeeded by a son John, 
whose grandson Richard died in 1534 
leaving four daughters, the eldest being 
only ten years old, by his wife Isabel 
daughter of Ralph Langton of Newton ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. vii, no. 3, 
where the descent is given thus: Adam 
-s. Edmund -s. William -s. John -s. 
William -s. John -s. William —s. Richard. 
The heir male was Nicholas Skillicorne, 
then thirty years of age. John Skillicorne 
was of Preese in 1523, when he had a 
dispute with the Abbot of Whalley as to 
common of pasture on Carr Marsh on the 
border of Staining ; Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. 
Com.), ii, 31. His wife at that time was 
Margaret sister of James Anderton of 
Worden in Leyland ; Duchy of Lane. Ing. 
p-m. v, no. 51. Afterwards (in 1528) he 
married Anne, James’s widow; she died 
in 15343 ibid. vii, no. 3; Ducatus Lanc. 
ii, 37. John was living in 1532. 

From a. further inquiry made about 
1556 it appears that Richard’s four 
daughters were then living and married. 

%3 Visit, (Chet. Soc.), §23; Nicholas is 
described as son of John Skillicorne. He 
had a son William and grandson Nicholas. 
The elder Nicholas and his three sons 


25 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


to his grandson Nicholas, who held it in 1609." 
Soon afterwards the manor was sold, and in 1634 was 
held by John Wolverton.” 
In 1756 John Parkes pur- 


chased a moiety of it: from 

Vhomas Gorst and Rachel an 

his wife. The hall?” now TTI TT 

belongs to Mr. Thomas im Trt 

Horrocks Miller of Singleton. om 
SWARBRICK in Preese vides ay 

scems always to have been a Lt 

member of Wecton.” It gave ap 


a surname to a family or 
families of lung standing in 
the district. 

MYTHOP, though part of 
the fee of Penwortham, was 
held as the tenth part of a 


Preese. 


of the second. 


knight’s fee by the lords of Weeton,” and has de- 
scended with it. A family surnamed Mythop occurs, 
but does not seem to have b.en of long continu- 


ance.” 


Sir Gilbert Gerard was in 1593 stated to have 
held land in Preese of the inheritance of Richard 


Balderston.”! 


Some of the Earl of Derby’s lands were sold by the 
Commonwealth authorities in 1653.*° Three ‘ Papists’ 


registered estates in 1717.% 


For the Church of England St. Michael and All 
: A parish 
was assigned to it in 1846,” and the vicar of Kirkham 


Angels’ was erected at Weeton in 1843. 


has the patronage. 


A Wesleyan Methodist chapel was built in 1827,” 


but has long since disappeared. 


SKILLICORNE of 
Sable a cross 
countercompony or and 
azure between four garbs 


TREALES, ROSEACRE, axnp WHARLES 


Treucles, Dom. Bk. ; Turuel, 1242. 
Rasaker, Raysakur, 1249. 
Quarlous, 1249 ; Warlawes, Werlows, 1286, 
Treales is the southern half of this composite 
township, the northern halt being divided between 
Roseacre to the north-west and Wharles to the south- 
east. The respective areas of the three portions are 
1,998, 937 and 1,165 acres, or 4,100 in all.! The 
population numbered 492 in 1901. The greater 
part of the surface is flat, but in the south is some 
higher land, the 100 ft. above sea level being attained ; 
but this declines somewhat sharply to the brook which 
forms the boundary between Treales and Kirkham. 
From Kirkham a road goes north through Treales, 
standing on the higher land mentioned, and then by 
Bolton Houses and Cross Hill to Wharies, at which 
hamlet it divides, one branch going north-east to 
St. Michael’s and the other north-west, by Roseacre and 
Sasswick House, to Elswick. There are some side roads 
and cross roads. The railway from Preston to Black- 
pool runs through the extreme south of the township. 
The soil is clay ; wheat is grown, but three-fourths 
of the land is pasture. 
There is a parish council. 
In 1066 TREALES, a member of 
MANOR Earl Tostig’s fee, was assessed as two 
plough-lands.? Afterwards it is found to 
be a member of the Weeton fee, held successively by 
Boteler and Stanley, and the lordship has descended 
to the present Earl of Derby.’ ROSEACRE and 
WHARLES were probably improvements from the 
waste‘; it does not appear that they were ever 


were burgesses at the guild of 15423 
Preston Guild R. 1g. Nicholas was dead 
in 155¢, when the manor was in the 
king's hands by reason of the minority of 
Wiliam, his son and heir; Duchy of 
Lan:. Misc. Bks. xxiii, 55d. 

In 1592 an in‘orme- told the govern- 
ment that ‘Mr. Skilicorme of Preese 
hath for many years a recusznt school- 
master, who for sundry years was one 
William Fletcher, then a recusant, now 
the schoolmaster at Wigan’; Gibson, 
Lyiiazs Hall, 238, quoting S. P. Dom. 
Eviz. cexv, 9. Wiliam $k ‘Nicorne died 
in 1601 holding the manor of Preese, and 
was succeeded by his son Nicholas; 
Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. xvii, no. 35. 
For a pedigree see Fishwick, Kirkhiv, 
Igl. 
es A feoffment of the manors of Preese 
and Newton was made by Nicholas 
Skillcorne in 1606; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F. bale. “9, no. $3. The manor of 
Preese alone appears in a similar fine in 
1609, when the deforciants were Nicholas 
Skiiicorne, William his son and heir- 
apparent and Elizabeth his wite, Joha 
Ski.licome and Priscilla his wife; ibid. 
bdle. “6, no. 31. No Skillicornes appear 
in the Preston guild roll of 1622 or later. 
Nicholas and John Skillicorne were con- 
yicted recusants in 1620; Cal. S.P. Dom. 
1619-23, P- 180 

35 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 125, 
no. 43. From the draft of an Act of 1624 
it appears that John Skillicorne had con- 
yeve4 the manor to Robert, Edmund and 
Charles Wolferstone ; His. MSS. Com. 
Rep. ili, 30. 

26 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 354- 

27 In 1836 it belonged to Hugh Hornby 


of Liverpool, and was afterwards sold to 
Thomas Miller, father of the present 
owner ; Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1836), iv, 400; 
(ed. 1870,, il, 493- 

28 The 4 oxgangs of land there were in 
1286 held by free farmers of Theobald le 
Boteler ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 265. 
This is probably the land in Preese held 
by the heir of Theobald Walter in 1242 ; 
ibid. 153. 

29In 1212, of the four plough-lands 
granted by Warine Bussel to Gillemichael, 
only three were held by his heirs; the 
other, in Mythop, was held by the heir of 
Theobald Walter ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, 
i, 29. It was worth 44 marks yearly in 
1249 and 645. in 1286 ; ibid. 172, 264. 
The tenure was in 1302 recorded as the 
tenth part of a knight's fee in Mythop, 
held of the Earl of Lincoln ; ibid. 316. 
This is repeated in later extents, &c. ; ¢.g. 
Feud. Aids, iii, 91. 

In 1522 the tenants of Mythop paid 
£4 a year, including 3s. 3d. as the value 
of the works and services ; Derby Rental 
(at Lathom). 

30 James le Boteler Earl of Ormonde in 
1329 complained that Robert de Prees 
and Adam son of Thomas de Mythop had 
rescued cattle from his pound at Weeton; 
De Banco R. 278, m. 157. 

Adam son of Richard de Mythop in 
1341 confirmed to his son Richard lands 
at the Bankhouses in Warton; Lytham 
D. at Durham, 1a, 2 ae, 4 ae, Ebor. no. 20. 
The witnesses included Henry, Geoffrey 
and Robert, sons of Richard de Mythop. 

Nicholas son of Robert de Mythop had 
land in Elswick in 1402-5; Towneley 
MS. C8, 5 (Chet. Lib.), Hen. IV, no. 


5) 7+ 
178 


There was another place of the same 
name in Lytham. 

81 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvi, no. 2. 

8? Cal. Com. for Comp. ii, 1117 ; Swar- 
brick, Mythop, &c. 

38 James and Thomas Swarbrick and 
William Blacoe; Estcourt and Payne, 
Engl. Cath, Nonjurors, 134-5. For the 
convicted recusants c, 1670 see Misc. 
(Cath. Rec. Soc.), v, 195-6. 

34 By Order in Council 21 Jan. 1846. 

85 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1870), ii, 493. 

1 Including 2 acres of inland water; 
Census Rep. 1901. 

2 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 2884. 

8See the account of Weeton. The 
sheriff rendered account of 26s. tallage of 
Treales in 1205-6; Farrer, Lancs. Pipe 
R. 202. In 1249 the three plough-lands 
in Treales were worth £8 145. 7d. in all 
issues, and the land of Wharles and Rose- 
acre £93 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Ree. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 172-3. In 
1286 there were 24 oxgangs of land in 
the hands of free farmers, each oxgang 
being worth 115, a year; ibid. 265. 

4. In 1286 there were in Roseacre 215 
acres of land, and in Wharles 144 acres, 
each worth 10d, yearly, in the hands of 
free farmers ; ibid. 

It appears that in 1233 Randle de 
Goosnargh, Alice his wife and William 
son of Alexander the Clerk of Elswick 
held 67 acres in Roseacre, but Theobald 
le Boteler purchased them ; Final Conc. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 160. 

The Derby rental of 1522 (at Lathom) 
shows that £16 was received from 
tenants at will in Treaies; a windmill 
paid 30s. and turbary 261, 8d. The 
rent of the tenants at will .o Wharles 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


considered to be manors.’ ‘The township is scarcely 
ever named in the records, but in 1228-9 a mandate 
was issued to the sheriff respecting Lewe de Treales, 
who had found ancient coins while ploughing.® 

Thomas Firth (Styth) of Wharles in 1631 was 
fined (10, having refused knighthood.’ Sir Edward 
Osbaldeston in 1637 had a small rent from Treales.® 
Some ‘Papists’ of Treales and Roseacre registered 
estates in 1717.9 

Christ Church, Treales, for the worship of the 
Church of England, was built in 1855. The vicar 
of Kirkham is patron.’° 

The Presbyterians had a licensed meeting-place in 
Roseacre in 1689," but it does not seem to have been 
permanent. 


GREENHALGH-WITH-THISTLETON 


Greneholf, Dom. Bk. ; Grenhole, 1212 ; Grencle, 
1242; Grenehol, 1244; Grenole, 1249; Grenolf, 
1331. 

Thistilton, 1212 ; Thistelton, 1242. 

Estebrec, 1249. 

Greenhalgh or Greenalgh, in which are Esprick 
and Cornoe, occupies the southern part of this com- 
posite township, Thistleton being the northern part. 
The two portions measure 1,187 and 710 acres 
respectively, or 1,897 in all}; the population in 1901 
was 408. The surface is flat, sloping gradually from 
south to north and from west to east, the extremes 


KIRKHAM 


being 100 ft. above sea level at the south-west border 
and 25 ft. in the north-east corner. There is 
moss land in the south. 

A road goes north-north-west through the whole 
length of the township, passing through Corner Row 
and Esprick, From it another road goes west to the 
hamlet of Greenhalgh, turning south to reach Weeton ; 
while yet another in the north turns off to the east 
and north to reach Thistleton, from which it turns 
towards Elswick. 

The soil is clay ; potatoes are grown, but most of 
the land is permanent grass. 

For this township there is a parish council. 

In1066 three plough-landsin GREEN- 

MANORS HALGH formed part of Earl Tostig’s 

Preston lordship.? Afterwards there 

seems to have been a division; so that one of the 

plough-lands, Medlar, was granted out in thegnage, 

while the others, Greenhalgh proper and Thistleton, 

were given to the ancestors of the Boteler fumily, 

and held as members of the Weeton lordship, the 
superior manor descending in the same way. 

By Hervey, the grandfather of Theobald Walter, 
Thistleton and Greenhalgh were given with his 
daughter Alice to Orm son of Magnus, and thus 
descended to Roger de Hutton, lord of the adjacent 
Medlar.* Roger and his son granted the whole or 
greater part out in various ways. Chiefly by purchase 
the Butlers of Rawcliffe appear to have acquired the 
greater part,° and were regarded as lords of the 


was 109s. 8d., including 18d. the value 
of their works ; for Roseacre the amounts 
were £6 15s. $d. and 4s. 7d. respectively. 

3 The ‘township’ of Wharles and 
Roseacre is named in 15263; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 998. © Close R. 39, m. 20. 

7 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 221. 

8 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvii, 
No. 15. 

® Henry Johnson and John Ward of 
Treales; William Crooke and John 
Miller of Roseacre ; all leaseholds ; Est- 
court and Payne, Engl. Cath. Nonjurors, 
91.92. For the convicted resusants c. 1670 
see Misc. (Cath. Rec. Soc.), v, 196-7. 

A separate ecclesiastical parish was 
constituted in 1858; information of the 
vicar. See A. Hewitson, Our Country 
Churches, 365, where is also an account 
of the Primitive Methodist Meetings, 
369-72. 

U Hist, MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 
232. 

11,898 acres, including 8 of inland 
water; Census Rep. 1901. 

2 V.C.H. Lanes. i, 2882. 

3 The members of Theobald Walter's 
fee of Weeton were not named separately 
in 1212, but Thistleton and Greenhalgh 
occur in 12423; Lancs. Ing. and Extents 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 37, 153- 
The assessment of Greenhalgh as one 
piough-land was recorded in 1249; ibid. 
i, 172. Thistleton is named among the 
Countess of Ormonde’s lands in 1355 and 
among those of Sir John Stanley in 1431 3 
Feud. Aids, iii, 90, 95. 

One oxgang of land was in 1286 in 
the lord’s hands, and rendered 18s. 
yearly ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 265. 
This, no doubt, was the oxgang not held 
by knight’s service ; ibid. 173. 

The Derby rental of 1522 (at Lathom) 
records the payment of 18s. gd.—the gd. 
in lieu of services—for a tenement and 
oxgang of land containing 24 acres, in 


the occupation of Gilbert Wilkinson ; 
3s. 4d. for a cottage newly built, and 
2 acres, lately of Henry Fleetwood 
deceased, and then of Robert Wilkinson ; 
and 12d. for certain lands in Greenhalgh 
Field held by Rowland Cornay. These 
rents were from Greenhalgh in the 
Fylde ; from Greenhalgh in the Holme 
came ros. for a tenement lately Henry 
Fleetwood’s. Another Greenhalgh gave 
a name to Greenhalgh Castle near Gar- 
stang. 

4 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 37. 

5 Part was included in the gift of 
Medlar to his daughter by Roger, and 
thus came into the possession of the 
Hospitallers and of Cockersand Abbey— 
viz. the mill of Greenhalgh and the ser- 
vice of Adam de Cornoe; Lancs. Ing. 
and Extents, i, 473 Cockersand Chartul. 
(Chet. Soc.), i, 168-71. 

Ellis son of Roger de Hutton made 
grants in Greenhalgh and Thistleton to 
Cockersand, as will be seen below. To 
Adam de Cornoe he gave part of his 
demesne in Greenhalgh, and this was 
confirmed by his son Robert; Dods. 
MSS. liii, fol. 91. The same Ellis 
granted an oxgang of land to Jordan son 
of Richard the Clerk of Kirkham, and 
another to Walter son of Ailsi de Ros 
(the land of Adam de Cornoe, the mill, 
Whitaker, and the croft of Raun being 
excepted) ; ibid. fol. 854, 87. 

In 1242 the immediate tenants were : 
In Thistleton—John de Thornhull ; in 
Greenhalgh—Roger de Nutshagh, Adam 
de Bradkirk, William de Kirkham, Robert 
son of Thomas, and Richard son of 
William ; Lancs, Ing. and Extents, i, 
152-3. , 

6 Geoffrey de Pleasington, with the 
consent of Alice his wife (probably the 
heir), released to Richard le Boteler all 
right in Greenhalgh, Whitacre and 
Cornoe; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 98. 
Richard le Boteler gave his son Edmund 


179 


all his land in Greenhalgh, Whitacre, 
Esprick, and Cornoe Row ; ibid. fol. 974. 
The same Edmund le Boteler acquired 
for 27 marks an oxgang and a half of 
land from William son of Robert de 
Greenhalgh, who in 1274 at Little 
Hoole released all his land in Greenhalgh 
to Edmund ; ibid. fol. 92, 865 (no. 44). 
Edmund also acquired first an acre of 
land and then the whole inheritance in 
Whitacre of William son of Adam de 
Whitacre ; ibid. fol. 85, no. 25, 35. 
From Geoffrey de Pleasington he ob- 
tained a release of all the land held by 
Geoffrey of the Hospitallers ; ibid. fol. 97. 

Nicholas le Boteler in 1291 released 
to an uncle Henry the land in Green- 
halgh formerly held by the uncle Edmund 
just named ; and a little later gaye his 
sister Alice all his land in Greenhalgh, 
with the services of Adam de Bradkirk, 
William de Esprick, and others; ibid. 
fol. 98, 97. William de Elswick, son of 
Alexander the Clerk, granted to Henry 
le Boteler, son of Sir Richard, the 
homage and service of his brothers Alan 
and Thomas, apparently in Thistleton ; 
ibid. fol. 85. 

Alice sister of Nicholas le Boteter 
was no doubt the wife of Adam de 
Walton, to whom in 1302 Henry le 
Boteler gave all his land in Greenhalgh ; 
ibid. fol. 874. 

Mabel widow of Nicholas le Boteler 
in 1300 claimed dower in six messuages, 
6 oxgangs of land, &c., in Greenhalgh, 
against Adam de Walton and Alice. The 
free tenants named were Adam de Brad- 
kirk, William, Adam and John de 
Esprick ; De Banco R. 135, m. 227. 

Ranulf de Singleton and Mabe) his 
wite in 1304 claimed her dower in certain 
land in Greenhalgh held by Adam de 
Walton and Alice his wife, and William 
son and heir of Nicholas le Boteler, a 
minor, was called to warrant ; De Banco 
R. 153, m. 157, 164. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


manor.” 


16th century." 
part of Greerhalgh.? 


THISTLETON, apart from the tenement of the 


* See a later note ; also the account of 
Out Rawciiffe. 

* Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. if, no. 
$35 tae lands were sali to te in 
Ta:etleton. 

$ Tid. ii, no. 10g; vill, no. 85 xxvi, 
mo, 36; Greenha'zh alone, or Green- 
haigh with Thistieton. 

Ww = 


a= 


10 Weiter ce Greeciaich wee tenant of 
ies Hatter about 122¢ 3; Cackerseed 


fe 


wee, Mace Woes me 


Smug scm gic ier of Rape :e 
tere wet 2 cerices of ci 
im Gow f 3 


seme Beeckice ac Godt aes 
% > ss =, =—:3 to 


“ ée Greenhiish 
Kuercen MSS. ivy, T 


Greenh: Eserick, Cornoe, Wesham, 
ieeeauiee the Hoimes ; Dods. MSS. 
liii, fol. $6, no. 35. : 
Thomas Clifton in 1547 claimed a 
messuage in the township against Richard 
Greenhalgh and James Thornton ; Dacatus 
Lance. (Rec. Com.), i, 223. : 
Jatnes Greenhalgh died in 1559 holding 
various messuages, &c. in Greenhalgh, 


In 1488 John Butler held his lands of the 
Earl of Derby by knight’s service,® but in 1504 and 
later the mesne lordship was ignored, and the lands in 
Greenhalgh and Thistleton were said to be held of 
the king as of his duchy by knight’s service. 
Greenhalgh gave a surname to some local families," 
of which one retained possession of its lands till the 
The Bradkirk family held a fourth 


Cornoe Row, Esprick and Whitter (Whit- 
acre, of the queen as of the late priory of 
St. John of Jerusalem by a rent of 2s. 
His heir was his grandson George ‘son of 
Richard) Greenhalgh, about twenty years 
oid; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xii, no. 
23. Not .onz afterwards, in 1566, George 
Greenhalgh sold the manor of Greenhaizh 
alias Grecnoo, with water-mill, windmill, 
&c, in Comoe Row, Whiter and Esprick, 
to Henry Butler; Pal of Lanc. Feet of 
F. bdle. 28, m. 203. Soon afterwards 
Henry B-ver also purchased two mnes- 
S-azes, &c, in Greenhalgh and Esprick 
fom the Earl of Derby; ibid. m. 49. 
James Greenhe'zh, son of George, in 
1577 teleased any right im Greenhalgh to 
i same Henry Brter ; Dods. MSS. liii, 
g7s. 

Tre manor of Greenhalgh is named 
amcing the Butler estates in 15-1; Pal. 
ot Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 3:,m 79. In 
1535 Heacy Boer complained that John 


Ecciex-2 of Greezhalzi had obtained 


cectaim evidences sh- wir 


m8 2 recosimr in 
Chester Di xc. Reg. 

Ase: the confiscaicn of :te Butler 
estates = 1716 the manor of Greenta zh 
zypeats w have 2ee= acgzired again by a 
seme: of <2: ‘:<a! family, for in 1-74 
acd again tm 1816 che belser wana James 
Greects gh; Pal of Lace. Picea R. 620, 
mur 2: Lene Asses 24 Geo. IIL 

UO The Brack'rz holziag has occurred 
"= precesicg motes. Adam de Bradkirk 
wei Tecacla Lis wife im 1340 he!d two 


1605; Vise P. in 


z bolas le Boteler by 
service and a reat of 15d.; Ing. 
3 Ew. UT (2ci nosy nots. A 
Parker was defeniant in a claim 


Se Greenhills of Preston and Margaret his 
wire had am interest (cr her life) in a 
&e, cheve uncer John Boteler 
of Kirsiscd; Fitz’ Coac. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches’, EL 43-4. Wilam 
Skiti-crme and Joan his wife had some 
land there in 1397; Pal of Lanc. Feet 
of F. Sle tam. cg. Cuchhert Cutten 
of Cixon in 1512 held land of John 
Betler of Rawcliffe, and a simiar state- 
mect js found in later imzuisitions; 
Dechy of Lanc. Ing. p-m. iv, n>. 12, &c. 
Edward Worthington died at Weeton in 
1639 holing a messuage, land and 
common rights in Greenhalgh of Henry 
Butler. Lawrence bs son and heir was 
fi old ; ibid. xxx, no. 35. 

~ ieee Alice widow of William de 
Travers claimed dower in Thistleton and 
Elswick against Robert son of William de 


180 


Butlers, was largely held by the Cowdrays" and 
Aughtons of North Meols'* and their heirs, their 
manor of Thistleton consisting principally of the 
2 oxgangs of land, a fourth part of the vill, granted 
to the canons of Cockersand by Ellis son of Roger de 
Hutton."* A number of the tenants of Thistleton, 
which name in former times seems to have been used 
of the township as a whole, appear in the pleadings 
and inquisitions 


ing townships, held of the Crown, the Earl of Derby 


; some of them, seated in neighbour- 


Cowdray and Margaret his wife; De 
Banco R. 219, m. 131d. Margery widew 
of Robert de Cowdray in 1349 gave all 
her land in Thistleton to Adam de Meols ; 
Kuerden MSS. iv, T 5. 

5 ™ Hugh Aughton of North Mes's was 
i 1417 seised of a moiety of the manor 
of Thistleton, held of the king as of his 
duchy by knight's service and $d. rent; 
Lares. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 129. 

13 Cockersand Chartul. i, 1735 Elta 
made an exception of Esprick and his 
mill, but added 12 acres on the nearer 
side of Greenhalgh Syke, marked out by 
Crosses, and exemption from multure at 
Greenhalgh mill Thomas de Chevilli 
and Amiria his wife released their title 
to lands in Thistleton, and the canons 
received further grants or releases from 
Robert son of Robert the Clerk of Ulvers- 
ton, Richard de Freckleton, clerk, and 
Geoffrey son of Sir John de Hackinsall; 
ibid. 174-6. Numerous place-names 
occur in the charters—e.g. Fieldingtord- 
wray, Mundegumeland, Otemaste, Ruthe- 
syke, two tongues (or gores) on Borayns 
on the lower side of the road to Single- 
ton. 

Hereward, Abbot of Cockersand, gave 
the 2 oxgangs to William the Clerk of 
Kirkham about 1230 at a rent of 25.3 
Kuerden MSS. loc. cit. ; Dods. MSS. 

Hugh Aughton, son of the above-named 
Hugh, held messuages, &v., in Thistleton 
in 1464 of the Abbot of Cockersand by a 
rent of 2d. (2s.); Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soe.), ii, 80. No ‘manor’ is named then 
or later. A similar tenure was recorded 
in later inquisitions, e.g. in that of Hugh 
Aughton, 1520; Duchy of Lance. Inq. 
p-m. v, no, 28, After the inheritance was 
e vided, John Bold (1587) was said to 
hold lands, &c., in Thistleton of the 
queen as of the late abbey of Cockersand 
ty 2: rent (ibid. xviii, no. 43); but in 
1603 Barnaby Kitchen held similarly by 
12d, rent—i.e. he had a moiety ; Lars. 
Ing. p.m. i, 23, 27. The ‘manor’ of 
Thistleton was named among the estates 
of Hugh Hesketh of North Meols and 
Alice his wife in 1611; Pal. of Lang 
Feet of F. bdle. ~9, no. 71. 

6 The estate of John de Thornhill in 
1242 may have been derived from the 
Jordan de Thornhill who married Quenilda 
daughter and co-heir of Richard son of 
Rozer of Woodplumpton ; she afterwards 
married Roger Gernet, but had no children. 
John Gernet died in 1245 hoi ling nvthing 
in chief of Theobald le Botelcr, but hold- 
ing 2 oxgangs in Thistleton of John de 
Thornhill, which land he had by purchase. 
His brother Benedict was his heir ; Lanc. 
Ing. and Excenss, i, 177+ When, short'y 
afterwards, the escheators were directed to 
give seisin to Benedict, the land was aid 
to be he!d cf Richard son and heir of 
Jobn de Thornhill ; Cove R. 64, m. 14. 

In 1292 ingu'ry was made a8 to the 
tenement of Master William de Kirkham 
in Thistleton; he was dead and the 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


or the Butlers’; others, such as Haw,'® Hudson,” 
and Thompson,” resided in Thistleton itself. Several 
‘Papists’ registered estates in 1717," 

CORNOE,™ or Corner Row, gave a surname to 
its tenants.*> It, like Esprick* and Whitacre or 
Whitter,” was usually regarded as part of Greenhalgh. 

The Hospitallers** and Cockersand Abbey had 
lands.” 

Peter and John Winstanley in 1653 petitioned for 
a rent-charge due to them from their father’s estate 
in Cornoe, sequestered for the recusancy of their 
brother Francis.® 

A Congregational chapel was in 1851 built at 
Corner Row, and provided with a small endowment.” 

There is a school at Esprick said to have been 
founded by John Cooper about 1760." 


LITTLE ECCLESTON-WITH- 


LARBRECK 


Eglestun, Dom. Bk.; Eccliston, 1212. 

Lairbrec, 1212; Leyrebrec, 1242; Leirbreck, 
1329. 

The component parts of the township are divided 
by Thistleton Brook flowing north-east to join the 
Wyre, which river is here the northern boundary of 


KIRKHAM 


township and parish. Little Eccleston, with an 
acreage of 4454, lies to the east of the brook, thus 
adjoining Great Eccleston in St. Michael’s; while 
Larbreck, or Larbrick, containing 835 acres, lies to 
the west. The total area is 1,2804 acres.! There 
was a population of 188 in 1901. The surface is 
comparatively level, rising a little on each side of the 
brook to over 80 ft. above sea level on the east and 
over 60 ft. on the west, thence falling again to the 
north and further west. 

The principal road is one going west and south- 
west from Great Eccleston through Larbreck hamlet 
to Little Singleton ; from it other roads lead south to 
Little Eccleston hamlet, joining there and going on 
to Elswick, while another, in the north-east corner of 
the township, goes north, crossing the Wyre by 
Cartford Bridge. 

Dr. Leigh about 1700 wrote: ‘The most remark- 
able cold spring in these parts is that at Larbreck. 
. . . Upon immersing your hand into it the part 
immediately grows extremely red and you will then 
perceive a most violent pain. Fishes of several sorts 
I have seen put into this spring, which make but one 
effort and instantly expire. It is an Acidula or Chaly- 
beate Water.’? 

The soil is clayey ; wheat, oats, beans and potatoes 
are grown, and there is much pasture land. 


claimant was his nephew Walter de Goos- 
nargh. He had held a messuage, 4 ox- 
gangs of land and 33 acres, In 1292 
Thomas Travers and Cecily his wife held 
the messuage and 2 oxgangs; William 
son of Robert held 1} oxgangs and Alice 
de Newton held 2 oxgang, in dower of 
William’s inheritance ; three others held 
13 acres of land, the remaining 20 be- 
longing to the Abbot of Cockersand. 
Travers called Roger son of Alexander de 
Pilkington to warrant him, while William 
called Nicholas son and heir of William 
son of Nicholas le Boteler, a minor ; 
Assize R. 408, m. 37, 8. The suit 
against William son of Robert de Thistle- 
ton and Alice (now called Dulcia) was 
continued in 1301, when William son of 
Nicholas le Boteler, a minor, was called 
to warrant; Assize R. 1321, m. Iod. 
Some of this may have been acquired by 
the Newton family,who had half an oxgang 
of land in 1332; Final Conc. ii, 88. John 
Newton of Preston in 1596 sold a mes- 
suage, &c., in Thistleton to James Ander- 
ton of Euxton, and he transferred it to 
Edmund Raw; Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 
139, 13943 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 
59, m. 66, 

Henry Holme of Uprawcliffe had 
land in Thistleton about 14683; Final 
Conc. iii, 133. George Kirkby of Upraw- 
cliffe was in 1561 found to have held his 
lands in Thistleton of the Earl of Derby 
by $d. rent ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
xi, no. 8. Richard Parker of Salesbury in 
1638 held his land of James Lord Strange ; 
Towneley MS. C8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 
P. 967. 

James Anderton of Euxton in 1552 
held of the Earl of Derby by 14d. rent, as 
did his son Hugh in 1566; Duchy of 
Lanc Ing. p.m. ix, no. 143 xi, no. 31. 

The tenure in some cases—Hesketh, 
Westby, Allen, Duddell, and Shireburne— 
Is not recorded ; Gilbert Latus in 1568 
held of the lord of Thistleton in socage ; 
Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. xii, no. 113 
and see Ducatus Lanc. iii, 469. Sir 
Thomas Hesketh and Alice his wife sold 


lands in Thistleton to John Bold in 
1558; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 20, 
m. 109. 

To Alexander Banyon were granted a 
messuage, windmill, &c., in 1608 ; Pat. 
6 Jas. I, pt. xxii. 

18 Richard Haw died in 1592 holding 
a messuage, &c., of the queen as of her 
duchy by the two-hundredth part of a 
knight’s fee, and leaving a son William, 
aged fifteen, as heir ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. 
p-m. xvi, no. 21. William died in 1603, 
his heir being his brother John, aged 
seventeen ; and John died in 1607, the 
heir being a sister Janet, wife of Chris- 
topher Parkinson, twenty-eight years of 
age; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 15, 100. 

19 Christopher Hudson died in 1605 
holding a messuage, &c., of Henry Butler 
as of his manor of Greenhalgh by 14d. 
rent. His heir was his son William, aged 
twenty-eight ; ibid. 106. On William’s 
death in 1626 he was succeeded by 
his son Christopher, aged twenty-six ; 
Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 
p- 506. 

20 Henry Thompson made a purchase 
from Hugh Hesketh and Alice his wife 
in 1586; Pal. of Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 
48, m. 224. Henry Thompson the 
elder died in 1620, holding land of the 
Earl of Derby by 3d. rent. His son and 
heir John was thirty-two years old; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ti, 272. 
John Thompson died five years later, 
leaving a son William, two years old ; 
Towneley MS. C 8, 13, p. 1180. 

21 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurors, 1353; Gabriel Wilkinson, 
James and Robert Carter. 

22 In 1189 Roger son of Augustine de 
Heaton held the land of Cornoe by grant 
of William de Lancaster ; Farrer, op. cit. 
437. In 1346 it was found that William 
de Coucy held 2 oxgangs of land in 
Greenhalgh, William Banastre being the 
occupant ; Ing. p.m. 20 Edw. III (2nd 
nos.), no. 63. 

23 Robert and Rowland Cornoe were 


181 


charterers in 15933 Ducatus Lance. iii, 
282, 298, 322. Robert Cornoe in 1604 
held land in Cornoe and Greenhalgh ot 
Henry Butler as of his manor of Green- 
halgh by 11d. rent. Rowland, his son 
and heir, was fifty years old ; Lancs. Ing. 
p.m. (Rec. Soc.), i, 107. Rowland died 
in 1609, leaving a son Henry, aged 
twenty-nine; ibid. 124. The spelling 
seems to have become Cornall at times. 

% William Clifton of Kidsnape in 
1517 held lands in Esprick of the Earl of 
Derby by r4d. rent ; Duchy of Lance. Inq. 
pm. v, no. 21. Cuthbert Clifton of 
Clifton in 1512 held of John Butler of 
Raweliffe ; ibid. iv, no. 12. 

John White of Eccleston in 1557 held 
a messuage in Esprick of William Kirkby 
in socage by a rent of 3d. 3; ibid. xi, no. 
55. William Travers of Nateby in 1558 
also held of William Kirkby by a red rose ; 
ibid. xi, no. 68. 

Esprick was described as a manor in 
1586 ; Ducatus Lane. iti, 169. 

% Ellis son of Roger de Hutton gave 
his demesne land in Whitacre to Cocker- 
sand Abbey, with easements in the vill of 
Greenhalgh. The bounds were: on the 
west, the syke going down north from the 
moss between Watfoth and Whitacre, 
across to a great stone, eastward to the 
highway and southward to the moss ; 
Cockersand Chartul. i, 160. 

26 Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 375. 

27 The rentals, with tenants’ names, 
14.51 to 1537, are printed in Cockersand 
Chartul, iii, 1262-5, 1266-9. 

28 Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 2973. The 
father, also Francis, had made his will in 
1638. 

29 Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. i, 103. 
The ministers of Kirkham and Elswick 
maintain the services. 

30 End. Char. Rep. for Kirkham, 21. 

1The Census Rep. 1901 gives 1,158 
acres, including 8 of inland water; there 
are also 29 acres of tidal water and 31 of 
foreshore. 

2C. Leigh, Nat. Hist. of Lancs. bk. i, 


54. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


In 1066 the two Ecclestons, assessed 
as two and four plough-lands, were held 
by Earl Tostig.® Afterwards five plough- 
lands there are found in the fee of the barons of Kendal‘; 
they were later still members of the lordship of Nether 
Wyresdale.* These five plough-lands, of which two 
were in Great Eccleston in the adjacent parish of St. 
Michael’s, had been granted in marriage by William 
de Lancaster, and in 1212 were held by Richard de 
Molyneux of Sefton, William Blundell of Ince, Ralph 
de Eccleston, Walter son of Swain and Geoffrey.® 
The tenure was later described as knight’s service.’ 

From the subsequent history it is clear that Molyneux 
and Blundell held LARBRECK equally, though the 
former was principal. It was rated as a plough- 
land and a half, and the Blundell part,’ having been 
granted to Norreys (of Sutton), descended regularly 
till the 16th century, when the tenants were Moly- 
neux'! and Daniell of Daresbury." ‘The manor was 
purchased in 1565 by William Burrow or Burgh," 
who died in 1601 holding the manor of the queen 
by suit at the court of Goberthwaite and a rent of 


MANORS 


aged thirty-nine, died at Larbreck in 1639 holding 
the manor as before and leaving his brother William 
as heir."* Richard had made a settlement in 1637, 
with remainders to Alice his wife, William his brother 
and Dorcas his sister for life, and then to his nephews 
Peter and John Woodhouse, sons of his sister Sarah, 
still living in 1640, when William Burgh was found 
to be a lunatic.’® 

William Woodhouse,” another son of Sarah, suc- 
ceeded, and on his death in 1661 was followed by his 
daughter Alice, who married Edward Shuttleworth. 
They had two daughters—Dorothy, who married 
Dr. Charles Leigh of Singleton Grange," and Fleet- 
wood, who married Richard Longworth of St. 
Michael’s. Eventually the moiety of the former was 
acquired by Richard Harrison of Bankfield in Singleton 
in 17473 while the other moiety by various sales 
passed to the Pedders of Preston," and was purchased 
from — Pedder of Lancaster in 1858 by Richard 
Whiteside, father of Mr. George Whiteside, the present 
owner.” No manor is now recognized. 

But little is known of the minor tenants of Larbreck, 


12d. yearly.'* 


3 V.C.H. Lancs, i, 2884. 

© 1bid, 459) Bs 245 

5 e.g. Extent of 13243 Dods. MSS. 
cxxxi, fol. 394 (Ingeham de Gynes). 

§ Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 2. 

TTbid. 154; Adam de Eccleston, 
William de Molyneux, Hugh de Mitton, 
Richard de Catterall and Henry de Long- 
ford held the same lands and Catterall by 
the sixth part of a knight's fee in 1242. 
The last three having Catterall, Adam 
and William must have had the Ecclestons 
and Larbreck, unless some names have 
been omitted. 

8 Both were equally recognized as tenants 
in 1212, but Molyneux alone in 1242 (if 
the record is perfect). In 1346 the lord- 
ship of Wyresdale included a plough-land 
and a half in Larbreck held by Richard 
de Molyneux by knight's service; Ing. 
p-m. 20 Edw. III (2nd nos.), no. 63 
(William de Coucy). William son of 
Richard de Molyneux held the manor of 
Larbreck in 1358, having received it from 
his father on his marriage, paying 1d. 
rent and performing suit at the court of 
Wyresdale, held at Goberthwaite every 
three weeks ; 73d. was payable for castle 
ward ; ibid. 33 Edw. III (2nd nos.), no. 
99. The clear value was given as 7 marks 
then, and as § marks in 1362, when 
William son of the above-named William 
was heir but under age ; ibid. 36 Edw. III, 
pt. i, no. 120. In other records (of 1364 
and 1366) the tenement of William son 
of William son of Richard de Molyneux 
was called a moiety of the manor ; it was 
held by knight’s service of the manor of 
Wyresdale, and John de Ashton was in 
charge; Memo. R. (L.T.R.), 129, m. § d.; 
Memo. R. (K.R.), 143, m. 20. Whilliam’s 
son Richard died in 1397 holding the 
manor of Larbreck in Amounderness 
among his other estates ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Chet. Soc.), i, 71. 

It is possible that the ‘moiety of the 
manor’ only means the Larbreck moiety 
of the whole township. 

9 This does not seem to have been 
usually regarded as a manor. It is not 
Tecognized in the Blundell inquisitions. 

10 Jn 1318 Alan son of Henry le 
Norreys demanded against John le Norreys 
(of Speke) a messuage, 6 oxgangs of land, 


Richard Burgh, his son and heir, then 


&c., in Larbreck, which William Blundell 
had given to Alan son of Alan le Norreys 
and his issue, with reversion to Henry le 
Norreys. Patrick, son of the grantee, 
had died without issue. John le Norreys 
alleged that Patrick had granted him 
2 oxgangs of land, and the jury gave a 
verdict for the plaintiff for the other 
4; De Banco R. 222, m. 226. The 
6 oxgangs show that the tenement was a 
moiety of Larbreck. Notice of a similar 
suit will be found in the account of 
Formby. 

The same plaintiff in 1329 claimed 
land in Larbreck against Richard son of 
William de Molyneux and John son of 
Alan le Norreys; ibid. 279, m. 330d. 
Two years later he did not appear to 
prosecute his claim to twelve messuages, 
&c., held by John son of Alan; ibid. 
287, m.484. There may have been some 
surrender by the latter, for the Norriscs 
of Speke do not again appear in connexion 
with Larbreck. 

William Danyers (Daniell) and Clemency 
his wife (in her right) complained of waste 
of her lands in Larbreck by William and 
John Blundell of Ince in 1357-8 ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Assize R. 6, m. 3d. (Mich.), 
m. 5 (Lent). 

In 1435-6 it was recorded that William 
Daniell held the manor of Larbreck of 
William Blundell in socage by a rent of 
6d. ; Harl. MS. 2086, fol. 446. 

11 The manor is named in a Molyneux 
feoffment in 1558; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F. bdle. 20, m. 80. The object was to 
provide a jointure for Bridget daughter of 
John Caryll, who was to marry William 
the son and heir-apparent of Sir Richard 
Molyneux; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. 
xiii, no. 35. 

22 John son and heir-apparent of Thomas 
son of John Daniell of Daresbury received 
vs grandfather's lands in Larbreck in 
1550; Anct. D.(P.R.O.), A 13476. John 
his son assigned to his grandfather Thomas 
an annuity of £4 from the Larbreck lands 
in 1564.3 Harl. MS. 2077, fol. 193d. 

In 1571 John Daniell sold his lands in 
Larbreck, the principal purchaser ‘seven 
messuages, &c.) being Thomas Eccleston ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 33, m. 58, 
&e. 

8 Ibid. 27, m. 33. 


182 


The deforciant, 


though at one time there was a family so surnamed.” 


Richard Chisnall, was one of the trustees 
appearing in the Molyneux fine of 1558 
above referred to. The sale included 
the manor, five messuages, windmill, salt- 
pit, fishery in the Wyre, &c. 

Chisnall had been plaintiff in a dispute 
as to right of way, &c., in 1563; Ducatus 
Lance. (Rec. Com.), ii, 260. 

M Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m, xviii, no, 
37. For Goberthwaite see the account of 
Cabus. Soon after his purchase William 
Burgh had had a dispute with Henry 
Butler of Rawcliffe respecting a messuage 
and salt marsh by the Wyre; Ducatus 
Lane. ii, 337. 

18 Duchy of Lanc, Inq. p.m, xxx, no, 
100, 

16 Thid. gg. Alice the wife of 
Richard had formerly been married to 
Thomas Holt, and she was afterwards wife 
to John Greenhalgh, being a widow the 
third time in 1652 ; Royalist Comp. Papers 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 111-13. 

WV This paragraph is a summary of the 
account in Fishwick’s Kirkham (Chet. 
Soc.), 183-4, where further details may 
be seen, the ‘title deeds’ being the 
authority. ; 

18 In a fine in 1689 respecting a mo‘ety 
of the manor of Larbreck and messuages, 
&c., there and in Thornton, Greenhalgh 
and Medlar, the deforciants were Charles 
Leigh and Dorothy his wife; Pal. of 
Lane. Feet of F. bdle. 224, m. 40; Pal. 
of Lanc. Plea R. 451, m. 6. 

19 Edward Pedder owned in 1836; 
Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1), iv, 404. 

2% Information of Mr. Whiteside. 

21 Richard de Molyneux granted to 
Adam son of Roger de Larbreck the 
messuage of Girard, with half an oxgang 
of land in the lord’s hands, half of 
Thurnewaitacre; this lay beside the 
Wyre, and its two salt-p'ts were excluded 
from the grant. The witnesses included 
Robert, rector of Garstang, and William 
Blundell ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 334- 

In 1366 William son of Richard de 
Larbreck complained that Adam son of 
Ralph de Bickerstath had taken his cattle 
at Cornholm in Larbreck, but defendsat 
pleaded that Cornholm was partly in 
Little Eccleston, and it was here that the 
seizure had been made ; De Banco R. 425, 
m. 446d, 441d. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Some other owners appear in the inquisitions.*” Cocker- 
sand Abbey had land there, adjoining Singleton Pool,” 
which was afterwards owned by the France family.™ 

The descent of LITTLE ECCLESTON is obscure. 
The local family soon disappears,”® and in 1346 the 
plough-land and a half there were held by Henry de 
Bickerstath of the lord of Wyresdale.” At other 
times only 6 oxgangs of land are ascribed to them,” 
and in the 16thcentury their heirs were stated to hold 
of Boteler of Rawcliffe.” In the Boteler inquisitions 
the tenure of their land in Little Eccleston is not 
recorded ; they appear to have been succeeded in the 
18th century by the France family.” The ‘manor’ 
does not appear in the records, but a few minor 
owners are named.* 

Richard Burgh of Larbreck paid £25—the highest 
fine in the parish —and John France of Little Eccles- 
ton {10, on refusing knighthood in 1631. A few 
‘Papists’ registered estates in the township in 1717.” 


SINGLETON 


Singletun, Dom. Bk. ; Schingleton, 1168 ; Singel- 
ton, 1176; Singilton, 1257 ; Singleton, 1286. 


KIRKHAM 


The larger part of this township is known as Great 
Singleton with 1,5754 acres ; it contains the village 
and chapel near the centre, with Enam or Avenham 
to the south-west and Brackinscal to the south-east. 
Little Singleton occupies the northern part, bordering 
the River Wyre with its picturesque scenery ; it is 
divided near the centre by a small area known as Pool 
Foot, which, with a detached plot to the west, 
measures 534 acres. Little Singleton has an area of 
1,294 acres ; the hamlet or village is near its centre, 
with Mains to the north-west, while Singleton Grange 
and Bankfield are in the eastern portion. The total 
measurement is 2,923 acres,' and there was in 1901 
a population of 373. The surface is almost level, but 
falls away to the north and to the west ; on the latter 
side are the low-lying Carrs, drained by a dyke cut 
some years ago at the expense of the landowners. It 
goes along near the western boundary of the township, 
and empties into the Wyre, near Skippool, Poulton.? 

A road from Kirkham and Weeton leads north to 
Great Singleton and then to Little Singleton, where 
it turns westward, crossing the boundary brook at 
Skippool Bridge and turning south to Poulton. From 


32 Among the purchasers from John 
Daniell in 1571 were Nicholas Thompson 
and Robert Kirkham ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F, bdle. 33, m. 61, 64. Nicholas 
Thompson (who was son of Henry) died 
in 1609 holding his messuage and land 
in Larbreck of the king by the hundredth 
part of a knight's fee. John, his son and 
heir, was nineteen years of age; Lancs. 
Ing. pom. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 201. 

Robert Kirkham in 1573-5 sold some 
of his lands to George Duddell, his wife 
Anne and son Henry being concerned 
also; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 35, 
m. 149; 38, m. 132. Duddell (in right 
of Thomas Daniell) had in 1578 a dispute 
with the attorney-general as to lands in 
Larbreck for Rufford Chapel; Ducatus 
Lane. iii, 62. He died in 1589 holding 
lands in Larbreck and other places, tenure 
unstated, and leaving a son William, aged 
twenty-four; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
XV, NO. 43. 

Henry Kirkham died in 1630 holding 
a messuage, &c., in Larbreck of Richard 
Burgh as of his manor of Larbreck by 
knight's service ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13 
(Chet. Lib.), 721. He left three infant 
daughters—Agnes, Margaret and Anne. 

Robert Higgenson, who died in 1618, 
also held his messuage, é&c., of Richard 
Burgh as of his manor of Larbreck by 
knight’s service. His heir was his 
daughter Janet wife of Richard Simpson; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 169-70. 

Thomas Stanley of Great Eccleston 
(1641) purchased a water-mill at Lar- 
breck ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxix, 
no. 14. 

® Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 
185. The gift was made by Richard de 
Molyneux and included one of his men, 
viz. Alan son of Roger de Larbreck. 

* Ducatus Lane. iii, 373 ; John France 
was tenant in 1597. For details of the 
Pleading and pedigree see Fishwick, op. 
cit. 194, 

75 Adam son of Patrick in 1246 
obtained an oxgang of land in Little 
Eccleston from Beatrice widow of Ralph 
de Eccleston ; Assize R. 404, m. 14. 

In 1284 inquiry was made whether or 
not Robert de Eccleston had held 34 
oxgangs of land in Little Eccleston, the 


right of Simon son of William de Burton 
to 3 oxgangs being acknowledged by John 
son of Christiana de Lingard and brother 
of Petronilla, Mabel and Quenilda, John 
and his sisters being the heirs of Robert ; 
Assize R. 1268, m. 12d. Petronilla was 
wife of William son of Simon de Stodley 
and Quenilda of Roger at Creek. 

John son of John de Lingard claimed 
a moiety of the tenement in 1324 against 
Richard del Cross; De Banco R. 252, 
m. 99; 253, m. 352 ; 258, m. 100. 

76 Ing. pm. 20 Edw. I{I (2nd nos.), 
no. 63. See the account of Bickerstaffe. 

From a pleading of 1292 it would 
appear that Little Eccleston had been 
granted out afresh to the Bickerstaths. 
Adam son of Ellis de Eccleston claimed 
three messuages and 34 oxgangs of land 
in Little Eccleston against Ralph son of 
Adam de Bickerstath, alleging that Ralph 
had no entry except through William de 
Lancaster, who had disseised plaintiff. 
Ralph pleaded that there were other 
tenants (including his brother Richard, 
% oxgang), but afterwards agreed with the 
plaintiff, giving him a sor sparrow-hawk 
fora quitclaim ; Assize R. 408, m. 15 d. 

Henry de Bickerstath was in occupa- 
tion of a moiety of Little Eccleston 
(viz. 6 oxgangs of land, &c.) in 1331, 
when Adam de Bickerstaffe granted the 
reversion to his own son Ralph and Joan 
his wife ; Final Conc. ii, 80. 

Adam son of Ralph de Bickerstath 
complained of waste at Little Eccleston 
in 1360; Duchy of Lanc, Assize R. 8, 
m. 7d. 

27 Nicholas Atherton in 1424 held 
6 oxgangs of land, &c., in Little Eccleston 
of John Duke of Bedford as of his manor 
of Wyresdale, in socage, by suit at the 
duke’s court of Goberthwaite from three 
weeks to three weeks; Towneley MS. 
DD, no. 1477. 

28 Thomas Atherton in 1514 held his 
lands, &c., in Little Eccleston of John 
Boteler of Rawcliffe in socage by 24d. 
rent; Duchy of Lanc. Inq, p.m. iv, no. 
68. His daughter Margaret Scarisbrick 
held likewise ; ibid. no. 92. 

29 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1870), ii, 496 3 
J. Porter, Fylde, 161. In a recovery of 
land, &c., at Little Eccleston, with a free 
fishery in the Wyrein 1779, John France 


183 


was vouchee; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 629, 
m. 3d. 

80 Robert Pacok (Peacock) of Eccleston 
and Agnes his wife held a oxgangs of 
land in Great and Little Eccleston in 
1369, when a division was arranged by 
which 1 oxgang in Great Eccleston was 
assigned to the husband and the rest to 
his wife ; Final Cone. ii, 175. 

The estate of the Kighley family ex- 
tended into Little Eccleston ; ibid. iii, 4. 

William Ambrose purchased two mes- 
suages in Little Eccleston and Larbreck 
from Henry Farington in 1562, but 
appears to have sold them to Thomas 
Eccleston four years later; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 24, m. 2503 28, m. 165. 
The tenure of Thomas Eccleston’s land 
in the township (1592) was not recorded. 

William Thomason purchased a mes- 
suage, &c., from the Earl of Derby in 
1564; ibid. 26, m. 156. He died 
in 1587 holding the same ‘in Little 
Eccleston in the township of Larbreck.’ 
His heir was his son William, aged eight ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xv, no. §0. 
At a later inquiry it was found that the 
tenement was held of Henry Butler in 
socage ; ibid. xvii, no. 63. 

John Wilkinson the younger died 
in 1628 holding a messuage, &c., in 
Little Eccleston of William Butler as of 
his manor of Rawcliffe; the estate had 
been purchased from John Leckonby and 
Thomas Hall. He also held the Half-hey 
in the Wall of the king. His heir was 
his nephew John (son of William) Wilkin- 
son, aged forty ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13, 
pp. 1311-12. 

31 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 


i, 221. 
82 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurors, 134. They were Henry 


Kirkham the elder and Henry the 
younger, both of Larbreck; William 
Gillow, who was younger son of George 
Gillow of Gillow House in Little 
Eccleston ; and Henry Barton. 

1 The Census Rep. 1901 gives 2,730 
acres, including 17 of inland water ; there 
are also 35 acres of tidal water and 110 
of foreshore. 

2 This and much other local informa- 
tion has been afforded by Messrs. J. W. 
Fair and Rea, agents to Mr. T. H. Miller. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


this road a branch goes north past Mains to cross the 
Wyre by Shard Bridge. From Little Singleton another 
road turns off to the east towards St. Michael’s, while 
from Great Singleton other roads go east and west to 
the adjoining townships. 

The village is said to have been the residence of 
Mag Shelton, a famous witch. “The cows of her 
neighbours were constantly milked by her, the pitcher 
in which she conveyed the milk away, when stoten, 
walking before her in the shape of a goose.’ A neigh- 
bour, suspecting, once struck the ‘goose,’ and the 
pitcher was broken, the milk flowing out.$ 

There is a sheep fair on 21 September. 

The soil is clayey, with marl subsoil ; oats, potatoes 
and turnips are grown. Sixty years ago almost all 
the land was under the plough, but about three-fourths 
of the land is now pasture, for the dairy farms. 

The township is governed by a parish council. 
There is a fire-engine station, with a volunteer 
brigade. 

The Gillow family, formerly seated in this and 

adjacent townships, produced several noteworthy 
men.‘ Henry Lushingtor, at one time chief secre- 
tary to the Government of Malta, was born here in 
1812. Hedied in 1855.° John Bilsborrow, D.D., 
born at Singleton Lodge in 1836, was Bishop of 
Salford from 1892 till his death in 1903. 
; Before the Conquest Singleton was in- 
cluded in the great lordship held by Earl 
Tostig in Amounderness ; it was then 
assessed as six plough-lands.° Afterwards it was re- 
tained as demesne by the lords of the honour of Lan- 
caster,’ except that half a plough-land was given to the 
hereditary bailiff of the wapentake by way of fee, and 
two plough-lands more were granted to Cockersand 
Abbey. 

Singleton is named in the Pipe Roll of 1168-9 as 
contributing to an aid,® and in similar ways later.® 
The demesne rendered 28s. to the farm of the county 
in 1226,'° but this had been greatly increased by 


MANORS 


1258," and the value of the vill to the Earl of Lan- 
caster was in 1297 estimated at £21.17 Accounts of 
the halmotes in 1325 have been printed." A brief 
extent made a few years later states that there were 
then twenty-one messuages and 26 oxgangs of land in 
the hands of bonders ; the total value to the lord was 
£24." Amore elaborate extent of the year 1346 has 
been preserved. There were then 28 oxgangs of land, 
held by bondmen or natives, each containing 12 acres 
and rendering 145. 34¢. yearly. The payment was 
made up of 5s. rent and gs. 344d. in lieu of various 
services, including the carriage of the lord’s victuak 
at any time of the year by three suitable beasts. An 
additional service was the carrying of victuals whenever 
the lord travelied from Ribble Bridge to Lancaster 
Castle and back. Merchet for sons and daughters and 
letherwit for sons were due. At death the lord took 
all the bondman’s goods, reserving the best beast for 
himself, paying debts, and returning to the widow 
and children two-thirds of the remainder. In 1346 
there were also a few cottagers and three tenants at 
will. There was an ancient custom that an unmarried 
woman living by herself in the township should pay 
the lord 3¢. yearly in the name of advowson.'* 

About 1510-15 disputes arose between the king’s 
tenants of Singleton and those of the Abbot of Whalley’s 
manor of Staining as to boundaries, and particularly 
as to the carr. It was decided that the carr belonged 
to the king alone, but the tenants of Todderstaffe and 
Hardhorn had right of common.'® 

Singleton proper, or GREAT SINGLETON, re- 
mained in the hands of the Earls and Dukes of Lan- 
caster, and eventually of the Crown, until 1623, when 
this manor, with Ribby and Wrea, was sold to Edward 
Badby and William Weltden.” Within a few years it 
seems to have been purchased by William Fanshawe, 
auditor of the duchy,'* descending to Simon Fanshawe, 
who in 1748 sold it to William Shawe of Preston.” 
His son, William Cunliffe Shawe, who succeeded in 
1771, sold it to Joseph Hornby of Ribby about 1800. 


8 Thornber, Blackpool, 308-9. 

4 Thomas Gillow, D.D., son of Richard 
Gillow of Singleton, 1769 to 1867, has 
a notice in Dict. Nat. Biog. Memoirs of 
him and several other members of the 
family will be found in Gillow, Bitl. Dice. 
of Engl. Cath. ii, 474-88. The Gillows 
of Leighton in Yealand are descendants. 

5 Dict. Nat. Biog. 

6 1°.C.H. Lancs. i, 2884. 

7 The tithes were given to St. Martin 
of Sées in 1094 by Count Roger of 
Poitou ; Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 290. 

5 Tbid. 12. 

9In 1176-7, 5 marks of aid; in 
1200-1, 18s. increment of farm (for half 
a year); in 1205-6, 47s. 8d. of tallage ; 
ibid. 35, 130, 202. In 1181-2 Richard 
de Molyneux paid 20s. for leave to agree 
with the men of Singleton as to a certain 
new assize ; ibid. 46-7. 

Singleton contributed £2 §s. 8d. to a 
tallage in 1226 and £4 in 1248-9, £8 
in 12613; Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 135, 176, 228. 

In 1229 the sheriff was ordered to 
reinstate Richard son of Ralph de Single- 
ton, who had held 2 oxgangs of land 
by a rent of 25.3 Cal. Close, 1227-31, 

. 176. 

Pio Lanes. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 139. The Abbot of 
Cockersand also paid 20s. for the two 
plough-lands of Newbigging. In 1246-8 the 


farm of Singleton amounted to £5 3s. 6d. 
and the pleas and perquisites to £5 25. 6d. ; 
ibid. 169. 

"1 For two years and a half (1256-8) 
the farm and the pleas and perquisites 
amounted in all to £13 15. 1d. ; ibid. 221. 
The issues for the three years and a 
half following, 1258-62, amounted to 
£15 9s. gd. without the pleas and per- 
quisites ; ibid. 230. 

1? Thid. 289. 

3 Lancs. Ct. R. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), 93-4. Three women paid 6d. 
each for licence to marry. 

4 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1870), ii, 692. 

15 Add. MS. 32103, fol. 1494. There 
was another custom that the township 
should provide four cows for the lord's 
stock, each man contributing his share. 
The names of the bondmen are recorded ; 
their holdings varied from half an oxgang 
to 2 oxgangs of land. 

The six plough-lands of 1066 seem to 
have been divided thus: 34 demesne, 
2 Cockersand, and } serjeanty. Some- 
times, however, the abbot was said to 
have five plough-lands and the bailiff of 
the wapentake one. 

John of Gaunt in 1373 (?) granted Sir 
Thomas Banastre for his life the vill of 
Singleton with all rents, &c., to be held 
by the rent of a rose; Duchy of Lanc. 
Misc. Bks. xiii, 131. 

A rental of the king’s lands in Great 


184 


Singleton in 1508 is preserved in Towne- 
ley’s MS. OO. The Abbot of Vale Royal 
paid 3s. 4d. for his tithe barn there. 

16 Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), ily 19 

20; Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc.) it, 
271. 17 Pat. 20 Jas. I, pt. iii. 
18 In Burke's Landed Gentry, in the 
pedigree of Fanshawe of Dengie, Essex, 
William Fanshawe (1583-1634), auditor 
of the Duchy of Lancaster, is styled ‘of 
Great Singleton,’ and the later descent 
is thus given: -s. John, d. 1689 - 
William, d. 1708 -s, Thomas Edwara, 
d. 1726-8. Simon, d.1777- 

Christopher Slinger was plaintiff and 
William Fanshawe deforciant Ue Ps 
in 1699 regarding the manor of Greal 
bipaleens lands there, view of frank- 
pledge, &c.; Pal. of Lane. Feet of F. 
bdle. 243, m. §5. Thomas Edward Fan- 
shawe was vouchee in recoveries of the 
manor in 1712 and 1716; Pal. of Lane. 
Plea R. 496, m. 2; §02, M3. Simon 
Fanshawe in 1747; ibid. 564, ™ 9 

19 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 338. 
Courts leet, courts baron, and view ot 
frankpledge are named in the fine. 

From the pedigree in Fishwick 8 Preston 
(341) it appears that William Shawe 
died in 1771, and his son W. C. Shawe, 
M.P. for Preston in 1792, died in 1821. 
This son was vouchee in a recovery 
the manor of Great Singleton in 17784 
Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 614, @- 6. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


In 1852 it was purchased from the trustees of Hugh 
Hornby by Thomas Miller, one of the great cotton 
manufacturers of Preston,” 
who resided at Singleton and 
did much for the material 
improvement of the district. 
Dying on 24 June 1865, he 
was followed by his son, Mr. 
Thomas Horrocks Miller, the 
present lord of the manor, 
who resides at Singleton Park, 
having built the mansion there. 
He also owns the Avenham 
estate.” 

LITTLE SINGLETON, as 
half a plough-land, was, as 
above stated, granted in serjeanty.” The holders 
adopted the local surname, but their principal 
manor was Broughton in Preston, with which Little 
Singleton descended to the heirs and representatives 
of the Balderston family.** On the partition in 1565 
it was assigned to the Earl of Derby.** In 1602 it 
was sold by Alice Countess of Derby and the heirs of 
Ferdinando the fifth earl to William Hesketh of Little 
Poulton,* who was probably already the occupier. 

The manor-house, known as MAINS, thencefor- 
ward became the chief residence of this branch of the 


Lancaster. England 
differenced with a label 
of France. 


KIRKHAM 


Heskeths. George Hesketh, who has already occurred 
in the account of Aughton as half-brother of Gabriel 
son of Bartholomew Hesketh,” 
had a considerable estate in 
the town of Kirkham and the 
neighbourhood, and in 1566 
was described as of Rossall. 
He died in 1571, and was 
succeeded by his son William, 
aged thirty.” This William 
died at Mains in 1622, but 
as nothing is said in the in- 
quisition as to his holding 
land in Little Singleton, the 
purchaser in 1602 may have 
been his son William, aged 
sixty at his father’s death.” 
William died in 1623 holding the manor of Little 
Singleton, and was succeeded by his son Thomas.” 
Pedigrees were recorded in 1613 and 1664. 

The family were distinguished by their fidelity to 
Roman Catholicism even in the days of Elizabeth.*! 
In the Civil War it was a matter of course that they 
took the king’s side ; one of the sons was killed in a 
skirmish at Brindle in 1651,3? and the family estates 
were by the Parliament sequestered for recusancy as 


Hesxetn of Mains, 
Argent on a bend sable 
three garbs or, a canton 
of the second. 


30 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1870), ii, 495. 
Mr. Cunliffe Shawe presented to the 
curacy in 1797, and Mr. Hornby was 
lord of the manor in 1809, rebuilding 
the church. 

Mr. Miller greatly improved the estate 
by draining the carrs and in other ways. 

31 Information of Messrs. J. W. Fair 
and Rea. 

7) Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, §2, 151. 
See the accounts of Broughton and 
Balderston. 

33 William son of Alan de Singleton 
had a mill and fishery at Singleton in 
1245 ; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 92. Thomas de Singleton 
proved his title in 12923; Plac. de Quo 
Warr, (Rec. Com.), 388. 

Joan (de Singleton) widow of Thomas 
Banastre held the manor of Little 
Singleton in 1303 ; Final Conc. i, 201. 

William Banastre died in 1323 holding 
of the Earl of Lancaster the hamlet of 
Little Singleton by serjeanty of the baili- 
wick of Amounderness and Blackburn- 
shire ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, ii, 159. 
In 1346 Thomas son of Adam Banastre 
held a plough-land in Little Singleton 
by the same serjeanty, paying £2 a year ; 
Survey, 50. 

Richard Balderston held the manor of 
Little Singleton by serjeanty in 1457; 
Lancs, Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 63. 

In or about 1460 a petition was 
addressed to the Bishop of Exeter as 
Chancellor by John Pilkington and 
Robert Harrington, as lords of Singleton, 
in right of their wives ; Early Chan. Proc. 
bdle. 28, no. 224. 

_ Thomas son of Gilbert de Singleton put 
ina claim to the manor of Little Singleton 
in 1344 against John and Nicholas sons 
of Thomas Banastre ; De Banco R. 338, 
m. 337. The story shows that the claim 
failed; nevertheless the Singletons of 
Broughton Tower and Chingle Hall appear 
to have retained certain land in Little 
Singleton ; Final Conc. iii, 164 (1508). 
This is not mentioned in the inquisitions, 
but is said to have been the estate called 


7 


early as 1643.°% 


the Lodge, once the residence of William 
Cunliffe Shawe ; Baines, loc. cit. 

Robert Hesketh and John Talbot were 
in 1466 appointed to arbitrate between 
William Singleton and Joan widow of 
Richard Balderston; Kuerden MSS. 
iy, 5 22. 

24 Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 216, m. ro. 

Little Singleton occurs, as part of 
the Balderston estates, in the inquisi- 
tions of Edmund Dudley, Thomas Rad- 
cliffe of Winmarleigh and his successors, 
Thomas Earl of Derby and Sir Alexander 
Osbaldeston. In that of the Earl of 
Deroy in 1521 the ‘ moiety of the manor’ 
is stated to have been held of the king as 
of his duchy by serjeanty, viz. being 
bailiff of the king of his wapentakes of 
Amounderness | and Blackburnshire ; 
Duchy of Lane. Inq. p.m. v, no. 68. The 
tenure of ‘the manor of Singleton alias 
Little Singleton’ was recorded in similar 
terms after the death of Ferdinando, fifth 
earl; Add. MS. 32104, fol. 426. 

25 Brockholes of Claughton D. A con- 
firmatory fine shows that the manors 
of Little Singleton and Elswick, with 
lands there and in Mains, Great Eccleston, 
Newton-with-Scales, &c., were purchased 
by a large number of persons; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 65, no. 69. The 
deforciants were Thomas Lord Ellesmere, 
Chancellor of England, Alice his wife, 
Grey Bridges Lord Chandos, Anne his 
wife, Sir Thomas Leigh and Thomas 
Spencer. Alice (Spencer) was the widow 
of Ferdinando Earl of Derby, and Anne 
was one of his daughters and co-heirs. 
The twenty plaintiffs (or purchasers) 
include Richard Burgh, William Hesketh, 
and Cuthbert Sharples. On the other 
hand it should be noticed that a manor 
of Singleton—probably titular only— 
occurs among the Earl of Derby’s estates 
in 16313 ibid. bdle. 118, no. 1. 

William Hesketh held the manor of 
Little Singleton in 1712, and Thomas 
Brockholes, lately called Thomas Hesketh, 
in 1737 3 Pal. of Lanc, Plea R. 49% m. § j 


$44, m. 12. 


185 


A later William Hesketh registered 


26 Bartholomew Hesketh was described 
as ‘of Rufford’; Anct. D. (P.R.O.), 
A13476. He seems to be the founder 
of the chantry at Rufford. 

27 Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. xiii, no. 15. 
He held nothing in Little Singleton. 

28 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), iii, 365. 

29 Brockholes of Claughton D. 

50 Visit, (Chet. Soc.), 21 (1613), 136 
(1664). They give the descent as: 
Bartholomew Hesketh -s, George -s, 
William —s. William, d. 1628 —s. Thomas, 
d. 1653 -s. William, aged forty-six in 
1664 -s. Thomas, aged five. A more 
extended pedigree may be seen in Fish- 
wick, op. cit. 197. 

81 For some notes on the family see 
Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. iii, 285, 
290; Foley, Rec. S. J. vi, 4933 vii, 
356-7. 

William Hesketh, who was a brother- 
in-law of Cardinal Allen, was in 1577 a 
recusant, ‘in lands £20 and in goods poor’; 
Gibson, Lydiate Hall, 215 from S. P. Dom, 
Eliz. cxvili, 451. In 1584 he had, as 
a recusant, to provide a light horseman 
for the queen’s service ; ibid. 231, from 
S. P. Dom. Eliz. clxxxiv, 33. He was 
fined the £260 a year in 1586 ; ibid. 238, 
from S. P. Dom. Eliz. cxc, 4.3. His arrest 
was desired in 1593 ; ibid. 261. 

32 This was Thomas Hesketh, son of the 
Thomas who died in 1653 ; Visit. of 1664 
(Chet. Soc.), 136; War in Lancs. (Chet. 
Soc.), 74. 

33 Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 218-21. Thomas 
Hesketh, who died in Oct. 1653, had two- 
thirds of his estates sequestered for recu- 
sancy in 1643. William as son and heir 
succeeded to the remaining third, but had 
not been convicted of recusancy, nor had 
he been charged with an offence against 
the State, though his father had aided ‘the 
King of Scots’ in 1651 and his brother 
had died in arms against the Parliament. 
The petition of 1654 was on behalf of 
William’s seven daughters, of whom the 
eldest was twelve years old, 


24 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


his estate as a ‘ Papist’ in 1717.%3 His son Thomas, 


inheriting the manor of Claughton in Garstang, took 
the name of Brockholes ; and ultimately Mains, like 
Claughton, was devised to a relative by marriage, 
and has thus descended to its present owner, Mr. W. J. 
Fitzherbert-Brockholes. 

MAINS HALL stands in a pleasant situation close 
to the bank of the River Wyre, and was originally a 
house of very considerable interest, being built on 
three sides of a quadrangle which was open to the 
south. To some extent this disposition still obtains, 
though the west wing has disappeared and the build- 
ing has been so much altered and pulled about from 
time to time that it has lost nearly all its architec- 
tural interest, and having been for a long time used 
as a farm-house has suffered much in other ways. 


central doorway and a projecting gable at the cast 
end. The doorway, however, is a good piece of 
18th-century work with flat canopy supported by 
carved brackets. The hall has been ‘altered and 
re-altered, modernized and re-modernized,’ altera- 
tions carried out in 1846 having almost gutted the 
interior.“ ‘The west wing, which contained the kitchen 
and offices, was pulled down in the first quarter of the 
1gth century,** and is said to have contained a ‘hall 
part’ having a huge open chimney and wainscoted 
with ¢ fluted oak of the reign of Henry VIII.’* The 
west end of the main building has been rebuilt three 
stories in height in a very plain manner, detracting 
in a very large measure from the otherwise rather 
picturesque appearance of the south front, a pictu- 
resqueness produced mainly by the long line of 17th- 


OU) PnE tee ye 


Merny se 


af 


Mains 


The north side facing the river preserves something 
of its 17th-century appearance, having a large middle 
gable and a smaller one to the east; but all the 
windows are modern, and additions have been made 
from time to time. All the external walls of the 
main building are covered with rough-cast and 
whitewashed and the roofs are covered with modern 
grey slates. The south side, or garden front, was 
rebuilt in the 18th century, and is a rather un- 
interesting two-story elevation with sash windows, 


33 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Novurcrt; 133. The annual value was 
£198 135. 43., but allowance was made 
for annuities. Wiliam Hesketh was son 
of the Thomas (aged five) of 1664. He 
married Mary daughter of John Brockholes 
of Claughton and heir of her brother ; their 


4 Trans. Hist. 
(1853), v, 159. 


numerous children al] died without issue, 
three of the daughters being nuns. 

Some other members of the family are 
named ; ibid. 96, 135. 
Soc. 


Ma Thornber, writing about 1537, says 


Hai 


century red brick buildings on the east side and the 
inclosing brick wall to the garden. The wall is 
about 10 ft. 6 in. high, with triangular buttresses on 
the outside, and steps down at each end to the front, 
where it forms a dwarf wall with wood railings, the 
entrance being flanked by tall brick gate-piers sur- 
mounted by balls. The garden is about go yds. long 
by 50 yds. in width, extending some feet beyond the 
house on either side, and is inclosed for its greater 
length on the east by the outbuildings already men- 


it was taken down ‘some years ago’; 
Hist. of Blackpool, 301. He describes it as 
“the most venerable part of the mansion.’ 
Various ‘hiding places’ were discovered 
during the demolition. 

% Trans. Hist. Soc. Lancs. and Cher. v. 


159. 


Lancs. and Ches. 


186 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


tioned, which stand detached from the main building. 
Towards the north end of these facing the garden are 
the initials, roughly worked in the brickwork, of 
Thomas and Margaret Hesketh and the date 1686. 
The building on which the initials occur is now a 
stable, but the upper part is usually known as the 
‘chapel,’ though no signs of its having been used as 
such are now visible. It is described as being ‘ deso- 
late’ in 1845, when ‘the picture of the Virgin and 
Child had fallen from the altar and the altar rails 
were in decay.’** The outside staircase which for- 
merly led to the ‘chapel,’ which is now a hayloft, has 
long been removed. In the north-west corner of the 
garden is a brick pavilion measuring 13 ft. 6 in. by 
11 ft. internally, with pointed slated roof, now in a 
state of dilapidation. The lay out in front of the 
house must have been originally very effective, and 
even yet in its decay and semi-wildness is not without 
beauty. On the north side, between the house and 
the river, is an octagonal brick pigeon-house with 
pointed roof. 

SINGLETON GRANGE, or Newbigging, was 
considered to lie in Little Singleton probably because, 
being the estate of Cockersand Abbey,® it was inde- 
pendent of Great Singleton Manor. In 1384 inquiry 
was made as to the tenure of part of the land held 
by the abbot, it being alleged that John Count of 
Mortain had granted a messuage and 12 acres to 
John Joy and his heirs to find a man with a horse 
to be ferryman on the water of Wyre—which alms 
had been withdrawn.** 

The Grange was after the Suppression sold to 
William Eccleston of Great Eccleston,” and seems to 
have been alienated subsequently in small parcels. 


86a Trans. Hist. Soc. Lancs. and Ches. vy 
159. 


and Ches. i, 68; 
187-8. 


Fishwick, Kirkham, 
A portrait is prefixed to his 


KIRKHAM 


Hugh Hornby died in 1638 holding a messuage in 
Singleton Grange and leaving a son and heir John, 
aged forty.** William Leigh, clerk, who was rector 
of Standish, died at Preston in 1639 holding a capital 
messuage called Grange House in Singleton Grange, 
with various cottages and land in the township. 
Theophilus, his son and heir, was forty years of age.®” 
His grandson Charles Leigh, M.D., said to have 
been born at Singleton in 1662, was author of the 
Natural History of Lancashire published in 1700"; 
he practised as a physician in Manchester, where he 
was living in 1704.""_ A pedigree of the family was 
recorded in 1664.7 Richard Burgh of Larbreck also 
had land at the Grange in 1639."° Cuthbert Harrison, 
minister of Singleton during the Commonwealth and 
founder of the Nonconformist chapel at Elswick, had 
an estate at Bankfield, which has continued in his 
family.* The present owner is Mr. Charles Edward 
Dyson Harrison Atkinson. 
Several ‘ Papists’ registered estates in 1717. 
The earliest record of St. Mary’s 
CHURCH Chapel at Singleton occurs in 1358, 
when Henry Duke of Lancaster granted 
the custody of it to John de East Witton, hermit. 
It remained in use“ till the Reformation, but in 
1547 astipend of 49s. a year was paid to a priest to 
celebrate in the chapel.*® It appears that there was 
a curate as late as 1578, but he was conspicuous for 
neglect of his duties and bad morals. Afterwards 
the building ceased to be used, and was with the 
appurtenances sold by the Crown in 1618 to Sir 
James Auchterlony.” During the Commonwealth 
period a new chapel was built, and the people re- 
quested a minister and endowment.’ It seems 


48 Ibid. A lease, apparently of the 
chapel property, made to Sir Richard 


% King John in 1216 gave two plough- 
lands (with their appurtenances) of his 
demesne in Newhbigging by Singleton, 
from which 16s. used to be received ; but 
the canons of Cockersand were to pay 205. 
yearly ; Cockersand Chartul. i, 40. The 
grant was twice confirmed by Henry III ; 
ibid. 433 Originalia R. 40 Hen. III, 
m.11. From an entry in the Pipe Roll 
of 1213-15 it seems that the canons had 
already been in possession at a rent of 
£2 a year; Farrer, op. cit. 252. 

The name Singleton Grange was used 
in 1297, at which time the abbot paid the 
20s. yearly ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 289. 

In 1346 the abbot’s tenement in New- 
bigging was called five plough-lands. He 
paid 20s. yearly ; Survey of 1346 (Chet. 
Soc.), 52. For rentals, see Chartul. iii, 
1264-5. 

86a Pal. of Lanc. Docquet R. 1 (8 Reg.). 

37 Pat. 35 Hen. VIII, pt. ix. The 
grant included Medlar also, The amount 
paid was [244, 

William Eccleston and his son became 
involved in various disputes as to the 
fishery and the marsh; Ducatus Lance. 
(Rec, Com.), i, 180; ii, 254; iii, 19. 

Thomas Eccleston died in 1592 holding 
ten messuages, &c., in Great Singleton, 
commonly called Singleton Grange. The 
tenure was not stated ; Duchy of Lance. 
Ing. p.m. xvi, no. 38. 

58 Ibid. xxx, no. g1. His tenement was 
held of the king as of his manor of East 
Greenwich in socage. 

% Ibid. no. 34. The tenure is not stated. 
A settlement had been made in 1623. 

© Dict, Nat. Biog. ; Loc. Glean. Lancs. 


Natural History. He had no issue, and the 
estate seems to have been divided and sold. 

41 Lancs, and Ches. Antig. Soc. xxii, 
186-8. 

42 Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 183; 
Leigh of Singleton Grange. 

43 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xxx, no. 
100. The tenement in Singleton Grange 
and Great Singleton was stated to be held 
of the king by the fiftieth part of a 
knight’s fee. 

44 Fishwick, op. cit. 189, with pedigree. 
The estate is said to be the same as that 
of Hugh Hornby above; Baines, Lancs. 
(ed. 1870), ii, 495. There are family 
monuments in the church. 

45 Estcourt and Payne, op. cit. 125, 133, 
137, 147,149. The names were Ellen 
Bickerstaffe, James Buller, Elizabeth 
widow of William Hull, Richard son of 
Edward Hull, and Thomas Knott. The 
Bullers were of some standing there ; 
Ducatus Lanc. tii, 183, &c. George Buller 
of Singleton in 1622 had land in Lea; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), iii, 317. 

46 Dep. Keeper’s Rep. xxxii, App. 345. 

47In 1440 a licence was granted to 
celebrate in the chapel at Singleton for one 
year ; in 1452 a similar licence for three 
years was granted, and an indulgence of 
forty days for the chapel was afterwards 
added; Raines, Lancs. Chantries (Chet. 
Soc.), 216. The chaplain was probably 
maintained by subscription of the inhabi- 
tants, but the 49s. later paid to a stipen- 
diary indicates that the Dukes of Lancaster, 
as lords of the manor, had made a small 
allowance, 


187 


Hoghton (26 Feb. 1546-7), contained a 
provision that he should pay 49s. to the 
priest, who at that time was Richard 
Godson, thirty-eight years of age. This 
name does not appear among those of the 
Kirkham clergy in 1548. The chapel 
had no plate, but possessed ‘ornaments’ 
worth 2s, 4d. and a small bell, which were 
taken by the king ; ibid. 267, 275, 277. 
The above-named lease caused disputing 
in 1561 ; Fishwick, op. cit. 45. 

49 Raines, op. cit. 266, note; ‘he 
hath lately kept an ale-house and a 
naughty woman in it.’ His name is not 
given. 

50 Pat. 16 Jas. I, pt. xiii; the chapel 
was ‘ruinous.’ The chapel house and 
chapel yard were included, as also the 
stipend due to the chaplain and a windmill 
with suit of the demesne tenants, which 
seems to have been the endowment. The 
grantee, aged twenty-five, one of the king’s 
carvers, was in 1604 to marry Dorothy, 
widow of Sir John North, aged thirty-six. 
Foster, Marriage Licences. 

The old chapel was still existing in 
1650, having been held on lease by Ralph 
Eccleston, a recusant, and purchased by 
Robert Holt of London; Cal. Com. for 
Comp. iv, 2549. 

51 Commonw. Ch. Surv. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), 155. The chapel 
was ‘newly erected’ in 1650, but it is not 
stated who built it. There was then no 
minister, but Cuthbert Harrison officiated 
1651-4, £50 having been given out of 
Thomas Clifton’s sequestered estates ; 
Plund. Mins. Accts. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and 
Ches.), i, 98, 139. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


doubtful whether it was this building or some part 
of the old chapel which after the Restoration came 
into the hands of the Ro:nan Catholics and was used 
for service as opportunity offered” ; but in 1749 the 
new lord of the manor, who owned the building, 
gave it to the Bishop of Chester to be used as a chapel 
of ease to Kirkham,* and, having provided a small 
endowment, the right of presentation was conceded 
to him.* This right has descended with the manor 
to Mr. T. H. Miller. In 1809 the chapel was 
pulled down and a new one was built; this lasted 
for fifty years, and was replaced by the present 
St. Anne’s Church in 1861.* 


The following have been incumbents * :— 
Edward Threlfall 


i= 
oe John Threlfall, B.A. (Wadham Coll., Oxf.) 
— William Threlfall 

1797 Thomas Banks” 

1842 William Birley, B.A. (Trinity Coll., Oxf) 
1843 Leonard Charles Wood, B.A. (Jesus Coll., 


Camb.) 


In 1689 there was a Quakers’ meeting-house in 
Great Singleton.* 

From what has been said about the Heskeths, who 
had a domestic chapel at Mains,” it might be inferred 
that all through the penal times the missionary priests 
were able to minister in the Singleton district, and 
direct evidence is available that even in the most 
bitter periods they carried on their work. Thus 
Thomas Robinson, born at Singleton, was baptized 
in 1651 by a secular priest named Holden, and on 
entering the English College at Rome in 1673 he 
stated that ‘his parents had suffered both public and 
private spoliation of their property in the Civil War 
on account of their faith.’ ®’ Later than this, as above 
stated, an old chapel was used till about 1750. On 
being dispossessed a new one was built about 1768," 
but the lease expiring was given up when St. John’s 
at Poulton was opened in 1813.” It was again used 
from 1832 to 1860, by which time, through 
Mr. Miller’s influence, very few Roman Catholics 
remained in the township.® 


HAMBLETON 


Hameltune, Dom. Bk. ; 
Hambleton (xvi cent.). 

This northernmost portion of the parish is cut of 
from the main body by the River Wyre, the boundary 
on the south-west side. It has an area of 1,553} acres}! 
and in 1901 the population numbered 321. The 
village is situated near the centre, on the slope of a 
piece of rising ground. The surface in general is 
undulating, varying from about 15 ft.to 50 ft. above 
sea level. 

Entry is made from the south by the Shard Bridge 
over the Wyre, opened in 1864.’ The scenery by 
the river is very beautiful. From this point the road 
goes north to the village, and divides into several 
branches going in all directions; one to the north- 
west leads to a ferry over the Wyre, 

Dr. Charles Leigh of Singleton, writing about 
1700, states that the River Wyre ‘affords us a pearl 
fishing, which are frequently found in large mussels, 
called by the inhabitants Hambleton Hookins, from 
their manner of taking them, which is done by 
plucking them from their skeers or beds with hooks.’? 

The soil is various, with subsoil of clay ; wheat, 
oats and beans are grown, but almost the whole of 
the land is pasture. 

The township is governed by a parish council. 

In 1066 HAMBLETON was assessed 

MANORS as two plough-lands, and was held by 
Earl Tostig.‘ Later it was called three 
plough-lands, and was included in the demesne of 
the honour of Lancaster.’ In 1176-7 it contributed 
30s. to an aid.® The farm of the vill had been 
increased by 245. a year in 1200,’ but this addition 
seems to have been temporary, for in 1212 the ‘men 
of Hambleton’ held the three plough-lands there by 
a service of 245. yearly.’ It appears that a William 
de Pilkington had once held the land, but in 1213 
the king gave it to his serjeant, William de Colmore, 
for his maintenance.® In 1229 Henry III granted 
the same in fee to Geoffrey the Arbalaster, who was 
to pay 16s. to the king and 24s. to the old tenant, 


Hamelton, 1176; 


52 Thornber (Blackpool, 306) gives a 
different account. He states that the 
chapel of 1650 was turned into an inn, 
and that the o/d chapel remained in the 
hands of ‘the Romanists’ till 174.5, ‘when, 
on the suppression of the rebellion in this 
year, the Protestants of the village cele- 
brated the fifth of November with greater 
zeal than usual, raising contributions of 
peats at every door and among the rest at 
the priest’s. The refusal of his house- 
Keeper so enraged the people that with one 
Richard Seckington at their head they 
ejected the priest both from his house 
and church.’ This traditional account 
must be a little wrong in the date. 

53 The chapel and chapel-yard were 
consecrated in 1754. 

+4 Deeds of 1749 and 1756 printed in 
Fishwick’s Kirkham, 47. The chapel was 
then known as St. Anne’s. William Shawe 
gave £200 for endowment and £200 was 
added by Queen Anne’s Bounty. The 
curate of Singleton was to assist at the 
parish church on Christmas Day, Good 
Friday, Easter Day, Whit Sunday, and 
other Sundays on which sacraments were 
usually administered. 

In the deed of 1749 the chapel was 
said to be ‘then used as a popish chapel.’ 


% Fishwick, loc. cit. See also Hewitson, 
Our Country Churches, 378-86. In the 
chancel is an old oak chair, said to have 
been Milton's, 

56 Church P, at Chester Dioc. Reg. 

§7 Succeeded William Threlfall, who 
resigned ; Consistory papers at Chester. 
‘William’ may be an error for ‘ John,’ 
for Thornber states that only ‘two minis- 
ters, Mr. Threlfall and the Rev. Thomas 
Banks,’ had occupied it till 1837. John 
Threlfall was master of Kirkham Grammar 
School from 1744 till his death in 1801 3 
Fishwick, op. cit. 148. 

5 Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 230. 

59 Fr, John Berington, S. J., was there 
from 1701 to 17203; Foley, Rec. S. J. vii, 
54 (Meales) ; Gillow, Haydock Papers, 
2353 Tyldesley Diary. 

© Foley, Rec. S. J. vi, 4213 he had 
studied humanities at Kirkham, Poulton, 
Singleton and St. Omera. A similar 
statement was made by James Swarbrick, 
who had been baptized by a priest named 
Matthews in 1655 ; ibid. The convicted 
recusants c. 1670 (including Robinson 
and Swarbrick) are recorded in Misc. 
(Cath. Rec. Soc.), v. 198-202. For the 
fate of James Swarbrick see Estcourt and 
Payne, Engl. Cath. Nonjurors, 355. 


188 


51 Thornber, loc. cit. One of the priests 
there, — Watts, became a Protestant and 
was appointed curate of Wrea Green, 
where he died in 1773. 

5? Hewitson, op. cit. 404. 

63 Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. ii, 


474 

'The Census Rep. 1901 gives 15445 
acres, including 4 of inland water ; there 
are also 24 acres of tidal water and 128 
of foreshore. 

2 The bridge is supported by thirty-two 
iron pillars. ‘There was previously a ferry 
called Shard Ferry; and at Aldwath 
(see Poulton) there was a ford in more 
ancient times. 

8 Nat. Hist. of Lancs. bk. i, pp. 225137. 

4 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 2885, 

5 The adjacent Stalmine was reduced 
from four to three plough-lands. 

6 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 35. The 
sheriff answered for 171, the tallage of 
Hambleton in 1206 ; ibid. 202. 

7 Ibid. 134. 

8 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 51; the heading is 
* Drengages.’ 

9 Ror, Lit, Claus. (Ree. Com.), i 146. 
The gift was to hold good during the 
king’s pleasure, but in 1227 Henry Hi, 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


after whose death the whole 40s. would be due to 
the king ; the land was to be quit of tallage thence- 
forward.” The manor of Hackinsall became the 
chief residence of the lords of Hambleton, so 
that they took their surname from it,” and in 
course of time their lordship in Hambleton was 
ignored.” 

The above-named Geoffrey in 1244-5 granted 
all Hambleton to his nephew Robert de Shireburne, 
the rent of 40s. being payable to the king.’> Then 
in 1255-6 Robert de Shireburne gave 2 oxgangs of 
‘ Jandin Hambleton to his son John, with remainder 
to William, Robert’s eldest son.4 John, who was a 
clerk, also had an oxgang from his brother William," 


KIRKHAM 


and eventually succeeded to the whole.’® John’s son 
Robert acquired by marriage part of the manor of 
Aighton near Ribchester, and his descendants were 
long seated there as the Shireburnes of Stonyhurst.!” 
Hambleton descended in the same way ™ until 1867," 
when the land was sold in parcels,” and no manor 
seems to have been recognized afterwards. 

In 1548 an agreement was made by Sir Richard 
Shireburne as lord of Hambleton with Nicholas 
Butler as lord of Over Rawcliffe concerning the 
bounds of their manors.” 

At one time a family surnamed Hambleton had 
part of the land”; the Botelers of Rawcliffe* and 
Singletons of Little Singleton ™ and their successors 


for the profit of the souls of King John 
his father and others, confirmed the grant 
to William de Colmore for the period of 
his life ; Cal. Par, 1225-32, p. 112. 

10 Cal. Close, 1227-31, p. 159 3 Chart. 
R. 22, m. 11 3 23, m. 8 

"See the account of Preesall with 
Hackinsall. 

In 1263 Geoffrey de Hackinsall de- 
mised the vill of Hambleton with 4 
oxgangs of land to John de Hoole for 
eighteen years, as a marriage gift for his 
son Geoffrey, who was to marry John’s 

. daughter Mary ; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 834. 

John de Hackinsall in 1261 held three 
plough-lands of the king in Hambleton 
by the yearly service of 4os. 3 the value 
was £5 16s.3; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 
229. The vill of Hambleton paid 40s. 
yearly to the Earl of Lancaster in 1297 ; 
ibid. 289. 

Richard de Hackinsall held Hambleton 
by the qos. service in 1292 and 1324; 
Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 377 3 
Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 40d. 

Though Richard was the brother and 
heir of John de Hackinsall, the latter had 
a son Roger, to whom his father, when on 
his death-bed, gave a messuage and two- 
thirds of 2 oxgangs of land in Hamble- 
ton. Richard in 1292 appears to have 
disputed the gift, but the verdict was in 
Roger’s favour; Assize R. 408, m. 34d. 
Roger de Hackinsall held two-thirds in 
1306, Cecily wife of Thomas Travers 
having the remainder (of Roger’s inherit- 
ance), but it was claimed by the three 
nieces of John son of Simon de Hamble- 
ton; Assize R. 420, m. 8, rod. Roger 
summoned Richard de MHackinsall to 
warrant. Geoffrey de Hackinsall was 
plaintiff in 1352 and John son of Thomas 
de Hackinsall in 1354, with respect to 
property in Hambleton ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Assize R. 1, m. vij; 3, m. 13 Dep. 
Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 331. 

John de Hackinsall had some land in 
the township in 1362; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Chet. Soc.), i, 82. 

The manor of Hambleton was in 
1321-2 granted to Robert de Shireburne, 
with remainders to his sons William and 
Robert, by Richard de Hackinsall ; Kuer- 
den MSS. ii, fol. 260. The charters 
teferred to below show that this was a 
final release. The Hackinsall lordship 
does not seem to have been recognized 
after 1324. 

18 Kuerden MSS, y, fol. 112. 

In the claim for dower by Eva widow 
of Geoffrey Arbalaster in 1246 it was 
agreed that she should have 6s. yearly 
from the tenement of Robert de Shire- 
burne in Hambleton ; Final Conc. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), i, 96. 

“ Kuerden MSS. loc. cit. ; Robert’s 
wife was named Maud. 


8 Ibid. In 1262 an agreement as to 
the 3 oxgangs of land was made between 
William son of Robert de Shireburne and 
John ; the latter’s right was acknowledged, 
and he was to pay William 1d. at Easter 
and do the service to the chief lords ; 
Final Conc. i, 136. At this time the 
father must have been dead ; nevertheless 
a Robert de Shireburne was juror in 
1265 ; Lancs, Ing. and Extents, i, 234. 

16 This seems the necessary inference 
from the descent of the manor. John 
de Shireburne was living in 1297 3 ibid. 
289. 

John son of Robert de ‘Chireburne’ 
granted 2 oxgangs of land to William son 
of Alexander de Hambleton; Raines MSS. 
(Chet. Lib.), xxxviii, 377. 

17 See the account of Aighton. 

Robert son of John de Shireburne in 
1292 complained that John de Shireburne 
(apparently his father), Adam Pakok of 
Singleton, Roger de Hackinsall and others 
had disseised him of 3 oxgangs of land, 
&c, John had demised them to Adam for 
ten years, and then had given them to 
Robert, who entered at the end of the ten 
years. Meantime John had extended 
Adam’s term to thirty-three years, to 
Robert’s loss. Adam, however, resigned 
his right to Robert, reserving only the 
crops of that year’s harvest ; Assize R. 
408, m. 6. 

The Prior of St. Mary’s, Lancaster, 
claimed a messuage and 2 oxgangs of land 
against ‘John son of Robert de Shire- 
burne,’ but failed, as it should have been 
“Robert son of John’ ; ibid. m. 59d. 

John de Shireburne was in 1294 sum- 
moned to answer Adam Pacock respecting 
a convention as to 3 oxgangs of land in 
Hambleton ; De Banco R. 103, m. 24. 

18 In 1346 William de Shireburne held 
three plough-lands in Hambleton in 
socage, paying qos. a year; Surwey of 
1346 (Chet. Soc.), 52. 

Richard Shireburne died in 1445 hold- 
ing the manor of Hambleton with its 
appurtenances of the king in socage, its 
value being £10 clear ; Lancs. Rec. Inq. 
p-m. no. 30, 31. His grandson Robert 
was tenant in the following year, by the 
old service of 40s.; Duchy of Lance 
Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, no. 20. 

The manor is regularly named among 
the family estates. Robert Shireburne 
(1492) was said to hold by knight’s ser- 
vice, but the tenure in socage with 4os. 
rent was rightly given in 1528 after the 
death of Hugh Shireburne ; Duchy of 
Lance. Ing. p.m. iii, no. 923 vi, no. 65. 
It occurs in 1777 among the manors of 
Thomas Weld ; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 625, 
m. 10 d (16). 

19 Joseph Weld of Lulworth, brother of 
the Cardinal, was the lord of the manor 
in 1836; Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1), iv, 


189 


404; Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 
505. 

*0 Baines, op. cit. (ed. 1870), ii, 496. 

31 Shireburne Abstract Bk. 

22Tn 1246 Simon de Hambleton was 
a tenant; Final Conc.i,96. In the same 
year one William de Hambleton acknow- 
ledged that he was the native of John de 
Hackinsall ; Assize R. 4o4, m. 4. 

Alice widow of William de Hambleton 
in 1292 recovered dower against Robert 
de Singleton alias Broughton ;_ ibid. 408, 
m. 1, 74. She also complained that 
Robert had encroached on her right in 
the common pasture, but the jury found 
that he had approved with the assent of 
Geoffrey son of John de Hackinsall, 
chief lord of Hambleton, and others ; 
ibid. m. 67d. 

In a suit already mentioned Maud 
wife of Thomas (son of Thomas) de 
Hambleton, with her sisters Agnes and 
Alice, nieces and heirs of John son of 
Simon de Hambleton, claimed land in 
1305-13; Assize R. 420, m. 8, 10d.; 
424, m. 6. 

Maud widow of William son of Richard 
de Hambleton claimed dower in the town- 
ship in 1330 against Nicholas de Oxcliffe ; 
De Banco R. 283, m. 247d. 

?3 Richard le Boteler about 1280 gave 
to his son Geoffrey all the land of 
Hambleton which he had from John son 
of Adam Beaufront ; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 
gi. William son of Sir Richard confirmed- 
the same to his brother Geoffrey ; ibid. 
fol. 84. In 1294 Richard le Boteler gave 
two-thirds of an oxgang of land to Richard 
son of Robert the Cook of Hambleton ; 
ibid. fol. 91. Richard son of William the 
Cook gave !and to Thomas son of Richard 
de Stainall in 1315-16; ibid. The same 
Richard also gave land to John Lawrence 
and Elizabeth his wife ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Anct. D. (P.R.O.), L 1029. 

Richard le Boteler of Marton in 1322 
held a messuage and land in Hambleton 
of Richard de Hackinsall in socage ; 
Lancs. Ing. and Extents, ii, 146. There 
are charters in Raines MSS. xxxviii, 


7-9: 

Nicholas le Boteler of Rawcliffe had 
land in Hambleton in 1331; De Banco 
R. 287, m. 307d. In 1405 the family’s 
lands here were stated to be held of the 
king as duke in socage ; Towneley MS. 
DD, no. 1460. Nothing more definite 
is stated in the later inquisitions, down to 
William Butler in 1639. 

24 This may be inferred from land in 
Hambleton being held by Sir Thomas 
Banastre in 1379, and by the heirs, &c., 
of Balderston later—e.g. Dudley, the Earl 
of Derby, and Radcliffe of Winmarleigh, 
as appears by the inquisitions, &c. See 
Lancs. Inq. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 15. Land 
in Hambleton, part of the Balderston 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


also had estates there, the former having ferry rights 
A few other names occur in the 


over the Wyre.” : 
inquisitions and pleadings.”* 


Cockersand Abbey” and Lancaster Priory ® had 


lands in Hambleton. 


Some estates were registered by ‘ Papists’ in 1717.” 

The chapel of St. 
existed from an early date, and may 
have been the oratory at Hambleton for 
which Robert Shireburne of Stonyhurst obtained a 
It was in 1567 licensed for the 
administration of the sacraments and for burials. 
In 1717 it was ‘duly served by a curate who preaches 
and reads prayers every Sunday, sacrament days 
excepted.’*? The ancient endowment was £5 a year, 
paid by the lord of the manor out of the profits of gration in 1 
a windmill ® ; but this was increased by other gifts.” 
In 1650 the Committee of Plundered Ministers 
had allowed {40 a year out of sequestrations.* 
The church was rebuilt in 1749; there is a sundial 


CHURCH 


licence in 1456.” 


P Seal ET 
ion 
with the inscript 1670 


formed in 1846.” 


inheritance, was included in the grant to 
the first Earl of Derby in 1489, and after 
the death of the second earl the 1522 
rental (at Lathom) shows that lands there 
paid 305. 7d. yearly. 

Robert de Singleton has been named as 
a landholder in 1292, It may have been 
his estate which descended to Sir William 
Leyland of Morleys, who died in 1547 
holding lands in Hambleton of the king 
as of his duchy by the tenth part of a 
knight’s fee and a rent of 145. 84.; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. ix, no. 43. 
The same tenure is recorded in later 
inquisitions, e.g. Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. 
Soc.), ii, 262. 

In 1596 Robert Bickerstaffe purchased 

a messuage, &c., from George Singleton, 
Mary his wife, Thomas Gudlaw the 
younger, Richard Wilkinson and Margaret 
his wife; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 
59, m. 142. 
- % Henry Butler of Rawcliffe died in 
1621 holding six messuages, four salt- 
cotes, lands, moor, marsh, fishery, &c., and 
a ferry boat on Wyre; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. xxvi, no. 36 ; xxx, no. 18. 

28 In 1323 John de Lancaster purchased 
a messuage and an oxgang and two-thirds 
from Richard son of Robert de Inskip and 
Alice his wife ; Final Conc. ii, 57. This 
may have been the estate of John de 
Hambleton already referred to. 

Alice widow of Robert Hesketh in 
1490-1 left lands in Hambleton to her 
sons Hugh and Richard; Towneley 
MS. C8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), H300. The 
tenure of Thomas Hesketh’s lands was 
not known in 1523; Duchy of Lane. 
Ing. p.m. v, no. 16. Sir Richard Shire- 
burne seems to have purchased them in 
1556; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 16, 
m. 15. 

The lands of Thomas Boteler of 
Warrington (1522) and Alexander Goos- 
nargh abe were held as parts of an 
estate in Stainall in socage; Duchy of 
Lance. Ing. p.m. v, no. 13, 55. 

George Allen in 1567 purchased a 
messuage, &c., from Nicholas Sumner, 
Alice his wife, Thomas Wilkinson, Ellen 
his wife, Anthony Garstang and Elizabeth 
hia wife; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 
29, m. 81. Other parts of the same 
estate were sold to Sir Richard Shireburne 


A separate parish was 


The vicar of Kirkham appoints 


the incumbents. 
charge * :— 


1699 
1706 
1717 
1717 
Mary probably 

1737 
1765 
1803 


1835 
1836 
1882 


and Henry Thompson ; ibid. bdles. 34, 
m. §9; 35, m. 152. George Allen’s 
tenement was in 1579 found to be held 
of Sir Richard Shireburne in socage ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 80. 

Robert Finch of Mawdesley (1610) had 
land, but the tenure was not stated ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), i, 156. 

37 Simon son of Henry de Hambleton 
gave to Cockersand, together with the 
body of his wife Alice, half an acre in 
Sandirland field, having land of Robert de 
Shireburne on the south side ; Cockersand 
Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 141. 

For rental see ibid. iii, 1268-9 ; and 
for grants of the Cockersand lands see 
Pat. 21 Eliz. pt. xi; 42 Eliz. pt. xvi. 

28 John son of Geoffrey Arbalaster gave 
to the priory 2 oxgangs of land, one of 
which had been held by Richard Colmore 
and another by Richard son of Siward, 
but reserved a part of the appurtenances, 
viz. in a field called Thornhole and in the 
Wyre fishery; Lanc. Ch. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 378. This was confirmed by his son 
Geoffrey de Hackinsall ; ibid. 377. 

It was perhaps this land which was 
held by Thomas Fleetwood of the queen 
in 1576; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xii, 
no. 2. 

*9 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurors, 93, 116, 134. The names 
were : John Lickfold, London, in right 
of his wife Dorothy (widow of Richard 
Sharples), Mabel Hodgkinson, and John 
Charnley. 

Mary Holland of Wigan in 1757 
bequeathed to Mrs. Winifred Eccleston 
of St. Helens a messuage in Hambleton 
which she had had from her aunt Anne 
Hesketh; Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), 
iii, 288, from R. 31 of Geo. II at Preston. 

3° Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xxii, 
379- 
31 In 1567 the inhabitants petitioned 
that their chapel ‘commonly called Our 
Ladie Chapell’ might be ‘consecrated’ 
for divine service and administration of 
the sacraments by fit chaplains as curates, 
approved by the vicar of Kirkham, and 
for the burial of the bodies of their dead ; 
Reg. Bk. at Chester, i, fol. 4034. The 
Bishop of Chester gave ‘licence’ accord- 
ingly, ordering that the chapel wardens 
should take his permission once every 


190 


The following have been in 


Christopher Jackson, B.A. (T.C.D.) 

Richard Crombleholme * 

Richard Rauthmell, B.A. 

William Whitehead, B.A. (St. John’s 
Coll., Camb.) 

John Field (Queen’s Coll., Oxf.) 

Robert Tomlinson 

Thomas Butcher, B.A. (St. John’s Coll., 
Camb.) 

Charles Beaumont Howard, B.A. 

William Hough 

James Henry Bumstead 


The Congregationalists, who first began a preaching 
830, erected a small chapel in 1870; it 
is annexed to Poulton.’ 
small congregation of Particular Baptists.” 


There was at one time a 


GOOSNARGH-WITH-NEWSHAM 


Gusansarghe, Dom. Bk. ; Gunanesarg, 1205 ; 
Gosannesareghe, Gosanesarwe, 1226; Gosenargh, 


three years to the parish church, where it 
was to be read through, after the Gospel, 
on Whit Monday ; ibid. ii, fol. 231. 
Thus an old chapel was not ‘con- 
secrated,’ but licensed for use. It seema 
likely that the vicar of Kirkham had 
objected, but as the place was 7 miles 
from the parish church its use was 
convenient for baptism and burial. 

In 1601 an agreement as to the chapel 
was made by Richard Shireburne on one 
part and John and Thomas Carter on 
the other ; Shireburne Abstract Bk, 

Gabriel Tyldesley was curate in 
1611-22 ; Visit. P. at Chester Dioc. Reg. 

32 Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 423. In 1705 the curate certified 
that the only revenue was £5 a year and 
that there was ‘preaching there one 
afternoon in three Sundays’; ibid. 422. 
This shows that there was a curate in 
1705 3 there does not seem to have been 
one in 1689 and 1691. 

33 This is mentioned in the time of 
James I; Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 268. The 
amount points to a pre-Reformation 
endowment. 

34 About 1717 there was £8 16s, rent 
of land and £2 103. interest of £50; 
Gastrell, loc. cit. The rent-charge of 
£5 appears to be paid still. 

35 Commonw, Ch. Surv. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), 156. The £5 paid by 
the lord of the manor is named. 

The minister in 1651-2 was Robert 
(Noble) Cunningham, and in 1654 Roger 
Sherburn ; Plund. Mins. Accts, (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), i, 239, 246, 142+ 
The latter had an increased allowance of 
£50+ 

36 Fishwick, Kirkham, 59-62. 

37 By Order in Council 21 Jan. 1846. 

38 From the Diocesan Registry, Chester. 

39 William Bushell of Goosnargh wrote 
to the Bishop of Chester, 18 Sept. 1706: 
‘The bearer Richard Crombleholme has 
been educated as a Presbyterian and 
intended to have been a dissenting 
minister.’ 

40 Son of Robert Whitehead, clerk, one 
of the masters of Kirkham School ; 
Admissions t9 St. John's Coll. ii, 201. 

41 Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. i, 135+ 
167,  Hewitson, op. cit. 508. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


1244 ; Gosanarche, 1251 ; Gosenhar, 1257 ; Gosse- 
narwe, 1290 ; Gosnargh, 1297. Pronounced Goosnar. 

Trelefelt, Dom. Bk.; Threlefel, 1244 ; Threlefal, 
1257. Neuhuse, Dom. Bk.; Nusum, 1249 ; Neu- 
sum, 1251. 

Goosnargh gives its name to a detached chapelry 
of Kirkham, comprising Goosnargh, Newsham and 
Whittingham. The first-named portion has of itself 
a content of 8,324 acres,' while Newsham, a detached 
portion to the west, has 348, so that the whole town- 
ship measures 8,672 acres. In 1go1 it had a popu- 
lation of 1,091.7 Goosnargh proper contains a number 
of hamlets or farmsteads. ‘The name belongs specially 
to the lower or south-western part of the township 
and to the village* round the chapel, which stands 
close to the border of Whittingham. The higher or 
north-eastern part was known as Threlfall—a name 
no longer in common use—and had its chapel, which 
was called White Chapel. To the north-east of 
Goosnargh Chapel lies Eaves Green and to the north- 
west Middleton ; Inglewhite is 1} miles north of the 
last-named, and has St. Anne’s Well‘ to the south of 
itand Fairhurst to the north. Beesley is north of 
Eaves Green, and has Kidsnape to the east and 
Bulsnape to the north-east, and further to the east, 
on the border of Chipping, is Loudscales, over- 
looking the River Loud, there forming the boundary. 
There were six ancient divisions called tithings— 
Church, Beesley, Kidsnape, Longley, Aspenhurst 
and Threlfall.‘* 

The principal feature of the northern end is Beacon 
Fell, which attains a height of 874 ft. above the sea. 
From it the ground slopes away in all directions, but 
more especially to the west and south-west. The 
300-ft. line runs diagonally across the township by 
Fairhurst, Beesley and Kidsnape, with higher ground 
to the east and lower to the west. To the north of 
the Fell are Lickhurst and Broadhead, and further 
north is the River Brock, forming the boundary on 
that side. 

The township is crossed by a large number of 
country roads. Through Newsham passes the London 
and North-Western Company’s main line to the 
north, with a station called Barton and Broughton. 
To this station there is a footpath over the fields from 
Goosnargh village. The Preston and Lancaster Canal 
crosses Newsham at Hollowforth. 

Newsham was separated from Goosnargh in 1894 
and annexed to Barton*; the present reduced town- 
ship is governed by a parish council.® 


KIRKHAM 


The soil is of every variety, with subsoil of clay. 
The land is chiefly in grass, being occupied as follows 
in Goosnargh and Whittingham jointly: Arable, 
50 acres ; permanent grass, 10,7944 ; and woods and 
plantations, 1974. The population is now employed 
solely in agriculture ; formerly there were silk and 
cotton manufactures.’ Goosnargh is noted for cheese 
and butter ; also for a kind of small, sweet cake. 

The Thirlmere pipe line conveys the Manchester 
water supply through the eastern parts of Goosnargh 
and Whittingham. 

There is a market cross at Inglewhite Green.’ 
Here two fairs for cattle and sheep are held—on the 
Tuesday before Ascension Day and on 5 October. A 
sheep fair is held on 25 April. A workhouse formerly 
stood there. 

‘There are remains of several ancient crosses,® and 
at Inglewhite was a pit known as ‘cuckstool pit.’ 

Lists of the principal inhabitants at different times 
in the 17th century have been printed." 

Among the burials recorded in the registers for 
August 1644 are those of a ‘soldier found slain’ on 
the 1st and another soldier on the 16th. They may 
have belonged to the royal troops driven out of 
Amounderness on 18 August. 

The worthies of the chapelry include the Ven. 
William Marsden and George Beesley, who suffered 
death during the Elizabethan persecution in 1586 
and 1591; Alexander Rigby, a noteworthy Parlia- 
mentarian, baron of the Exchequer, who died in 
1650"; William Bushell, founder of the hospital at 
Goosnargh, who was high sheriff in 1733, and died 
in 1735 *; Peter Armstrong Whittle, born at Ingle- 
white in 1789, a miscellaneous writer who pub!ished 
several topographical works, and died in Liverpool in 
1866"; William Threlfall of Hollowforth, a Wesleyan 
missionary, killed in Namaqualand in 1825 ; Edward 
Kirk, journalist and antiquary, 1832 to 1885.’ 

In 1066 Goosnargh, Threlfall and 

MANORS Newsham, each assessed as one plough- 

land, were held by Earl Tostig as members 

of his lordship of Preston.’® Afterwards Goosnargh 

and Threlfall—or part of them, viz. a plough-land 

and a half—were granted out in thegnage, being held 

by the service of 12s. a year and 6s. 8¢. for a sor 

goshawk ; and Newsham became part of the barony 
of Penwortham. 

Bernard son of Ailsi was lord of GOOSNARGH 
about 1160,” and was succeeded by his son Robert, 
who about 1190 gave land to the Hospitallers."* He 


1 The Census Rep. of 1901 gives 8,329 
acres, including 22 of inland water. 

? Of these 983 belonged to Goosnargh 
proper and 108 to Newsham. The popu- 
lation of the chapelry was 4,327- 

3 This seems to have been called the 
‘burgh.’ There is no trace of any borough. 
Cf. Euxton Burgh, 

‘Dr. Leigh about 1700 says of it: 
‘This springs out of a black bass, which 
by calcination I found to contain sulphur. 
The water has a very sulphureous smell as 
strong as that near Harrogate in York- 
shire, but contains little or no salt’ ; Nat. 
Hist, of Lancs. bk. i, p. 40. 

‘a Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 421. 

5 Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 32199. 

® The older government was by a vestry 
known a3 ‘the Twenty-four Men’ of 
Goosnargh and Whittingham. There are 
extracts from their books, which com- 


mence about 1625, in Col. H. Fishwick’s 
Goosnargh, 51-85. See also Trans. Hist. 
Soc. (new ser.), xiv, 41-64. 

6a Statistics from Bd. of Agric. (1905). 

7 Fishwick, op. cit. 8; Smith, Long- 
ridge, 220. 

8 Fishwick, op. cit. 8. 

9 Ibid. 199. 

10 Tbid. 198. 

1 Taxation of Goosnargh, 1625 ; ibid. 


59-68. Of Whittingham, c. 1640 ; ibid. 
55-6. Heads of families, 1671; ibid. 
201-6. 


12 For these three see the accounts of 
Threlfall and Middleton below. 

13 For an account of this benefactor and 
his family see Fishwick, op. cit. 120-8, 
where a pedigree is given. He was grand- 
son of Dr. Seth Bushell, vicar of Preston 
1663-82, and of Lancaster 1682-4. 


IgI 


6 Dict. Nat. Biog. The ‘historical’ 
parts of his books are untrustworthy. 

15 Smith, op. cit. 243. 

16 1,.C.H. Lancs. i, 2884. 

17 This is an inference from the dates 
recorded of his son. 

18 See the account of Howath in 
Barnacre. Robert’s wife Hawise and his 
son Bernard are named. The brethren 
of St. John Baptist of Howath granted to 
their ‘sister’ Hawise, wife of Robert son 
of Bernard de Catterall, land in Howath, 
also Threlfall, with appurtenances, and 1 
oxgang of land in Hutton; Dods. MSS. 
liii, fol. 89. 

In 1194-5 Robert son of Bernara, 
who had joined in the rebellion of Count 
John, made peace with the king, paying 
1§ marks; Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. go. 
There is another reference to Robert, ibid. 


146. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


died in 1206,"? and his heirs held the 12 oxgangs of 
land in 1212 by the service above stated.” The heirs 
Iseult, who married Richard 
son of Swain (de Catterall)”; Beatrice wife of Hugh 
and Avice, who married (1) Oliver son 
of Nigel de Longford and (2) Michael de Aslacton.™ 
In 1242 accordingly the manor was held by their 
heirs,” Richard de Catterall,”* Hugh de Mitton” and 


were three daughters 


de Mitton” ; 


19 In that year Hugh de Mitton, Oliver 
son of Nigel and Richard son of Swain 
gave 20 marks and a palfrey to have 
12 oxgangs of land in Goosnargh which 
had been held by Robert son of Bernard, 
they having married his daughters and 
heirs ; Farrer, op. cit. 203, 209 ; Towneley 
MS. HH, no. 520. 

20 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 48; see also 
139, for 1226. In 1297 the vill paid 
18s. 8d. to the Earl of Lancaster ; ibid. 
289. 

21 Richard de Tarnacre gave to Cocker- 
sand Abbey a third part of Beesley in 
Goosnargh, which he had had from the 
Lady Iseult, wife of Richard son of Swain ; 
Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 243. 
Richard son of Richard son of Swain de 
Catterall granted an acre of land; ibid. 
242. 

22 Beatrice daughter of Robert son of 
Bernard made various grants to Cocker- 
sand, some as ‘widow,’ and one as Beatrice 
de Mitton. The place-names include 
Robertshurst, Hurst and Carr, Fulsnape, 
Small Brook, Longley, the syke which was 
the boundary between Goosnargh and 
Barton, where the road descends into 
Goosnargh Brook. In one grant land 
given by Avice her sister is mentioned , 
ibid. 234-8, 243. 

As Beatrice de Mitton daughter of 
Robert son of Bernard she in her widow- 
hood gave William the Clerk son of 
Robert the rector of Garstang the moiety 
of certain land in Threlfall. The bounds 
began at Pepper Syke, following it to the 
old hedge, under the land of Avice daughter 
of Robert son of Bernard; then going 
across to the old ditch, and along this to 
the entry into the great wood; by the 
wood to Mill Brook, and following this 
brook to the great carr under Huenat- 
hurst; thence along the carr, the 
boundaries of Adam son of Paulinus and 
the aforesaid Avice, to the starting-point ; 
Add. MS. 32104, no. 958. 

23 See the account of this family under 
Withington, near Manchester. 

34 Michaei de Aslacton (Ellaston) and 
Avice his wife gave lands to Cockersand 
Abbey ; the land which Iseult daughter 
of Robert son of Bernard gave William 
son of Richard de Kirkham is named. 
Avice granted the same as widow 3 Cocker- 
sand Chartul. i, 240-1, where two other 
gifts are recorded. 

25 Lancs. Ing. and Extents,i,154. They 
were the tenants in Catterall, Goosnargh 
is not named in 1242. 

26 Richard de Catterall in 1244 held 
3 oxgangs of land in Goosnargh by 
knight’s service ; he paid 4s. 73d. ; ibid. 
159, 212 

Adam de Catterall granted certain 
land (received in exchange from Richard 
de Hoghton) toe Alexander de Goosnargh 
and Maud his wife, with remainders to 
Thomas and to Margery de Bradkirk ; 
Add. MS. 32104, no. 497. The same 
Adam gave land on the north side of 
Longley to Grimbald son of Diota and 
Maud his wife ; a rent of t2d. was to be 


paid, and 12d. for pannage ; Towneley 
MS. DD, no. 756. 

Robert de Grotton and Agnes his wife 
(widow of John de Catterall) in 1318-19 
claimed dower against Paulin and Alan 
de Catteral!, on the ground that John son 
and heir of Ralph de Catterall had dowered 
Agnes with certain lands in Goosnargh 
at the church of Towneley (or Burnley) 
in 1287 ; De Banco R. 223, m. 150; 229, 
m. 23; 248, m. 229. John son of John 
de Catterall made further claims in 1325 
against Joan the widow and Robert the 
son (under age) of Paulin de Catterall ; 
ibid. 258, m. 137. 

Ralph son of Richard de Catterall granted 
Oakenhead in the vill of Threlfall to Adam 
de Hoghton, his mill there being excepted, 
at the rent of a pair of white gloves; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 517. He gave his 
daughter Christiana 8 acres purchased from 
Hugh de Middleton ; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 
1004. The same Ralph gave Adam his 
son all his lands and demesne in Goosnargh 
and Threlfall, together with the homage of 
John de Barton, Master Richard de 
Hoghton, Walter de Goosnargh, Thomas 
de Kirk, and others, in 1294; ibid. fol. 
934. The above-named Christiana, as 
widow of Walter de Goosnargh, gave 
lands to her son Thomas with remainder 
to another son Henry ; Kuerden MSS. iv, 
Gg. She was plaintiff (as widow of 
Walter) in 13243; De Banco R. 253, m. 
185d. 

Alan de Catterall in 1322 died holding 
a messuage, land and rent of the king in 
chief (by the forte'ture of Thomas Earl of 
Lancaster), by a rent of 55.3 Lancs. Ing. 
and Extents, ii, 141. 

Richard de Catterall in 1337 demised 
4 acres in Goosnargh newly approved to 
Richard son of John del Yate of Bils- 
borrow and John his son for their lives ; 
Add. MS. 32104, fol. 116. 

27 Ralph de Mitton was summoned in 
1246 to show why he would not take the 
homage and relief of Bernard de Mitton 
for 5 oxgangs of land in Goosnargh granted 
Bernard by his mother Beatrice daughter 
of Robert ; Ralph was her grandson and 
heir, being son of Robert, elder brother of 
Bernard. Ralph said he held nothing of 
Beatrice’s, but Bernard’s land would revert 
to him, sbould he die without issue ; 
Assize R. 404, m. 2. Bernard son of 
Beatrice had in 1241 purchased an oxgang 
of land from Bernard son of Richard, he 
giving 6 acres north of Foxhole Hurst at a 
rent of 12d.3 Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 86. As Bernard son 
of Hugh de Mitton he granted 6 acres to 
Alan the Forester; Kuerden MSS. iv, 
G 9. 
Ranulf de Goosnargh in 1246 de- 
fended his title to 20 acres against Bernard 
de Mitton ; Assize R. 404, m.2. At the 
same time Jordan de Kirkham recovered 
30 acres against Bernard de Mitton, 
Walter de Barton, Ranulf de Goosnargh, 
Benedict de Beesley and Hugh de Middle- 
ton; ibid. m. 3d. Jordan was son of 
Richard the rector of Kirkham ; Cockersand 
Chartul. i, 240. 


192 


Henry de Longford.” Two oxgangs of land, ie. a 
sixth part of the manor, were acquired by William de 
Clifton, who died in 1258,” or by his predecessors « 
this in time led to a nominal readjustment, the repre- 
sentatives of the three co-heirs being said to hold five- 
sixths ofthe manor. ‘There were other changes. The 
Mitton third was surrendered to the Earl of Lancaster 
and then granted to the Hoghtons of Hoghton,” 


Margery widow of Ralph de Mitton in 
1291 claimed dower against Ma 
widow of Ranulf son of Bernard de Goos- 
nargh, Alice daughter of John de Barton, 
and many others; De Banco R. 9°, m. 
98 d.3 91, m. 248d, 

% Nigel de Longford in 1248-1 paid 
relief (135. 4d.) on succeeding to 4 ox- 
gangs of land in Goosnargh, being the 
estate of Avice daughter of Robert and 
grandmother of Nigel; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents, i, 184. 

In 1258 William de Clifton was 
found to have held 2 oxgange of land in 
Goosnargh of the heirs of Robert son of 
Bernard by a rent of 3s, gd. ; Lancs. Ing, 
and Extents, i, 213. This rent isa ak 
part of 18s. 8d.; the tenure may imply 
that the grant had been made by Robert 
son of Bernard himself. A later William 
de Clifton, 1323, held certain lands of 
Richard de Hoghton by 1d, yearly ; they 
included a ‘skalinga’ (shieling) with 80 
acres from the waste ; ibid. ii, 159. 

In 1324-5 a messuage and 18 acres 
in Goosnargh were part of lands in dispute 
between Isabel widow of William de 
Clifton and William son of William de 
Clifton ; Assize R, 426, m. 8, 

3° About 1285 Sir Ralph de Mitton, 
for 100 marks, resigned to Edmund Earl 
of Lancaster his whole tenement in 
Goosnargh and Threlfall, a rent of 21, 6d. 
per annum being due to the Hospitallers 
for the Threlfall portion ; Great Coucher, 
i, fol. 73, no. 53-4. 

As will be seen (note 32), this part of the 
manor was by the earl granted to Adam 
de Hoghton, who had already begun to 
acquire an estate there. Adam made a 
grant of land in Goosnargh to Richard 
son of Richard Lussell of Plumpton, at a 
rent of tod, with 6d, for pannage ; 
Bernard de Mitton was another lord; 
Towneley MS. OO, no. 1156, 

In 1276 Ralph de Mitton claimed a 
messuage, two-thirds of a mill, and 4 ox- 
gangs of land against Adam de Hoghton ; 
De Banco R. 13, m, 22d. Two years 
later Adam was claiming a messuage, 
mill, oxgang of land, and 14s. rent against 
William son of Alan de Carleton, 
referring to an agreement made with 
the said Alan; ibid. 24, m. 755 49 ™ 
52d. It seems likely that the former 
suit refers to the acquisition of the Long- 
ford share by Adam de Hoghton, for he 
with his sons Adam, Richard and John 
were alleged about that time to have 
disseised Ralph de Mitton of a messuage, 
mill water, &c., and the third part of 
1,000 acres of moor and wood in which 
they were wont to common ; Assize R. 
1235, m. 11d, About ten years later 
Henry de Clifton claimed common of 
pasture in land in Goosnargh against Adam 
de Hoghton ; Assize R. 1265, m 21. 
Adam son of Sir Adam de Hoghton in 
1291 released to Earl Edmund all his 
right in a pasture called the Heyfeld in 
Threlfall, bounded by a dyke from the 
limit of Blackburnshire as far as the water 
of Brock ; Duchy of Lanc. Great Coucher, 


i, fol. 64, no. 23. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


and the Clifton part was divided between Clifton 
Thus in 1346 five-sixths 
were held equally by Richard de Catterall, Sir Adam 
de Hoghton and Nicholas de Longford, and the other 
sixth equally by William de Clifton and Richard le 
Boteler.? A century later the tenants were Richard 


and Boteler of Rawcliffe.” 


A release of all interest in Wrighting- 
ton, Goosnargh, Threlfall and Howath 
made by Henry de Aslacton to Adam de 
Hoghton while Sir Robert de Iathom was 
sheriff would complete the transfer of the 
Mitton third to the Hoghtons. That they 
held the Longford part also seems clear 
from a fine of 1306 by which Richard son 
of Adam de Hoghton made a settlement 
of two-thirds of the manor of Goosnargh 
and various lands there ; Final Conc. i, 207. 
But from a charter in Add. MS. 32106 
(no. 705) it may be inferred that the 
two-thirds refers to the part in possession, 
Agnes widow of Adam the father (brother) 
of Richard having the other third, as 
below. 

Henry son of Adam de Blackburn was 
non-suited in 1292 on claiming a tene- 
ment in Goosnargh against Adam de 
Hoghton ; Assize R. 408, m. 58. In 
1302 John son of Alexander de Hyde 
made a successful claim to 30s. rent 
withheld by Master Richard, son and heir 
of Adam de Hoghton ; the defence was a 
technical one—that Agnes de Hoghton 
and Ralph de Catterall held the third part, 
but were not named; Assize R. 418, m. 
13d. From other pleadings it appears 
that Agnes was the widow of Master 
Richard’s brother Adam ; Assize R. 419, 
mM. 133 420, m. Iod. 

81 William son of Walter de Clifton 
about 1230 granted to William son of 
Waiter de Carleton, in marriage with his 
sister Elizabeth, 1 oxgang of land in 
Goosnargh and all his estate in Whittle ; 
Dods. MSS, liii, fol. go, no. 73. This 
moiety of the Clifton part of Goosnargh 
seems to have descended to the Botelers, 
who made other acquisitions. About 
1263 Ranulf de Goosnargh gave Richard 

‘le Boteler 15 acres in Threlfall; ibid. 
fol. 89, no. 64. Peter de Catterall also 
gave land there ; Kuerden MSS. iv, G 9. 

Richard le Boteler gave land in Goos- 
nargh and Threlfall to his son Henry; 
ibid. Henry sor of Sir Richard le Boteler 
gave Orm son of Richard de Barton part 
of his land between Longley and the 
Mickle Brook of Ratonraw ; Dods. MSS. 
lui, fol. 89, no. 66. He also gave 
part of his land in Threlfall to Roger 
son of Godith de Hupronchelm ; ibid. 
no. 69. William son of Alexander de 
Goosnargh granted to William son of 
Nicholas le Boteler in 1316 an oxgang of 
land in Goosnargh which he had had from 
Henry, who hadit from Richard le Boteler ; 
ibid. no. 74. Richard son of Thomas 
de Threlfall made a similar release about 
the same time ; Kuerden MSS. iv, G 9. 

To Nicholas son and heir of William 
le Roteler Agnes widow of John de 
Myerscough released land in Threlfall in 
Claughton in 1321-2 3 ibid. Sir Nicholas 
Boteler in 1337 gave William de Hoghton, 
clerk, land by Falbothgrene ; ibid. 

2 Survey of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 56-8. 
The plough-land and a half in Goosnargh 
were stated to make the third part and the 
eighth part of a knight’s fee. The old 
Tent of 12s. and 6s. 8d. for a sor goshawk 
was paid. It is stated that Adam de 
Hoghton held his third part by the 
charter of E(dmund) lately earl. 


7 


for some time. 


That the Longford third was occupied 
by Adam de Hoghton may be inferred 
from the sheriff’s compotus of 1348, when 
those who patd the 12s. rent were Sir 
Adam de Hoghton, Nicholas Boteler, 
William de Clifton and Ralph de Catterall ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Misc. Bks. xxiii, 111, 
Later inquisitions attribute third parts of 
a knight’s fee to Barton and Leyland. 

In 1348 Walter Wenne and Margaret 
his wife claimed a messuuge, &c., against 
Richard de Catterall, Alan his son and 
William de Singleton; Assize R. 1444, 
m, 22. Alan son of Richard de Catterall 
sought a messuage, &c., against Richard 
son of Margaret de Catterall in 1356 ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 5, m. 4d. 

Richard son of William Gest in 1367 
claimed three messuages, 40 acres of land, 
&c., in Goosnargh against John son of 
John de Catterall, alleging a grant from 
Ralph de Catterall (temp. Edw. II) to 
Paulin de Catterall and Alice his wife. 
Their daughter Margaret was plaintiff’s 
mother; De Banco R. 427, m. 319d. 

John son of John de Catterall made a 
feoffment of his lands in 1366 ; Towneley 
MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.); C 124. His 
estate was by his cousin William son of 
Richard the Parker given to John son 
and heir of Richard de Towneley in 
1380-1 ; ibid. P 43. 

Adam de Catterall in 1392-3 gave a 
part of his land called the Oakenhead 
for life to Thomas del Oakenhead ; Add. 
MS. 32104, fol. 115. He died in 1397 
holding a third part of the manor of the 
king in socage; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 66. Richard Catterall in 1440-1 
made a feoffment of Fisherplace and 
Crosshouse ; Towneley MS. DD, no. 755. 

Sir Adam de Hoghton in 1376 com- 
plained of the depasturing of his grass at 
Broadhead; De Banco R. 463, m. 21. 
In 1422 Sir Richard Hoghton held 
five messuages, &c., in Goosnargh and 
Threlfall of the heirs of Nicholas de Hyde 
in socage by a rent of 15s.; his manor of 
Goosnargh had been given to his son Sir 
William Hoghton and Alice his wife ; 
Lancs. Ing. pom. (Chet. Soc.), i, 146. 
The charter making the grant of the 
third part of the manor to William and 
Alice (1388-9) is in Kuerden MSS. vi, 
fol. 85. 

83 From an extent of 1445-63; Duchy 
of Lanc. Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, no. 20. 
The proportions were unchanged, Cat- 
terall, Hoghton and Longford holding 
five-sixths, Clifton and Boteler the other 
sixth. 

Ralph Catterall in 1515 was stated to 
hold his land in Goosnargh of the king by 
the third part of the fifth part of a knight’s 
fee, but his son John in 1517 was said 
to hold in socage; Duchy of Lance, Ing. 
pm. iv, no. 62,4. There are numerous 
references to the Catterall holding in 
Threlfall, Lickhurst, Broadhead, White 
Lea, &c., in the Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.). 

The Hoghtons also were stated to 
hold by knight’s service, the proportion 
of a fee being differently stated ; in 14.98 
it was called the third of five-sixths of a 
knight’s fee, in 1524 the third of the 
fifth, and in 1559 the third of a fourth 


193 


KIRKHAM 


Catterall, Richard Hoghton and Nicholas Longford ; 
Richard Clifton and Nicholas Boteler.® 

Early in the 16th century the Catterall portion 
became further divided,™ and one fraction continued 
to be claimed by the family of Townley of Barnside 
The Hoghtons, perhaps holding the 


part; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, 
no. 663; v, no, 61 3 xi, no. 2. 

The Longford part does not occur at 
all in the inquisitions, by that name. 

The Clifton of Clifton estate in 
Goosnargh was not treated separately, 
the tenure being called socage; e.g. 
ibid. iv, no. 12. 

Sir ae Boteler of Rawcliffe died in 
1404 holding his land in Goosnargh of 
Richard Catterall by services unknown ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 1460. A later 
John was in 1488 said to hold of Ralph 
Catterall by 1d. rent, but later still the 
tenure was stated as by knight’s service ; 
ibid. iii, no. 45, 109, &c. The main 
portion of the estate was sold to Gilbert 
Gerard in 1572 by Henry Butler, Anne 
his wife, Thomas Standish and James 
Anderton ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 
34, m. 69. The purchaser had also part 
of the Balderston estate through Radcliffe 
of Winmarleigh, but after his death the 
tenure was not recorded ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Inq. p.m. xvi, no. 2, and see Latus family 
below. 

34-Thomas Catterall of Little Mitton 
made a feoffment of Bulsnape, with court 
baron of Goosnargh, in 1570; ‘Towneley 
MS. DD, no. 758. Thomas, who died 
in 1579, left seven daughters co-heirs : 
Anne Townley, Elizabeth Procter, 
Katherine (wife of Thomas) Strickland— 
these three appear to have divided the 
Goosnargh part of the estate—Margaret 
Atherton (and Edwards), Marian Grim- 
shaw, Dorothy Shireburne (and Braddyll), 
and Jane (unmarried); Fishwick, 
Goosnargh, 150. The Stricklands sold 
their share to Kighley, Hoghton, 
Wilson, Kirk, and Barton; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 49, m. 313 53, 
m. 190; 58, m. 100, &c. See Bulsnape 
and White Lea below. Thomas Shireburne 
seems to have released his rights to James 
Pickering in 1599 (Common Pleas Recov. 
R. Easter 41 Eliz. m. 9), yet Dorothy 
Whipp (daughter of Thomas Catterall and 
formerly wife of Richard Shireburne) in 
1620 held a messuage of the king by 
the three-hundredth part of a knight’s 
fee ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc), ii, 229. 
Thomas Shireburne of Heysham in 1635 
held an acre of Gilbert Hoghton ; 
Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 1083. 

35 Goosnargh is named in a settlement 
by Henry Townley and Anne his wife in 
1590; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 52, 
m. 136. 

Lawrence Townley of Barnside died 
in 1623 holding a third of a third of the 
manor of Goosnargh and a third part of 
various messuages, water-mill, &c., includ- 
ing Lickhurst and Broadhurst, all of Sir 
Richard Shireburne as of the late priory of 
St. John of Jerusalem in socage by 
2s. 64d. rent ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 411. A similar 
return was made in 1630 after the death 
of Richard Townley ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p-m. xxv, no. 19. The third part 
of a third part of the manor occurs later, 
in 1673, in a feoffment of the estates of 
Richard Townley and Anne Townley, 
widow ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 
tot, m. 67, 


oS 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Longford share,” appear to have acquired part of the 
Catteralls’,” and the manor was spoken of as theirs 


absolutely. About 1630 the 
manor was purchased from Sir 
Richard Hoghton out of the 
marriage portion of Charlotte 
wife of James Lord Strange, 


proper. 


this family was assured. They appear to have been 
the only manorial family resident within Goosnargh 
Their estate was known as the manor of 
BULSNAPE,*® and on the partition became the resi- 
dence of Thomas Procter in right of his wife Eliz. 
beth daughter of Thomas Catterall (1579). After 


ay several changes of ownership,” Bulsnape was in 1650 


afterwards Earl of Derby.” 


It was acquired by Hugh 


Cooper, lord of the manor of 
Carnforth,* and about 1680 
was held by John Warren of 
Poynton in Cheshire,” who 
married the daughter and 
heir ; and so descended to his 
great - grandson Sir George 
Warren,” and from him to 


Lord de Tabley, who about 1860 sold the right of 
toll at Inglewhite fair to Mr. R. Baillie of Fulwood. 
That was supposed to be the only remaining manorial 


right. 


The Knights of St. John of Jerusalem had a con- 
siderable estate in THRELFALL,“ possibly the half 
plough-land noticed above as wanting, and, as the 
Catteralls were their tenants, the predominance of 


36 See preceding notes as to Hoghton ; 
in a later one (97%) will be found indica- 
tions that the Bartons of Barton held that 
third, perhaps as tenants of Hoghton. 

37 Richard Hoghton in 1591 pur- 
chased two messuages, &c., in Goosnargh 
and Bulsnape from the above-named 
James (son of Thomas) Strickland and 
Katherine his wife; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F. bdle. 53, m. 162. 

Thomas Hoghton had in 1570 pur- 
chased the estate of William Catterall and 
Joan his wife in Goosnargh, Whitting- 
ham, Cumberhalgh and Dilworth ; ibid. 
bdle. 32, m. 67, 105. In other deeds the 
vendor is described as of New Hall (in 
Rathmell) in Craven ; Dods. MSS. cxlii, 
fol. 70; Add. MS. 32106, no. 780. 

In the following year Thomas 
Hoghton purchased various lands from 
Thomas Singleton of Chingle Hall and 
Isabel his wife; they were situated in 
Goosnargh, Whittingham, Fishwick, 
Lea and Claughton; ibid. no. 774, 
no. 199 (fol. 277). 

Sir Richard Hoghton and Sir Gilbert 
were in possession of Goosnargh (among 
other manors) in 1616; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 89, no. 41. 

38 The inquisitions show the transfer 
to have been made between 1626 and 
1638. 

89 Cal. Com. for Comp. ii, 1102. 
William Earl of Derby, James Lord 
Strange and Charlotte his wife were in 
possession in 1642; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F. bdle. 141, no. 31. 

40 Watson, Earls of Warren, ii, 151. 

41 Fishwick, Goosnargh, 172. ‘Mr. 
Justice Warren’ was John Warren, one 
of the Council of the Welsh Marches, 
Judge of Chester, &c., who died in 1706. 
For pedigree see Ormerod, Ches. (ed. 
Helsby), iii, 686-7; i, 626. The 
Warrens had land in Goosnargh as early 
as 16673; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 

179, m. 24. See also V.C.H. Lancs. vi, 
255. 
y Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 585, m. 6. 
Sir George Warren and Jane his wife 
occur in 1761 ; ibid. 594,m. 6. Thomas 
James Viscount Bulkeley and Elizabeth 
Harriet his wife were in possession 


Warren of Poynton. 
Checquy or and azure on 
a canton gules a lion 
rampant argent. 


lL 


acquired by James Fishwick,® and it continued in his 
family till 1777,° when it was again sold. Bulsnape 
Hall is situated about 14 miles to the east of Ingle- 
white, and is a three-story building, now used asa 
farm-house. It was originally E-shaped in plan, with 
wide end gables and a narrow middle one over the 
porch, which is the full height of the house. The 
left-hand wing, however, has disappeared and the 
building is very much modernized, nearly all the 


windows being new and the walls covered with 


stucco. 


are visible 


An oak staircase with carved balustrade stil] 
remains, and other evidences of the original building 
in the 


interior. Remains of a moat 


could be seen up to about 1856, but have now dis- 


appeared.”” 


in 18043 Pal. of Lanc. Lent Assizes, 
42 Geo. III, R. 8. 

43 Fishwick, op. cit. 8. 

44 Some or all of it appears to have 
been given by Robert son of Bernard ; 
Kuerden MSS. v, fol. 82 (here the name 
reads Ywulefell, probably for Thralefell). 
Both Goosnargh and Threlfall are men- 
tioned among the Hospitallers’ lands in 
1292 3 Plac. de Quo Warr, (Rec, Com.), 


75° 

45 Richard de Catterall in 1244 and 
Adam de Catterall in 1397 held lands of 
the Hospitallers ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, 
i, 1603; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), 
i, 66. Ralph Catterall in 1515 and his 
son John in 1517 held of the same by a 
rent of 8s.; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
iv, no. 62, 4. In 1579 the whole estate 
was recorded to have been held of the 
Hospitallers ; ibid. xiv, no. 4. 

46 Lawrence Catterall, clerk, who died 
in 1520, had held the manor of Bulsnape 
for life by the gift of his father Richard. 
The heir was his grand-nephew Ralph 
(son of John, son of Ralph, son of 
Richard), who was then a minor in ward 
to the king ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
v, no. 31. The manor of Bulsnape is 
named in Ralph Catterall’s inquisition ; 
ibid. vi, no. 77. 

47 An agreement between the Town- 
leys, Procters and others seems to have 
been made in 1604; Exch. Dep. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 11. 

48 The Procters were a recusant family 
and the sequestration of two-thirds of 
their land in 1607 (Cal. S. P. Dom. 1603- 
10, p. 383) may have contributed to the 
need for sale. Feoffments of the manor 
of Bulsnape and lands in Goosnargh were 
made by Thomas Procter and Elizabeth 
his wife in 1581, by Thomas Procter in 
1610, and again by him in conjunction 
with John Nowell in 1614 ; Pal. of Lane. 
Feet of F. bdle. 43, no. 130 5 74, 20. 19 5 
85, no. 43. Shortly afterwards, viz. in 
1624, John Nowell and Mary his wife 
sold the manor to Thomas Edge; ibid. 
bdle. 103, no. 10. 

The purchaser died the same year 
holding the manor of Bulsnape in Threl- 
fall, with mill, &c. of Richard Shireburne 


194 


WHITE LEA, another part of the Catteralls’ estate 
in Threlfall,” was sold, as a third part of the manor, 
by Gervase Strickland and Katherine his wife to James 


(as of the late Priory of St. John of 
Jerusalem) by a rent of 25. 4d, ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxv, no. 2. The heir 
was his son Richard, then ten years old, 
and there were other children—George, 
Bridget and Ellen. 

49 The deforciants to the fine were 
Richard Edge, Sarah his wife, Samuel 
Shatterden and Bridget his wife; Pal. 
of Lanc, Feet of F. bdle, 147, m. 158; 
Com. Pleas Recov. R. Easter 1650, 
m. 7. 

The Fishwick family had long been 
connected with the neighbourhood. 
Adam de Fishwick in 1383 obtained a 
third of a messuage and land in Whitting- 
ham from William de Formby and Alice 
his wife ; Final Cone. iii, 17. 

In 1523 a jury of twelve freemen of 
the view of frankpledge in Goosnargh 
was summoned to inquire whether Adam 
Fishwick was seised of messuages, &¢., 
in Goosnargh claimed by his nephew John 
Fishwick as heir; Pal. of Lanc, Sessional 
Papers, 15 Hen. VIII. 

Adam Fishwick of Newsham in 1544 
agreed to give his younger brother Thomas 
(perhaps as trustee) certain lands in 
Goosnargh; Pal. of Lane, Plea R. 179, 
m. 134. 

50 The descent is thus given: Mey 
Fishwick, d. before 1653 -8. Charles, 
d. before 1680 -s. James, d. 1736 
-s. John, d. 1752 ~8. Robert, d. 1788. 
See the pedigree in Lt.-Col. Fishwick's 
work already quoted (154) ; its author, 
of whose local histories considerable use 
has been made in the present work, is 
descended from the Rev. James Fishwick 
(1711-93), younger son of the James 
who died in 1736. 

51 Fishwick, op. cit. 152, where there 
is an illustration. 

52 In 1570 an agreement was made 
between Thomas Catterall of Littie 
Mitton and Thomas Strickland of Man- 
sergh, who had married Katherine 
daughter and heir-apparent of Thomas 
Catterall, as to a messuage in Goosnargh 
called White Lea (occupied by William 
Parkinson) and others held by William 
Becsley, &c.; Catterall D, in possessio0 
of W. Farrer. 


Bursnape Hai 


GoosnarGH 


* 
' 
4 
| 


Asues, Otp Doorway 


GoosNnaRGH 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Kighley in 1591." John Kighley died in 1616 hold- 
ing it of the king by the fortieth part of a knight’s fee 
and leaving an infantson Hugh as heir.“ This family, 
who were Roman Catholics,** remained in possession 
till 1726 ; from Charles Gibson, who then purchased, 
the estate descended to his great-great-grandson Charles 
Gibson, who died in 1832. The estate was then 
sold to William Blackledge, who was succeeded by his 
son John, 

The ASHES was held by a family bearing the local 
name, Threlfall, who held lands of the Bartons of 
Barton, who in turn appear to have held this portion 
of their estate of Raiph Catterall by rendering a pound 
of cummin yearly. There is little known of the 
early history of the Threlfalls.°° Edmund Threlfall 
of the Ashes died in 1617, leaving a son John, aged 
twelve.’ He was a Roman Catholic, and had suffered 
the sequestration of two-thirds of his estate for re- 
ligion. The son John died young, and it was 
another son, Cuthbert Threlfall, whose estate at the 
Ashes was sequestered for ‘delinquency’ under the 
Commonwealth and forfeited in 1653." Cuthbert’s 
son Edmund was a Jacobite, and was killed by a 
party of soldiers sent to arrest him in 1690.8 He 
was succeeded by his brother Cuthbert, who as a 


KIRKHAM 


John was in possession soon afterwards, and later in 
the century the Ashes was sold, and has since changed 
hands several times. Ashes stands in a secluded 
situation some distance from the highway on rising 
ground north-east of Inglewhite; but apart from the 
doorway, which has a curious winged figure in a 
triangular frame carved over the square stone head,” 
is of little interest, being almost wholly modernized. 
Traces of a moat are still to be seen, and in one of 
the walls, which is from 4 ft. to 6 ft. thick, are 
cavities locally known as ‘hiding places.’® The 
house is of two stories and faces south-west. 

The HILL was in 1600 the residence of a family 
named Beesley.” Francis Beesley was fined for re- 
cusancy between 1591 and 1607.” His brother 
George, ordained at Rheims in 1587, was sent on the 
English mission in the following year, that of the 
Armada. He was captured after about two years, 
and though tortured to make him reveal the names of 
his hosts he would tell nothing, and was at last 
executed for his priesthood in Fleet Street, London, 
1591.” From the Beesleys™ the estate went to 
the Blackburnes, a branch of the Stockenbridge family, 
who were in possession in 1754." MWHITE HILL 
was the seat of a branch of the Heskeths, also a 


“Papist’ registered his estate in 1717. 


53 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 53, 
m, 133. Gervase was the son of Thomas 
Strickland. The previous year the same 
vendors had given a messuage, &c., to 
Robert Kighley ; ibid. bdle. 52, m. 37. 

54 Lancs. Ing. pom. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 31-3. John seems to 
have been half-brother of James and 
Robert Kighley ; Fishwick, op. cit. 156, 
where there is some account of the 
family. It is stated that ‘the local tradi- 
tion is that the last Kighley of White 
Lea, having joined the rebellion of 1715, 
was obliged to quit the country to save 
his neck.” 

53 A small chapel attached to the house 
was pulled down about 1830; ibid. 159. 

58Tbid. ; the descent is thus given: 
Charles Gibson, d. 1759 -s. John, d. 1786 
-8. Charles, d. 1823 -s. Charles (of 
Quernmore), d. 1832. 

57 For the Barton holding see the 
account of Kidsnape. 

58 Richard son of Thomas de Threlfall 
has been mentioned in 1316. Somewhat 
earlier (1311) a John de Threlfall was 
husband of Alice daughter and co-heir of 
Richard son of William de Greenhills ; 
De Banco R. 187, m. 105. Among 
witnesses to charters a John de Threlfall 
occurs in 1327 and another in 1392. 
In 1442 Robert Barton was claiming 
money due from John Threlfall of Goos- 
nargh ; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 4, m. 2. 
In the time of Edward IV John son of 
Edward (? Edmund) Threlfall recovered a 
tenement in Goosnargh against John 
son of John Threlfall ; ibid. 55, m. 12. 
Eleanor widow of John son of John 
Threlfall recovered dower in Goosnargh 
and Ribchester in 1488 against John son 
of Edmund Threlfall ; Pal. of Lanc. Writs 
Proton. 3 Hen. VII. 

Edmund Threlfall in 1568 purchased 
an acre in Threlfall and Goosnargh from 
Robert Midgehall ; ibid. Feet of F. bdle. 
3% m. 47. It was no doubt the same 
Edmund who in 1570 claimed (by descent) 
land beside the Chewe in Goosnargh ; 
Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), ii, 402. 

9 Lancs, Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 91 5 
his land in Threlfall, &c., was held of 


A brother 


Richard Shuttleworth and Barton Fleet- 
wood his wife by the rent of a glove—see 
the Barton inquest in note 97% His 
wife (Juliana Hesketh) survived him, 

69 In 1607; Cal. S. P. Dom. 1603-10, 


p- 383. 

61 John Threlfall died in 1625 holding 
his messuage, &c., in Threlfall of Richard 
Shuttleworth of Barton, and leaving as 
heir his brother William, aged seventeen ; 
Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 1182. 

William Threlfall, using the aliases of 
Parkinson or MHoghton, entered the 
English College at Rome in 1627, being 
twenty years of age. He is identified as 
the son of Edmund by his mother’s name, 
Hesketh. He stated that ‘he was born 
in the parish of Goosnargh near Preston, 
where he was chiefly brought up until 
seventeen years of age ; he lived after- 
wards at Burton [? Barton] in the same 
county. He made his early studies and 
his humanities at St. Omer’s College. His 
friends on his father’s side were chiefly of 
the lower class, but those on his mother’s 
were of good family. He had two 
brothers and two sisters, and many rela- 
tions, nearly all of whom were Catholics 
as he himself always was.’ He died of 
consumption in 1628 ; Foley, Rec. S. J. 
vi, 313. 

82 Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 3094. Nothing 
is said about recusancy but for that his 
mother Juliana’s part of the estate stood 
sequestered ; ibid. The estate was ordered 
for sale ; Index of Royalists (Index Soc.), 


63 If any part of the story of the 
‘Lancashire Plot’ is to be believed 
Edmund Threlfall took an active part ; 
Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 293. 
He was buried 24 Aug. 1690 ; ibid. 315. 

64 He is frequently mentioned in the 
Tyldesley Diary, 22, 107, &c. He was a 
Jacobite also. 

65 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath, Non- 
jurors, 144. He was then ‘of Bils- 
borrow.’ 

66 Fishwick, op. cit. 167; ‘ Ashes 
became part of the possessions of the 
Parkinsons of Clitheroe, and in or about 
1830 it was conveyed to the Rev. James 


195 


Roman Catholic family.” 


In consequence of their 


Radcliffe of Kirkham and Whitechapel 
and subsequently to its present [1871] 
owner, William Shawe of Preston, esq. 
In the same place are given some par- 
ticulars of another Threlfall family, of 
Barton. Another one occurs at Clifton, 

67 The doorhead is illustrated ibid. 164. 

68 Preston Guard. 22 Feb. 1908. 

69 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 232; George Beesley of Hill. 

 Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cata. i, 
170. 

"nl Ibid.; Challoner, Miss. Priests, 
no. 88 ; Douay Diaries, 238, &c. 5 Pollen, 
Acts of Martyrs, 291, &c. The cause of 
his beatification was allowed to be intro- 
duced at Rome in 1886. Another brother 
was a missionary priest in England. 

7 Francis Beesley died in 1609 holding 
two messuages, &c., of Sir Richard 
Hoghton. His heir was his son George, 
twenty-three years old; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc, Lancs. and Ches.), i, 138. 

73 In a deed of 1723 is mention of 
James Blackburne of the Hill, son and 
heir of James; his mother Bridget was 
living ; Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), iii, 
220, from R. 8 of Geo. I at Preston. 
Another deed gives the pedigree thus : 
Robert Blackburne -s. John —s. James —s. 
James (1723); ibid. 224. The last- 
named James [a priest] died at Lisbon 
about 1754 without issue; his co-heirs 
were two aunts, Grace Blackburne and 
her sister Elizabeth, wife of George Sedg- 
wick ; ibid. 286, from R. 31 of Geo. II 
at Preston. Thomas Starkie of Preston 
seems from this to have purchased the 
estate in 1757. See Gillow, op. cit. ili, 
260. 

It may be noted that Adam son of Adam 
de Blackburn gave land in Goosnargh to 
his son Henry (Add. MS. 32104, no. 
1170), and that Joho and Robert, sons 
of Henry de Blackburn, occur in 1360; 
Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 342. : 

74 Fishwick, Goosnargh, 154. A pedi- 
gree is given, from which it appears that 
Cuthbert Hesketh of White Hill was a 
son of Gabriel Hesketh of Aughton— 
therefore probably descendant of the 
Bartholomew Hesketh named under 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


taking part in the Civil War on the king’s side their 
estate was sequestered,”® and on their afterwards 
joining in the rebellion of 1715 it was forfeited,” 
and has since had many owners.” Some other 
estates in Threlfall have points of interest in their 
history.’ Higher Lickhurst was acquired by the 
trustees of the Goosnargh Hospital in 1819.” 

The Ven. William Marsden is said to have been 
born at a farm called the Mountain, on the east side 
of Beacon Fell, about 1563. He was ordained priest 
at Rheims in 1586 and sent on the English mission, 
but the ship he sailed in was driven ashore on the 
Isle of Wight. Marsden was captured, and, rejecting 
the equivocation suggested by a lenient judge, was 
condemned and suffered death as a traitor 25 April 
1586. 


1600 held by a branch of the Helme family," of 
whom other branches appear in Goosnargh and Chip- 
ping.” [t was purchased by Sir Nicholas Shireburne 
of Stonyhurst in 1694." 

MIDDLETON at one time gave surname to a 
local family.“ Afterwards it occurs in connexion with 
the Coore,® Greenhills“ and Singleton families,” 
the story being made clear by pleadings of 1447 
and later, in which Alan Singleton claimed three 
messuages, 6 acres of land and 12d. rent in Goosnargh 
against John Catterall, late of Flasby in Craven. It 
appeared that Richard son of Grimbald de Coore in 
the time of Edward II gave the property to Geoffrey 
son of Grimbald de Coore (by fine in 1323), and it 
descended to Adam son and heir of Geoffrey to Adams 
daughter Christiana (wife of William de Greenhills in 


In the Church tithing the KJRKHOUSE was about 


Kidsnape—and legatee of Sir Thomas 
Hesketh of Helsington, whose estate 
went to Cuthbert’s eldest son, a 
younger son Gabriel having White 
Hill. A pedigree of the family under 
the title of ‘Hesketh of Preston’ was 
recorded in 1664 ; Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. 
Soc.), 137- 

Notices of two priests of the family— 
Roger Hesketh, D.D., and Bartholomew 
Hesketh, O.S.B. —will be found in Gillow, 
op. cit. ili, 287-9. 

78 For recusancy and delinquency ; Cal. 
Com. for Comp. iv, 2960; Royalist Comp. 
Papers (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 
186-94. 

78 Gabriel’s son Cuthbert, who died in 
1702, settled White Hill on his nephew 
Gabriel. This Gabriel and his son Cuth- 
bert were both attainted of high treason 
in 1716. Under the settlement the heir 
was John Sallom, son of Anne, the sister 
of Gabriel, and under a Private Act of 
1735-6 (9 Geo. II, cap. 36) he obtained 
possession ; Fishwick, loc. cit. Gabriel 
Hesketh and his sons Thomas and Roger 
were parties to an agreement as to a re- 
covery of White Hill in 1725-6 ; Piccope 
MSS. (Chet. Lib.), iii, 230, from R. 12 
of Geo. I at Preston. The forfeiture may 
have been partial only. 

7 John Sallom sold in 1737 to William 
Lucas, who died in 1771. His trustees 
sold to Thomas Cardwell, whose son sold 
it to Edward Harrison, and after the death 
of his son in 1826 it was sold to Robert 
Snell. In 1871 it was owned by George 
Hargreaves of Leyland. See Fishwick, 
loc. cit., quoting the title deeds. 

78 By a deed passed in the early part of 
the 13th century Richard Fitton granted 
to Adam de Hoghton (Hoyton) and his 
heirs all his right in the land of Loud- 
scales (Ludecholis}, which the grantor’s 
father had of the gift of Avice daughter 
of Bernard ; Dods. MSS. exlii, fol. 116. 
Loudscales was owned by Christopher 
White in 1657, and by Thomas Knowles 
in 16743 Preston Guard. Loc. Sketches, 
no. 629. It now belongs to the Knowles 
charity. The forest bounds c. 1230 
“ascended the Loud between Ch ppingdale 
and Threlfall’ ; Farrer, Lancs. Pite R. 425. 

In 1246 Michael son of Michael de 
Thornton claimed 2 oxgangs of land in 
Threlfall against Richard son of Michael, 
but he was non-suited ; Assize R. 404, 
m. 6. 

Of Crombleholme Fold an account may 
be read in Fishwick, op. cit.175. A sun- 
dial bears the inscription RxCxIxCx 
1697. 


Walter Curwen of Caton held lands 
in Goosnargh by Fairhurst of Sir Richard 
Hoghton in 1457, and Gilbert Curwen 
held of Sir Alexander and his partners, 
lords of Goosnargh, in 1484; Lancs. Ing. 
pom, (Chet. Soc.), ii, 64, 114. Thomas 
Curwen and Nicholas his son and heir in 
1587 sold a messuage to Robert Walker ; 
Pal. of Lane. Feet of F. bdle. 49, m. 113. 
George Curwen died in 1629 holding a 
meesuage in Threlfall, tenure unrecorded, 
and leaving as heir his nephew, the son of 
his sister Janet by William Trout ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxviii, no. 24. 

Richard Singleton of Brockholes in 
1499 held land in Threlfall by unknown 
tenure, but in 1556 William Singleton 
held his land (probably the same) of the 
Prior of St. John; ibid. iii, no. 52; x, 
no, I. 

18 End. Char. Rep. 44. 

Lickhurst, which had formed a part 
of the Hospitallers’ estate, was held by 
the Catteralls. In 1480 Ellen widow of 
Robert Beesley was ordered to render to 
Richard Catterall the manor of Lick- 
hurst ; Pal. of Lanc, Writs of Assize, 
20 Edw. IV. It passed to Townley of 
Barnside, as already shown. 

%° Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. iv, 
464; Liverpool Cath. Annual, 1888; 
Pollen, Acts of Martyrs, 66-82. Marsden 
acknowledged Elizabeth to be lawful 
queen, ‘and took himself bound to obey 
her majesty, so far as his obedience im- 
peached not his duties to God and to the 
Church,’ but refused to promise ‘not to 
deal with any of her Majesty’s subjects in 
matters of religion.’ The introduction of 
the cause of his beatification was allowed 
at Rome in 1886 ; ibid. 379. 

51 George Helme was a freeholder in 
1600 ; Misc. (Rec, Soc, Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 233. For the estate see Fishwick, op. 
cit. 184~5. 

In the Commonwealth time one Robert 
Helme had two-thirds of his estate 
sequestered for recusancy, but in 1650-1 
Edward Rigby claimed it as part of his 
grandfather’s estate, the said Helme having 
become tenant in 16413; Royalist Comp. 
Papers (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 
179. 
52 Notices of several members of the 
family will be found in Gillow, Bibl. Dict. 
of Engl. Cath. iii, 261. 

% A number of deeds relating to Kirk- 
house are catalogued in the Shireburne 
abstract book at Leagram. It appears 
that in 1662 and later Thomas Helme of 
Kirkhouse and William his son mortgaged 
the estate; William had succeeded by 


196 


1393), who had two children—William, who died 


1669, and his son, also named William, 
sold to Sir N. Shireburne, who arranged 
with the mortgagees. 

84 In 1292 Richard son of Patrick de 
Middleton was non-suited in his ciaim 
for a tenement in Goosnargh held by 
Hugh son of Patrick; Assize R. 408, 
m. 92 d, 

Middleton, Greenhills and Coore all 
appear in the subsidy roll of 1332; Exch, 
Lay Subs, (Rec, Soc. Lancs, and Chea), 59. 

85 Geoffrey son of Gilbert de Coore 
(Couer) secured four messuages, an ox- 
gang of land, &c., in Goosnargh and Mid- 
dleton in 1323 from Richard son of 
Grimbald de Coore. The remainders 
were to Geoffrey's children—Adam, John, 
Christiana and Hilda—and then to his 
brother Richard ; Final Conc. ii, 53. 

Sir Adam de Hoghton was plaintiff in 
1367 against John son of Geoffrey de 
Coore Corese) in respect of certain pas- 
ture ; Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 5, m. 8. 
A messuage, half an oxgang of land, &c., 
were in 1359 recovered by Jane wife of 
William de Caton—she being daughter 
of Richard son of William de Coore— 
against Robert de Middleton ; ibid. 7, 
m. 1d. 

86 This family probably took its sur- 
name from a place in Medlar. William 
de Greenhills in 1315 obtained a mes- 
suage and land in Goosnargh from Richard 
son of Adam de Greenhills and Alice his 
wife. It was Alice’s right and was to 
descend to John son of William ; Final 
Cone. ii, 22. 

In 1393 Alan de Catterall acquired 
from William de Greenhills and Christi- 
ana his wife three messuages, &c. ; ibid. 
iii, 42. 

William and Christiana were concerned 
in suits as to land in 1368 and 1371} 
De Banco R. 432, m. 449 4.5 444 
mM. 425. 

A Wiliiam de Greenhill was outlawed 
in 1381 ; Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 


35% The pleadings recited in the text 
probably indicate that Alan Singleton had 
part but not all the Greenhills-Coore 
inheritance. Alan’s estate in the main 
descended by Anne hie daughter and 
heiress to her husband Sir William Ley- 
land of Morleys (Visit. of 152%, P 88), 
who died in 1547 holding lands, &c in 
Goosnargh of the king by the third part 
of a knight's fee ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. 
p.m. ix, no. 43. The tenure of his heir 
Edward Tyldesley in 1621 was not fe- 
corded ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ity 
261. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


without issue, and Alice, mother of the plaintiff. The 
defendant replied that one Alan de Catterall had had 
postesion and had given it to defendant and his son 
ohn." 

The Singletons having established their claim, 
granted it to endow a chantry. On the suppression 
of these foundations it was acquired by Robert 
Helme, whose sons defended their right as against 
Thomas Tyldesley, the representative of the founders.” 
It was acquired not long afterwards by Alexander 
Rigby of Wigan, who died in 1621 holding Middleton 
Hall, Topping House, with dovecote, lands, &c., of 
the king as of his manor of Clitheroe ; also Eyves 
Hall, of the Earl of Derby (formerly the Hospitallers’ 
land), by rd. rent; and a messuage, &c., in Aspen- 
hurst of Sir Richard Hoghton by 5s. rent. His son 
and heir Alexander was twenty-six years of age.” 

The younger Alexander ® was a bencher of Gray’s 
Inn. He resided at Ribby, being perhaps desirous 
of the style of Rigby of Ribby. He was returned 
for the Short Parliament in 1640 and then for the 
Long Parliament as a member for Wigan, at once 
distinguishing himself as a zealous Puritan. On the 
outbreak of the Civil War he showed himself equally 
active on the Parliamentary side, first as a civilian, 
sequestrator, &c.,” and then as a soldier with a 


KIRKHAM 


tenant-colonel under him, and raised a company 
within Goosnargh. He took Thurland Castle, after 
a siege of seven weeks, in October 1643, but lost his 
reputation next year by the fruitless leaguer of Lathom 
House and the defeat at Bolton. He then seems to 
have retired from war and devoted his attention to 
Parliament and to the sequestering of ‘ Papists’ and 
delinquents’ estates.” His son Alexander, however, 
continued his military career. The father was 
appointed one of the judges of Charles I, but did 
not act. In 1649 he was made a baron of the 
Exchequer, but did not enjoy his dignity long, dying 
18 August 1650. In religion he was an Independent, 
hostile to Presbyterianism as well as to Episcopacy. 
His son Alexander seems to have been a member 
of the Presbyterian Classis in 1646. 

This son succeeded to Middleton, and was member 
of Parliament for Lancaster in 1658. He and his 
brother Edward fell under suspicion at the beginning 
of the reign of James II, and were ordered into 
custody in 1685. Alexander Rigby died in 1694," 
and from him the estate descended to the Knowles 
family, but there is nothing in the history to call for 
remark. 

To this part of the township may have belonged 
the family or families using Goosnargh as a surname. 


colonel’s commission. 


87a Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 10, m. 294; 
I1,m. 9. Another messuage here with 
24 acres of land was in 1449 claimed by 
the same Alan Singleton against Alan son 
of John Catterall. It was alleged that 
Adam de Greenhills and Alice his wife 
gave it i ae son of William de Green- 
hills in the time of Edward II, after 
which it descended thus: John -s, Wil- 
liam -s, William -sister Alice -s. Alan 
Singleton the plaintiff. The jury found 
for the defendant ; ibid. 12, m. 19, 84. 

In 1498 a settlement was made of the 
estate in Goosnargh and Middleton of 
the daughters and heirs of Alan Carr, 
viz. Anne wife of John Lynstede and 
Joan wife of John Browne; Final Conc. 
ili, 147. 

Alan Singleton claimed a messuage and 
oxgang of land from Joan and Anne in 
1469 in right of his descent from Geoffrey 
de Coore, and Roger Singleton seems to 
have held it; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 36, 
m. 5; 86, m. 5. 

88 Lands in Chaigley, Aighton, Goos- 
nargh and Middleton were in 1508 in the 
hands of one Roger Singleton, apparently 
as trustee for Alan Singleton deceased, 
and he gave them to the chantry trustees ; 
Fishwick, op. cit. 215-18. 

89 Ibid. 207-10, where the pleadings 
of 1582 are printed. The plaintiffs, 
George and Henry Helme, stated that 
Edward VI in 1549 granted Middleton 
and other chantry lands to William 
Eccleston and Anthony Layton to hold 
as of his manor of Clitheroe, and the 
grantees conveyed to Roger Helme, plain- 
tiffe’ father. After Roger’s death his sons 
in 1566 divided the estate. (See Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 28, m. 45, 60.) 
Tyldesley claimed as heir of Leyland, 
alleging that Middleton had never belonged 
to the chantry, 

George Helme acquired a messuage, 
&c., in Goosnargh from Thomas Eccleston 
and Joan his wife in 1573 ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle, 35, m. 80. He probably 
bad Kirkhouse. 

Henry Helme died in 1589 holding a 


His son Alexander was lieu- 


capital messuage called Middleton (by gift 
of his father Robert), held of the queen as of 
her manor of Clitheroe in socage. Leonard, 
his son and heir, was nine years old in 
1596; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvii, 
no. 92. Leonard died in 1601 holding 
the estate, and leaving a son (? brother) 
Thomas, aged seventeen, to inherit it ; 
ibid. xviii, no. 20. 

9 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), iii, 456 5 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxv, no. 31 ; 
xxviii, no. 82, in which Fairhurst, said to 
be held of William Hyde of Denton, was 
found to have gone to a younger son 
Joseph Rigby. 

Alexander Rigby (the father) was son 
of John Rigby of Wigan, whose brother 
Alexander was seated at Burgh in Dux- 
bury ; see the account of the family in 
Pal. Note Bk. iii, 137, &c. 

Adam Rigby, rector of Eccleston in 
Leyland, was in 1632 said to have held 
his land in Cross Ground and Fairhurst 
of the same William Hyde by knight’s 
service and rent. The heir was the 
younger Alexander named in the text, 
being a nephew; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. 
pm. xxvii, no. 30; Towneley MS. C 8, 
13 (Chet. Lib.), roog. 

91 This account is from the Pal. Note 
Bk. loc. cit. See also Dict. Nat. Biog. 
There is a portrait in Fishwick, op. cit. 
146. 

2 The Royalist view may be gathered 
from Peter Barwick: ‘One Rigby, a 
scoundrel of the very dregs of the Parlia- 
ment rebels, did at that time expose these 
venerable persons [ William Beale, Master 
of St. John’s College, Cambridge, &c. ] 
to sale, and would actually have sold them 
for slaves if any one would have bought 
them’; Vita J. Barwick, 23. 

93 Pal. Note Bk. iii, 169. Baron Rigby’s 
lordship of the province of Lygonia in 
Maine (New England) is related ibid. 
181-7. His son Edward, also a lawyer, 
who ‘took to crooked ways,’ succeeded 
him in that estate. 

George Rigby, brother of the baron, 
settled at Peel in Hulton; his daughter 


197 


They occur in the pleadings, but the nature of 


Alice had some land in Goosnargh ; Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 160, m. 63. 

A pedigree was recorded in 1664; 
Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 245. 

94 Fishwick, loc. cit., where there is a 
pedigree from which the following outline 
of the descent is taken : Alexander Rigby, 
d. 1694 -s. Thomas, d. 1709 —s. Alexan- 
der, d. 1716 -s. Townley, d. 1777 -8. 
Alexander sister Sarah, d. 1832, m. 
William Shawe —da. Sally, m. Joseph 
Knowles —s. Towneley Rigby Knowles. 
See the account of Fishwick in Preston. 

In the Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), iii, 
118, 122, may be seen the claim of 
Townley Rigby, a Quaker, son and heir 
of Alexander Rigby, to aseat in Kirkham 
Church, 1726; the covenant on his 
marriage with Grace daughter of Sir 
Edward Hill, 1730; and the will of 
Lieut.-Col. Alexander Rigby, 1792, 
settling the descent of the messuage 
called Middleton in Goosnargh, lands at 
Ribby, &c. 

% Margery widow of Ranulf son of 
Bernard de Goosnargh was (as above) a 
defendant in 1291; De Banco R. 90, 
m. 98d. In the following yearin different 
pleas respecting lands in Goosnargh 
Richard son of Robert de Goosnargh was 
plaintiff, Robert de Goosnargh and others, 
also Henry son of Ranulf de Goosnargh, 
were defendants; Assize R. 408, m. 
36d, 96, 54d. Three years later John 
son of William son of Thomas de 
Goosnargh had a dispute as to their in- 
heritance with Richard son of William 
de Goosnargh ; Assize R, 1306, m. 19d. 
Richard son of William son of Thomas 
was called to warrant in 1306; De 
Banco R. 161, m. 107. 

Isold widow of Richard claimed dower 
in 1311 against Walter son of Robert de 
Ayrdale and Agnes daughter of Roger de 
Cumberhalgh ; De Banco R. 187, m 


105. Possibly she was the wife of Adam 
de Rideleys in 13153 ibid. 209, m. 
82. 


Walter de Goosnargh seems to have 
been a more important man than any of 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


their estate is unknown, except in the case of Alexander 
Goosnargh of Stalmine, who died in 1524 holding 
lands in the township of Richard Hoghton in socage ; 
the heir was a grandson Alexander Wering.* Eaves 
or Eyves Hall has been mentioned among the 
possessions of Alexander Rigby ; some particulars 
have been preserved of Eaves Green.” 
BRADCROFT, which may stand for the obscure 
third part of the manor once belonging to Longford, 
was owned by the Bartons of the adjacent township of 
Barton,?”* who long held KIDSNAPE of the Hoghton 
family by a rent of 6s. 84. William Clifton,” 
described as ‘of Kidsnape,’ died in 1517 holding 
lands in the tithing of Richard Hoghton and John 
Boteler by servicesunknown. He left three daughters 
and heirs—lIsabel, aged twenty-nine, wife of Ralph 
Venables in 15283; Joan, twenty-six, who married 
John Beconsaw ; and Anne, twenty, who married 


BEESLEY gave a surname to one or more local 
families. That seated in Threlfall has been mentioned 
above, and it is not possible to trace the others or 
state their tenures exactly, though they are often 
named in pleadings and other records.'” Jane the 
wife of Henry Beesley died in 1585, and Henry died 
in 1591 holding half a messuage, &c., called Barnard 
House or the Hey of Beesley, the tenure of which 
was not recorded. The heir was a son William.'* 
Thomas Beesley, who died in 1637, held ‘ Beesley’s 
lands’; his son Robert, aged forty, was heir!™ 
IWWHINNY CLOUGH was part of the Hoghton 
estate in the time of Elizabeth; later held by the 
Bamber family of Poulton, and more recently by the 
Parks of Preston.* It is now owned by Mr. William 
P. Park of Ashton-on-Ribble,% 

In Longley tithing Higher and Lower BARKER 
are noteworthy. About 1450 Barker in Goosnargh 


Bartholomew Hesketh.!” 


the above. In 1302 he had a suit with 
William son of Robert de Thistleton ; 
Assize R. 418, m. 64. He was called to 
warrant in 1312-14 in a suit between 
Roger de Wedacre and William son of 
Grimbald de Coore and Alice his wife ; 
De Banco R. 195, m.184 d. ; 207, m.148 ; 
212, m. 283d. John son of Walter de 
Goosnargh claimed land against Roger 
de Wedacre in 1324 ; ibid. 251, m. 154. 

Hugh son of Ranulf de Goosnargh in 
1314-15 gave his land in Whittingham 
to his sons Richard and Thomas; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 12. 

Robert Goosnargh in 1481 gave his 
land in the Snape and Westfield to the 
brothers Edmund and Henry Elswick ; 
Kuerden fol. MS. 153-4. 

°° Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, 
no. §5. In 1582 one William Waring 
was party to a division of lands in 
Whittingham and Goosnargh; he took 
those in the former township and John 
Taylor those in the latter; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 44, m. 139. John 
Taylor, Anne his wife, James his son 
and Ellen his wife occur in 1593 ; ibid. 
bdle. 55, m. 48. 

97 John Catterall of Selby, the elder, 
attainted in 14.61, had the manor of Eaves 
Green, with messuages and land in 
Goosnargh, Hackinsall, and Dilworth ; 
Chan. Ing. pom. 11 Edw. IV, no. 35. 
The tenures were not recorded. The 
manor with the rest of the estate was in 
1472 granted to John Pilkington (Cal. 
Pat. 1467-77, pp» 307, 419), who died in 
possession in 1478, leaving a son and heir 
Edward, twelve years old; Chan. Ing. 
p-m., 19 Edw. IV, no. 77. In 1625 the 
tenant was Richard Harrison; Fish- 
wick, op. cit. 68. 

In 1633 Alexander Rigby made in- 
quiry as to the ‘manor’ of Eaves Green. 
He believed it was the land he owned, 
‘only a little common . . . before the 
inclosure ... and no manor.’ There was, 
however, another little common ‘near 
the burgh’ called by the same name ; 
Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 52. 

9a Gilbert Barton in 1516 held Kid- 
snape of the heirs of Sir Alexander 
Hoghton by 6s. 8d. rent, otherwise 
of Henry Kighley and Elizabeth his wife 
(in her right), In addition Gilbert 
held an oxgang of land there of Ralph 
Catterall by a pound of cummin—this 
was perhaps the Sandyclough of another 
inquisition ; other messuages, of tenure 
not recorded, and lands, &c. yielding a 


was a portion of the estates of Richard Clifton of 


rent of 4s. g}d. and a pair of gloves, held 
of the king by the third part of the fifth 
part of a knight’s fee and 18d. rent ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, no. 7 5 
y, no. 6. Bradcroft is mentioned in the 
second inquisition, but the tenure is not 
separately stated ; in 1572 Richard Barton 
was said to have held it of the queen 
by the third part of a knight’s fee and 
18d, rent; ibid. xii, no. 9. At the same 
time a place called Spinster House in 
Goosnargh, which had been given to John 
Barton, younger son of Richard, was 
stated to be held of Thomas Hoghton by 
34. rent. 

Thomas Barton and Anne his wife in 
1593 sold various messuages, &c., to James 
Gregson ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle, 
55, m. 157. In 1603 Thomas Barton 
of Barton (nephew of Thomas Barton of 
Kidsnape) was stated to have held his 
lands in Kidsnape of Sir Richard Hoghton 
by 6s. 8d. rent and Thomas Procter by 
1d. or a pair of gloves. He also held 
some land, newly inclosed, of the king 
by knight’s service; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc.), i, 7-11. 

88 John son of Adam de Barton and 
Alice his wife sold land in Goosnargh to 
Richard son of Nicholas de Hiles in 1322; 
Final Cone. ii, 47. In the following year 
the family had two messuages, &c., in the 
township ; ibid. 56. The same estate 
appears again in 1381; ibid. iii, 10. 

In 1292 a Jordan de Kidsnape claimed 
land in Goosnargh against Walter son of 
Robert de Ayrdale, but was non-suited ; 
Assize R. 408, m. 46. 

89 It was no doubt an earlier William 
Clifton to whom, in conjunction with 
Joan his wife, Thomas Barton and Agnes 
his wife in 1444 granted all his land in 
Kidsnape, with 5s. a year from Gibbe- 
field, at arent of 10 marks; Add. MS. 
32104, no, 706. 

In 1473 Ralph Whitehead granted 
Kidsnape to Margaret and Joan, daughters 
of Thomas Barton; Kuerden MSS. iv, 
G 9. See also the account of Upper 
Rawcliffe. 

109 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, no, 21. 
In a previous inquisition (iv, no. 11) 
William Clifton’s lands ‘in Goosnargh ’ 
were said to be held of the king as of his 
duchy by the sixth part of a knight’s fee. 

A minor Clifton family occurs in the 
18th century; Lancs. and Ches. Antiz. 
Notes, ii, 35+ 

101 John son of Adam de Barton in 
1315-16 gave land in Beesley to Richard 


198 


son of Nicholas del Hiles; Dods. MSS. 
liii, fol. 93, and see note 98. 

108To Cockersand Abbey in the first 
part of the 13th century Adam son of 
Ralph gave land of his demesne next to 
land held by Richard de Beesley of the 
Lady Beatrice ; Cockersand Chartul, (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 239. Adam de Goosnargh gave 
lands to Thomas de Beesley, Thomas 
Travers being then sheriff (1302-6); 
Dods. MSS, cxlix, fol. 784, This deed 
was in 1597 in the possession of George 
Beesley of Goosnargh. 

Gilbert de Beesley and Adam his 
brother attested a charter (undated) ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 1891, William 
son of Gilbert de Beesley was in 1305 
defendant in two claims, one for dowet 
put forward by Agnes widow of Gilbert, 
and the other for certain land, by William 
son of Richard Russel of Woodplumpton ; 
De Banco R. 153, m. 256d; 156, 
m. 172d. William son of Nicholas de 
Beesley claimed a messuage, 10 acres of 
land, &c., against Ellen widow of William 
de Beesley in 1354.3 Duchy of Lane. 
Assize R. 3, m.y. The defendant sum- 
moned William son of William de 
Beesley to warrant her, he being next of 
kin and heir of Iseud de Beesley ; ibid. 
4, m. 1§. Shortly afterwards (1356) 
in a cross-suit William son of Nicholas 
claimed from Ellen the widow two mes- 
suages given by Gilbert de Beesley to 
Adam de Beesley and his issue with re- 
mainder to Nicholas, Adam (living in 
the time of Edward II) died without 
issue, and thus Nicholas succeeded, and 
his right descended to his son the 
plaintiff. William son of William, who 
warranted, said the remainder was to 
William de Beesley his grandfather; 
ibid. 5, m. 19d. 

In 1488 Alexander Ambrose and 
Margaret his wife claimed lands in 
Goosnargh and other places agaist 
Thomas Lawrence, Margaret his wife, 
Thomas Beesley and Joan his wife; 
Pal. of Lanc. Writs Proton. 3 Hen. VIII. 

Cecily widow of Robert Beesley was 4 
plaintiff in 15363 Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. 
Com.), i, 155. ' 

103 Duchy of Lance. Ing. pm. *¥%s 
no. 24. 104 Thid, xxviii, no. 62. 

105In 1570 Thomas, base son of 
Thomas Hoghton, laid claim to Whinay 
Clough ; Ducatus Lanc. ii, 392+ 

106 For a full account see Fishwick, 
op. cit, 179-81. 

106a Information of Mr. Park. 


GoosnarGH : INGLEWHITE VILLAGE 


Z o Din ime tes VEO 
eosin HE BETES 


i at 


ee 


Goosnarcu HospitTaL 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Clifton!” Of Higher Barker there is little to be 
said! ; Lower was about 1670-80 the residence of 
the lord of the manor of Goosnargh, John Warren 
of Poynton,” who in 1674 procured the royal charter 
for holding two fairs annually at Inglewhite in this 
tithing." JINGLE HITE was the estate of a family 
named Sidgreaves,"' of whom Christopher was re- 
corded as a freeholder in 1600," and James recorded 
his estate asa ‘Papist” in 1717."* He died in 1759 
and was succeeded by a son James, whose great- 
grandson dying without issue in 1853 the estate was 
sold." In 1869 it became the property of William 
Shawe of Preston, and is now held by the Knowles 
trustees. 

BLACKHALL or Blakehall'® was long the seat 
of a family named Midgehall."* George Midgehall 
died in 1557, leaving a son Robert, aged thirty-three, 
heir toan estate comprising Brabinfield in Goosnargh, 
held of Richard Hoghton by 18d. rent, two messuages 
held of the Crown as of the dissolved monastery of 
Cockersand by 12¢. rent, 3 acres held of the heirs of 
Ralph Catterall by the rent of a catapult, and two 
messuages in Threlfall held of the heirs of Richard 
son of Adam de Woodacre.'"” Robert’s son George 
died in 1612, leaving a son Robert as heir,"® and he 
in turn”® left a son George, who died in 1626 under 


KIRKHAM 


age and without issue, the estate then reverting to 
his uncle Edward Midgehall."° This Edward was in 
trouble in the Civil War time, for he took the king’s 
side and his estates were sequestered and ultimately 
sold by the Parliament for his ‘ delinquency.’”! The 
family about that time became Protestant, and 
the estate continued in the male line till 1807, 
when it was sold to James Sidgreaves of Inglewhite 
and was in 1847 purchased by William Shawe of 
Preston,.'” 

LATUS House had more anciently the name of 
Clifton House.'* The family of Latus or Latewise 
held it in the time of Elizabeth and later,’ but by 
1650 it had passed to the Rigby family.® About a 
century later it was in the hands of Parkinson, a 
wide-spreading family found in several parts of the 
township.”* It afterwards went to Talbot and was 
sold to Philip Park of Preston. St. Anne’s Well is on 
this estate. A Longley charter dated 1494 men- 
tions Benetfield, the highway to the church of 
Goosnargh, Tinklerfield and Stonyford.”” 

Of Aspenhurst there is little record except of the 
estate of Fairhurst held by the Rigbys of Middleton, 
already mentioned. 

Little need be said of other estates and landowners 
occurring in the records. 


07 From a deed quoted in Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. iv, no. 48. 

108 Fishwick, op. cit. 171. Barker was 
said to be in Threlfall in 1626; ibid. 174. 

109 He was the ‘Mr. Justice Warren’ 
spoken of ibid. 172. The stocks were 
placed near this house. It was sold to 
John Lucas of Goosnargh about 1760. 

NO Pat, 26 Chas. II (21 Sept.). 

Nl Their house was called the Lodge. 
For the family see Fishwick, Goosnargh, 
173-5, where 14th-century deeds are 
referred to, and the later pedigree is given 
thus : Christopher (1588) —s. James (will 
1626) -s, James, d. 1671 —s. Christopher, 
d. 1702 -s. James, d. 1759 -s. James, d. 
1780 -s. James, d. 1808 ~s. James, d. 
1838 -s, James, d. 1853. See also Mr. 
Gillow in Misc. (Cath. Rec. Soc.), v, 148. 

12 Misc, (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 233. 

8 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. Non- 
jurors, 95. 

14 See note 111, 

15 A family of this surname occurs in 
1410; Dods MSS. cxlii, fol. 614. 

N6 Fishwick, op. cit. 168, &c.. with 
pedigree. 

Thomas son of Thomas Goosnargh 
was in 1418 enfeoffed by his trustees of 
lands in Goosnargh, Barton and Chipping, 
with remainder to William son of Robert 
Midgehall (Miggehalgh) and Alice his 
wife, daughter of Thomas son of Thomas ; 
Dods. MSS. Ixx, fol. 161. 

"7 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. x, no. 22. 
By the inquisition of 1626 it appears that 
Robert Midgehall in 1577 made provision 
for his son George on his marriage with 
Ellen Parkinson. Robert was living in 
1600 ; Misc, (Rec. Soc.), i, 232. 

48 Lanes. Ing, p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 216-17. The capital 
messuage in Goosnargh was stated to be 
held of Sir Richard Hoghton by 20d. rent, 
and land improved from the waste, of the 
king by the two-hundredth part of a 
knight’s fee. 

"19 Thid, iii, 407. 

0 Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. xxvi, no. 
39. The capital messuage was held as in 


1612, but the other land was held partly 
of the king by knight’s service and partly 
(in Threlfall) of Richard Shireburne in 
socage. 

121 Index of Royalists (Index Soc.), 43 3 
Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 32013; Royalist 
Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
iv, 138-9. Part of the estate had been 
sequestered for the recusancy of Edward’s 
mother Margaret, who died in 1649 ; part 
also for the recusancy of Alice Midgehall, 
also dead. Alice appears to have been the 
widow of Edward’s elder brother Robert. 

For a dispute as to the estate in 1667 
see Exch. Dep. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), 45. 122 Fishwick, ut sup. 

128 Tt is also called Longley Hall ; ibid. 
181. 

124 Gilbert Latus held Clifton House 
in 1556 by bequest of his father-in-law 
William Westby of Mowbreck ; Richmond 
Wills (Surtees Soc.), 91. He died in 
1568 holding a capital messuage, 60 acres 
of land, &c., of Gilbert Gerard by a rent 
of 6s. with other lands in Warton, 
Thistleton, &c. His son and heir 
William was twenty-four years old; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xii, no. 11. 
The tenure shows that it had been part 
of the Balderston estate, and this again 
had probably descended from the Banastres 
and Singletons. Portions of this estate 
are found from the inquisitions to have 
been held by Edmund Dudley (1509), 
Thomas Earl of Derby (1521), Thomas 
Radcliffe of Winmarleigh and his suc- 
cessors. The tenure is sometimes de- 
scribed as of Osbaldeston, at other times 
of the king as duke ; ibid. v, no. 35 viii, 
no. 26; xi, no. 7. Part of it may have 
been augmented by the Hopersfield sold 
by William Ward of Ottley and Alice his 
wife to Sir James Harrington in 1408 ; 
Dods. MSS. liii, fol. go. 

William Latus died in 1609 holding a 
messuage, &c., of Sir Richard Hoghton 
by 16d. rent, and leaving as heir a son 
Matthew, aged thirty ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc.), i, 137- William Latus was 
one of the recusants whose sequestrations 
were in 1607 granted to Sir Richard 


199 


Cockersand Abbey and 


Coningsby ; Cal, S. P. Dom. 1603-10, 
Pp» 383. 

5 These statements are from Fishwick, 
op. cit. 182. 

126 Richard Parkinson was a tenant 
under Catterall in 1520-35 for land in 
Threlfall ; Duchy of Lance. Dep. xxxi, P. 1. 

Complaint was made of the abduction 
of Edmund son and heir of Thomas 
Parkinson of Goosnargh in 1540, his 
marriage pertaining to Nicholas Turner ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Writs Proton. 32 Hen. 
VIII. 

William Parkinson (of Bilsborrow) held 
Hutchenhey in 1592, but the tenure was 
not stated; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
xvii, no. 21. His son Edward was in 
1617 said to hold the same of Sir Richard 
Hoghton and Catch House of Thomas 
Catterall by 4s. rent; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc.), ii, 215. Roger Parkinson (of 
another family) held lands in 1622 of the 
Earl of Derby as successor of the Knights 
Hospitallers; he left as co-heirs three 
young daughters—Alice, Janet and Mar- 
garet ; ibid. iii, 309-10. 

Many references to the families will be 
found in the Ducatus Lanc. 

127 Duchy of Lanc. Anct. D. (P.R.O.), 
L 1199; a grant from John son and heir 
of John Westfield to Christopher Leeming 
of Lancaster, of a messuage, &c., in 
Longley. 

128 Cockersand Abbey estate has been 
recorded; for rentals 1451-1537 see 
Chartul. iii, 1270-1. One grant to the 
abbey was made by Adam son of Ralph 
which concerned Fayles, the bounds 
naming (among other points) Selebrook 
and Helmer housesteads; ibid. i, 238. 
In 1246 Richard son of Robert sought 
common of pasture in Goosnargh against 
Robert de Faleghs ; Assize R. 404, m. 5. 

The award in a suit between Lancaster 
Priory and Cockersand Abbey about a 
grange in ‘Trefeld’ is in B.M. Add. 
Charter 19818. 

In 1377 John de Elswick made a 
feoffment of lands in Goosnargh ana 
Whittingham ; Kuerden MSS. v, 117, 
no, 10. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Conishead Priory had some land in the township.'” 
John Singleton of Chingle Hall died in 1530 holding 
of Richard Hoghton by a rent of 65. 84." William 
Wilson in 1619 held lands of Sir Richard Hoghton 
by a rent of 5s.; they had been purchased from 
Thomas Shireburne and had no doubt formed part 
of the Catterall estate.'*' Joshua Gallard in 1638 held 
his lands of the king by the two-hundredth part of a 
knight’s fee."** William Barnes’s messuage and lands 
were held of James Lord Strange as of his manor of 
Goosnargh by ss. td. rent.'* In other cases the 
tenure is stated either vaguely ™ or not at all.'* 

Under the Commonwealth rule the estates of a 
number of Royalists and recusants were sequestered 
and in some cases sold outright."* In 1717 nine 
estates of ‘ Papists’ were registered.’ 

NEWSHAM, as already stated, was after the 
Conquest a member of the barony of Penwortham, 
and the mesne tenant was the lord of Woodplump- 
ton,!* with which manor it continued to descend till 


cipal holders took the surname of Newsham. Little 
is known of them." Adam de Newsham in 1361 
purchased six messuages, land, 
&c., in Newsham from Roger 
de Farington and Amery his 
wife." John Newsham, living 
in 1467, died in 1515, but 
the tenure of his estate was 
not known ; his heir was his 
grandson John, then aged 
fourteen."? A pedigree was 
recorded in 1567.8 In 1585 
George Newsham held the 
Newsham Hall estate of John 
Warren by 17s. rent. Robert 
Newsham was a freeholder in 
1600." Soon afterwards the 
family disappeared from view, and Newsham Hall 
was before 1660 acquired by the Wilsons of Tunley 
in Wrightington ; by them it was sold to John Bourne 


ep 


Newswam of New. 
sham. Acxure ona fesse 
argent three creslea 


gules. 


the 17th century or later.” 


129 Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 94. 

130 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. vi, no. 
32. This continued to descend with 
Chingle Hall. 

‘SU Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc, Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 223. John Wilson, the 
son and heir, was fifty years of age. 

132 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxx, no. 
17. The heir was his son Edward, aged 
nine. 

383 William Barnes was son and heir of 
John Barnes, who died in 1617 holding 
messuages and land in Goosnargh ; Add. 
MS. 32108, no. 4434. William died in 
1640; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxx, 
no. 30. John Barnes, his son and heir, 
was fifteen vears of age. 

134 Lambert Stodagh in 1511 held of 
‘the lords of Goosnargh’ in socage ; 
ibid. iv, no. 1. Ralph Clitheroe in 1556 
held of Thomas Whittingham ; ibid. x, 
no. 26. George Kirkby of Upper Raw- 
cliffe (1561) held of Thomas Hoghton by 
2s. 6d. rent; ibid. xi, no. 8. William 
Walton of Preston in 1559 held of 
Thomas Hoghton by fealty and suit of 
court, but the Goosnargh lands had been 
given (for life) to Isabel widow of Thomas 
Walton, e'der brother of William ; ibid. 
Ris NO. 27s 

William Pleasington of Dimples in 
1621 held of the king in socage ; Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 240. This estate 
appears to have been in the family as 
early as 1387, appearing again about 
1490; Final Conc. iii, 29 3 Pal. of Lanc. 
Plea R. 63, m. 14. 

139 These include Sir Richard Shireburne 
of Stonyhurst, 15943; Sir John South- 
worth, 1595; Thomas Osbaldeston (as 
heir of John Bradley), 1611 ; Alexander 
Standish of Duxbury, 1622 (perhaps 
Catterall, perhaps purchased from Bridget 
Stanley; Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 271); 
Sir John Radcliffe of Ordsall, 1627; and 
John Crosse of Liverpool, 1640. 

136 Some have been mentioned al- 
Teady. 

Thomas Barnes’s lands were sequestered 
for delinquency only, and were placed in 
the act for sale. He was dead in 1654; 
Index of Royalists (Index Soc.), 413 Cal. 
Com. for Comp. iv, 3120. The same was 
the case of Henry Butler; Index, 42; 
Cal. v, 3216. 


There seem to have 
been several subdivisions of the land, and the prin- 


with his estates. 


Janet Cottam (who died in 1652) had 
two-thirds of her estate sequestered for 
recusancy ; Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 3065. 
Robert Cottam in 1558 purchased mes- 
suages, &c., in Goosnargh from Nicholas 
and William Ambrose, the remainders 
being to James Cottam and John and 
Thomas his brothers ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F. bdle. 18, m. 32. 

The land of George Glave was in 164.5 
sequestered for recusancy; he died in 
Scotland in 1648, and his son John, 
“never a recusant,’ petitioned for restitu- 
tion, and took the oath of abjuration 
in 16523 Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), iii, 76. 

The lands of Peter Stanley of Aughton 
were forfeited and sold; Cal. Com. for 
Comp. iv, 2937. 

William Topping’s land was sequestered 
for recusancy, as was that of Francis 
Turner (dead in 1654); ibid. 3175; 
v, 3225. A brief note on James 
Moore of Goosnargh (will 1693) is in 
Lancs. and Ches. Hist. and Gen. Notes, 
ili, 57. 

1357 Besidesthe estate of James Sidgreaves 
already named were those of John Adamson, 
Edmund and Edward Barton, Cuthbert 
Cardwell, Michael Grayston, William 
Moreton of Dovehold, Thomas Parker 
and Jane Sturzaker ; Estcourt and Payne, 
Engl. Cath. Nonjurors, 95, 100, 103, 
141-2. 

185 Lancs, Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 36. Quenilda, 
widow of Roger Gernet, held 2 oxgangs 
of land in Newsham of the Earl of 
Lincoln in 1252 by knight’s service ; 
ibid. 190. A similar estate and tenure 
were recorded in 1240 after the death of 
Thomas de Beetham, and in 1254, after 
that of Ralph de Beetham; ibid. 17), 
194, 202. 

139 Elien widow of Robert de Stockport 
in 1275 claimed dower in a messuage, 
roo acres of land, &c., against Adam de 
Acton (? Aighton) ; De Banco R. 10, 
m. 71d, Adam son of Richard de Acton 
and Richard son of Adam were concerned 
in several suits in 1292; Assize R. 408, 
m.12d.,17d. Richard de Aghton claimed 
common of pasture in Newsham against 
Earl Edmund, but was non-suited ; ibid. 
m. 10d. An Adam son of Richard de 
Aghton of Newsham made a claim 


200 


of Stalmine Hall in 1782 and has since descended 
146 


William Singleton of Bank Hall 


against Adam Pigot of Newsham and 
Hawise his wife, but did not prosecute it, 
in 13323 Assize R. 1411, m. 12, 

Lands in Newsham and Hollowforth 
are named in a fine of the manor of 
Woodplumpton in 1662; Pal. of Lane. 
Feet of F. bdle. 169, m. 76. Newsham 
does not appear to have been considered 
a separate manor, 

140 Richard de Newsham in 1291 com- 
plained that he had been disseised of his 
common of pasture in 13 acres of moor 
in Newsham by Richard de Stockport, 
William son of Adam de Redeford, and 
others ; but the jury decided that the land 
was in Woodplumpton ; Assize R. 407, 
m 1d. 

In the following year Adam de New- 
sham and William his son were sureties 
in one of the Acton cases above referred 
to; Assize R. 408, m. 17d. 

Adam de Newsham occurs in 13323 
Exch, Lay Subs. (Rec. Soc, Lancs. and 
Ches.), 70. In 1339 Richard son of Adam 
de Newsham claimed lands against Richard 
and Henry, sons of William de Newsham, 
and against Godith del Er'esgate; De 
Banco R. 318, m. 27d. ; 320, m. 218, 
In the latter case he alleged that a mes 
suage and 17 acres in Newsham and 
Woodplumpton had been given by Richard 
de Newsham to Henry the Harper, 
with remainder to _ plaintiff's father, 
Adam son of (the said) Richard de News 
ham. The descent is established by a 
further plea two years later; ibid. R. 
325, m. 56. f 

M1 Final Conc. ii, 167. 

4? Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. iv, 9% 
75. It appears that John had two sons, 
George and Uctred ; the former married 
an Alice, and had the son John who in- 
herited, and who was the ward of Henry 
Preston of Preston. George was dead in 
1514. 
13 Visit, of 1567 (Chet. Soc.), §1- The 
descent was thus given: William New- 
sham -s. John -s. George -8. John -« 
George —s. Robert. . 

144 Duchy of Lanc. Ing, p.m. xiv, no. 88; 
Robert, the son and heir of George, ¥## 
thirty-two years old. 

rh Mise. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Chet), 
i, £43: i : 

145 For details see Fishwick, op. ob 
194-5. 


. 


held land in Newsham of John Warren in 1573.1! 
The Fishwicks occur.'4® 

HOLLOWFORTH with its mill was the estate 
bought by Robert de Holland in 1292 "* and held in 
1323-4 by William de Holland of Euxton of the 
heirs of Stockport by a rent of 25.8 Like Euxton it 
descended to Molyneux of Sefton,’ and was in 
1558 sold by Sir Richard Molyneux to George 
Newsham.” - Land in Hollowforth was held by the 
Middletons in 1600-40." The estate of Lawrence 
Parkinson of Hollowforth was one of those sequestered 
and sold under the Commonwealth." There is still 
a mill at Hollowforth. 

Alexander Rigby, James Sidgreaves and Thomas 
Helme each paid £10 in 1631, having refused 
knighthood.'** 

John Reynolds of Newsham as a ‘ Papist’ registered 
a leasehold estate in this part of the township in 
1717.%8 Robert Shepherd of Barnacre did the 
same.)? 

In the grant of Kirkham to Vale 

CHURCH Royal Abbey in 1281 its ‘ chapels’ were 
included,’®* so that it is probable that 

ST. MARY’S, Goosnargh, already existed. It was 
frequently called a ‘ church,’ and its district a‘ parish’ 
before the Reformation.’ Direct proof of its 
existence begins in 1330, when its ‘ chaplain’ was 
required to send an ox of the value of Ios. to the 
Abbot of Vale Royal (as rector) every year.’ 
Complaint was made of an assault upon Sir Adam 
Banastre at Goosnargh Church in 1336,’ and that 
the chapel was in constant use is shown by the names 
of the ministering priests which have been preserved.’ 
John son of Adam de Whittingham granted certain 
lands in 1379-80 to Henry Moton, the rent being a 
pound of wax, due to the church of B. Mary of 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


KIRKHAM 


Goosnargh."® ‘There was in it asecond altar, that of 
St. John the Baptist, the priest at which in 1528-9 
received an endowment—perhaps temporary—from 
William Barnes of Tewkesbury.' A more substantial 
endowment was secured to the chaplain celebrating 
in the ‘church or chapel’ of B. Mary the Virgin of 
Goosnargh by Alan Singleton, the statutes of the 
chantry being ordained by Roger Singleton in 1508.1 
This chantry was in existence at the confiscation of 
such endowments in 1547-8. It had a revenue 
of £5 a year." 

What happened during the next fifty or sixty 
years is uncertain. A curate was probably maintained 
there, but the stipend was only £3 18s. from the 
tithes of Christ Church, Oxford,!”’ increased no doubt 
by occasional offerings. The curate of 1611 was 
presented to the bishop for having given notice of the 
rush bearing ‘on the Sabbath day,’ leading to piping 
in the church and churchyard,'® while eleven years 
later the curate had not preached himself and had 
procured only two sermons in the year; he kept ale 
to sell. The arrangement of the seats in 1635 
has been preserved.” The Presbyterian discipline 
was accepted without resistance in 1646, and the 
minister in 1648 signed the ‘ Harmonious Consent.’ 
There was in 1650 no allowance to the minister, 
except £50 from the Committee of Plundered 
Ministers." This would, of course, cease at the 
Restoration, but Christ Church afterwards increased 
the allowance from the tithes to {19 185.17 About 
1720 a grant was obtained from Queen Anne’s 
Bounty,’ and the incumbent’s income has gradually 
increased until it is now £201." A separate parish 
was assigned in 1846." 

The church stands on the north side of the village 
of Goosnargh, and consists of chancel 25 ft. 6 in. 


47 Duchy of Lanc, Ing. p.m. xii, 
NO. 30, 34. 

M8 See the account of Bulsnape. Adam 
Fishwick in 1558 sold messuages in 
Newsham, &c., to Ralph Massy and 
William Neild ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 18, m. 16 3 19, m. 51. 

M9 Final Conc. i, 175; Robert son of 
Adam de Holland acquired 2 oxgangs 
of land, a mill, &c., in Newsham from 
Adam de Newsham. In a pleading of 
the same year already referred to Robert 
de Holland was joined with Adam de 
Acton in defending the right of two 
messuages, 80 acres of land, a water-mill, 
&c., claimed by Richard son of Adam de 
Acton. Both claimed by gift of Adam, but 
Richard withdrew, acknowledging Robert’s 
right ; Assize R. 408, m.17 d. The name 
Hollowforth does not appear till much later. 

150 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, ii, 162. 

WI Richard Molyneux died in 1397 
holding a plat of land called Hollowforth 
in Amounderness ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 71, 

Sir William Molyneux in 1548 held 
Hollowforth of Sir Edward Warren in 
socage by 2s, rent ; Duchy of Lane. Ing. 
p.m. ix, no. 2. 

1? Pal, of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 20, 
™m. 95 ; the estate was described as three 
messuages, water-mill, &c. 

%8The tenure of George Middleton 
of Leighton’s land in 1600 was not 
recorded, but Thomas Middleton’s in 
1640 was said to be held of the king in 
socage in conjunction with Kellamergh ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvii, no. 61 5 
XXIX, no. 64, 


7 


154 Cal. Com. for Comp. ii, 1301 5 Index 
of Royalists, 43. 

155 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 221. 

156 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath, 
Nonjurors, 96. 

157 Thid. 140. 

158 See the account of Kirkham Church. 

159 Even an official document like the 
Ministers’ Accounts in 1549 speaks of 
the chantry in the parish church of 
Goosnargh ; Lancs. and Ches. Recs. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 88. 

160 Ormerod, Ches. (ed. Helsby), ti, 167. 

161 Agsize R. 430, m. 20. 

162 Katherine Radcliffe of York in 
1458 left 20s. to the fabric of the chapel 
of Goosnargh, where she was born ; Tesr. 
Ebor. (Surtees Soc.), ii, 92. 

163 Add. MS. 32107, no. 1100, 

164 Thid. no. 1012, 1074-5. 

165 Something has been said of the 
founders’ family in the account of Middle- 
ton. Roger Singleton’s deed, apparently 
for the appointment of new trustees, is 
printed by Fishwick, op. cit. 215-18. In 
the Valor Eccl. (Record Com.), v, 263, 
the founder is called Roger Singleton, and 
6s. 8d. had to be distributed to the poor 
on his anniversary (St. Luke’s Day). In 
1548, however, Anne Singleton (perhaps 
the daughter of Alan) was said to have 
founded it, but no foundation deed was 
known, and the priest used to ‘celebrate 
there at his pleasure’; Raines, Chantries 
(Chet. Soc.), 242-3. 

166 Thid. 244. The chantry priest oc- 
cupied Middleton, out of which a rent 
of 6s, was due to the king’s bailiff of 


201 


Amounderness ; 5s. 2d. and 5s. 6d. were 
paid to Sir Richard Hoghton and Thomas 
Catterall respectively as free rents for 
other parts of the endowment. 

In addition there was land of the yearly 
value of 46s. 8d. devoted to the celebra- 
tion of obits and the maintenance of 
lamps in the church ; ibid. 253. A field 
called St. Mary’s Croft is supposed to 
have been part of it ; Fishwick, op. cit. 16. 

There were three bells ; Raines, op. cit. 
264, 280. 

167 Plund, Mins. Accts. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 8 ; Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. 
(Chet. Soc.), ii, 420. 

168 Fishwick, op. cit. 28, citing Raines 


MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xxii, 86. Cf. Asshe- 
ton’s Journ. (Chet. Soc.), 40. 
169 Fishwick, op. cit. 29. The ale- 


selling is named in the visitation record 
of 1619. 

170 Tbid. 71-3. 

171 Commonw. Ch. Surv. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), 155. An allowance 
of £40 was made out of the sequestered 
tithes as early as 1645 ; this was increased 
to £50, but about 1655 reduced to £20 ; 
Plund. Mins. Accts. i, 8; 1i, 88, 210. 

Goosnargh, which had what was 
thought ‘a fair parochial chapel,’ was 
made an independent parish in 1658-9; 
ibid. ii, 265, 272. 

172 Gastrell, op. cit. ii, 420. There 
were two chapel wardens for Goosnargh 
and two for Whittingham ; alist to 1800 
is given by Fishwick, op. cit. 86-102. 

178 Fishwick, op. cit. 21. 

14 Manch, Dioc. Dir. 

175 By Order in Council 21 Jan. 1846. 


26 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


by 20 ft. with north vestry, nav i 
20 ft. 6 in., north aisle ie eae by ae 
ses aisle 66 ft. by 13 ft., south porch and west 
sad To ft. 8 in. square, all these measurements 
eing internal, The building is constructed through- 
out of rubble masonry with gritstone dressings, and 
no part, with the possible exception of one of the 
windows of the north aisle, is older than the 15th 
century. ‘To this period belong the north arcade 
and aule, tower, and perhaps the chancel ; but this is 
said ”° to have been rebuilt in 1553. However this 
may be, the whole of the building is of late date, and 
though the architectural detail is uninteresting the 
general appearance of the interior is good. The 
south arcade and aisle appear to have been rebuilt at 
a subsequent period, perhaps at the end of the 16th 
or in the early years of the 17th century, the windows 
being all square-headed with plain, rounded lights, and 
without labels. ‘The chancel roof is externally lower 
than that of the nave, which is continued over the aisles 


N 


N N N N N oy 
VSI FER 


windows renewed, new wood dormers insert 
floor lowered 12 in., the rough-cast ie or 
formerly covered the exterior removed, and the two 
end galleries taken down, The whole of the seatin 
was likewise renewed, the old square pews, which had 
filled both aisles, nave, and part of the chancel, bein 
done away with. There was a further restoration of 
the roof in 1895, when it was again reslated, the cast 
gable and wall north of it rebuilt in dressed sto 
a eat! enlarged. “ 
The ancel has an original five-light poi 
window with plain pointed lights striae 
the line of springing and inner moulded arch dyin 
into the wall at the same level ; two windows ep 
priest’s door on the south side, and a single square- 
headed window of two cinquefoiled lights on the 
north side to the west of the vestry door. The 
easternmost window on the south has a segmental 
head and is of three lights, the middle with cingue- 
foiled and the outer ones with trefoiled heads, with 


\estoy 


q Norra AISLE nl iY 
Ns Sg ee ce A p= & 
Sa ama 
| owe | Nar Icancn | 
\ peal . f 

WA ! 2 
en. a ee a Sea 
{alee cai I IS"CENT 


3 16"cCENT 


eee ae me & ro + 9 peel L34 ro)! Ones 

~ q Pe ‘ i : TH 
“oq 10 5 9 10 20 30 go Ges] 17 CENT 
PORCH: "Baselteel — (1B CENT 
: + SCALE OF FEET 


[_] MODERN 


Prawn or GoosnarcH CHURCH 


with overhanging eaves, and has two modern gabled dor- 
mer windows on the south side and three on the north. 

The roof probably dates from the time of the 
building of the south aisle, when it was raised some 
feet, the line of the former ! sth-century roof showing 
in the east face of the tower within the nave. In the 
18th century the church is described as filled with 
square pews probably of 17th-century date, and had 
a gallery at the west end, and in 1800 another gallery 
was erected at the east end in front of the chancel for 
the use of the inmates of Goosnargh Hospital.'” 
Repairs had been carried out in 17$8,"" when probably 
a ceiling was erected; but the building remained more 
or less unrestored till 1868—9, when it was very 
substantially repaired, the roof opened out, renovated, 
and wholly reslated, the stone-work of many of the 


chamfered jambs, head and mullions, but without hood 
mould. The other window is of the same type a 
those in the south aisle, square-headed and of two 
rounded lights. ‘The priest’s door is 2 ft. 4 in. wide 
with segmental arch and chamfered jambs and head. 
The walls of the chancel, as in the rest of the church, 
are plastered, and the roof is a modern boarded one 
of flat pitch in three bays with moulded principals 
and purlins, and divided from the open timber roof 
of the nave by a timbered plaster gable facing west 
with shaped moulded piece below the tie-beam 
carried down the walls on to small wood pillars on 
stone brackets in the form ofa chancel arch. There 
is a good 18th-century brass chandelier, but the rest 
of the fittings of the chancel are all modern, and 
there is no screen. 


Bailey, 


R. Oliverson, Wm. Gornall, Wm. 
. Eccles, churchwardens, 4-?- 1788. 

The expense of repairing this church, 

L195 124. 6d." Fishwick, op. cit 24. 


the chancel wall both north and south. 
They have since been built up. 
ub On one of the roof timbers was 


painted : ‘The Rev’) C. Hull, B.D. ; 
202 


of Taect. (Chet. 


Ie Glynne, Ch vbes 


Soe.) $1: ; 
Ut When this guicry was erected win- 


dows were cut through the upper part of 


gay ia 
iil 


jit 


GoosnaRGH CHURCH FROM THE SOUTH-WEST 


GoosnarcH CuurcH: Tue Nave, Looxinc East 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


The north arcade of the nave is of six pointed arches 
of two chamfered orders carried on octagonal piers 
and responds with plain moulded capitals and bases, 
the height to the top of the capitals being 6 ft. 2 in. 
The north aisle, which is the full length of the nave 
and continued beyond it some feet at the east end, 
varies in width from 11 ft. 4 in. at the east to 
12 ft. 3 in. at the west end. It has two square- 
headed windows of two cinquefoiled lights on the 
north side and a similar one at the west end, and a 
built-up north doorway. 

The east end of the aisle was formerly the chantry 
founded by the Singletons, and has a window on the 
north side of two plain pointed lights. The chantry, 
which is now known as the Middleton Chapel,” 
is inclosed by a screen and has a recess with 
segmental moulded arch in the north wall 3 ft. 
high by 6 ft. in width. The east window is square- 
headed of three rounded lights similar to those ip 
the south aisle. 

The south arcade of the nave consists of five pointed 
arches of two chamfered orders on octagonal piers 
and responds with moulded capitals and chamfered 
bases, 6 ft. in height to the top of the capitals. At 
the west end the arcade begins at a distance of 
g ft. 8 in. from the tower wall,'™ the south aisle not 
extending the length of the nave at this end, and 
the piers are thus not directly opposite those on the 
north side. The windows of the aisle are all square- 
headed and of two lights, except that at the east end, 
which has three. The nave roof retains its four 
original roughly wrought principals, and is boarded 
between the spars ; but is otherwise, together with its 
continuation over the aisles, almost entirely modern. 
The porch, which is quite plain, measures internally 
8 ft. by 1o ft. and has a slated roof and inner 
pointed arch with double hollow-chamfered jambs 
and head, and a wood seat on each side. The 
outer arch is also pointed, with plain chamfered 
jambs and head, and the gable above has been rebuilt. 

The west tower is 60 ft. in height with embattled 
parapet and projecting vice in the south-east corner. 
Externally the stages are unmarked, the north and 
south sides being quite plain between the plinth and 
the belfry windows. On the west side there are 
diagonal angle buttresses of six stages reaching to the 
middle of the belfry windows, and at the north-east 
angle a square buttress of three stages. On the 
second stage of each of the west buttresses is a plain or 
obliterated shield, and on the west face of the tower, 
about 12 ft. above the ground, a circular figure 
18 in. in diameter commonly known as the ‘spinning 
wheel.’ *! The west door is round-headed with 
hood mould and chamfered jambs, and above is a 
pointed window of three lights with perpendicular 
tracery and label. The belfry windows are also of 


KIRKHAM 


three lights and similar in detail, with slate louvres, 
and there isa clock on the south and west sides towards 
the village. The tower arch is of two chamfered 
orders splayed off to one at a height of 8 ft. 6 in. 
from the floor. 

The screen inclosing the Middleton Chapel has 
turned balusters in the upper part and a door on the 
west side. The top rail is carved and bears on the 
south side the date 1622 and the initials of Alexander 
Rigby, while on the west side are the initials of his 
grandson Thomas Rigby and the date 1721. 
Within the ‘chapel’ are an oblong pew 10 ft. by 
4 ft. 6 in. of the same period as the screen which 
forms part of it and an elaborately carved ridged 
tombstone of late 15th-century date, 6 ft. 2 in. long 
and diminishing in width from 3 ft. to 2 ft., with two 
parallel floreated crosses terminating in heraldic 
shields." The stone lies on the floor opposite the 
recess, but does not belong to it. The initials a.r. 
have been cut upon it at a later time. 

The lower part of the tower arch is filled in by 
an oak screen 7 ft. high with turned balusters along 
the top, and a door in the middle on which are 
carved the initials r.c., 1... 1.1., .w., and the 
date 1678," and in the vestry is a loose panel with 
the date 1708 and the initials .1., R.w., LP, 
w.w. The old pulpit had the initials of the Rev. 
Wm. Bushell and the date 1707, but this has given 
place to a modern one of wrought iron. 

The font, which stands at the west end of the 
south aisle, is a square block of stone 2 ft. 3 in. in 
diameter and 1 ft. 5 in. high with a square bowl 
standing on a modern pedestal, and may be of 15th- 
century date. The organ was formerly in the west 
gallery, but the present instrument, which was built 
in 1906, is at the east end of the south aisle. There 
is a brass to the Rev. Wm. Bushell in the north aisle, 
and a stone slab to Thomas Whittingham, who died 
in 1667.1 

There is a ring of six bells, with inscriptions as 
follows: Treble, ‘God preserve the Church and 
Queen Ann 1713’; (2) ‘Prosperity to the Church 
of England a.r. 1742’; (3) ‘Abr. Rudhall cast us 
all 1713’; (4) ‘Christopher Swainson A.M. 
minister, a.R. 1742’ 3 (5) ‘Presented by R. News- 
ham esq. Mears and Stainbank 1883’; tenor, ‘I to 
the Church the living call and to the grave do 
summon all, 1753.’ 

The silver plate consists of a chalice of 1746 and 
a paten ‘Presented to Goosnargh Church in 
memoriam Charles Osborne Gordon, vicar of the 
parish, who died Aug. 19,1892.’ There are also a 
plated chalice and flagon and a plated breadholder 
inscribed ‘ Presented to the Parish Church of Goos- 
nargh by Townley Rigby Knowles esq. in memory of 
the late William Shawe esq. 1872.’ 


9 In 1635 the Records of the Sworn 
Men mention ‘the Middleton Chapel con- 
taining all the uppermost arch from the 
eastward wall of that aisle into the middle 
of the uppermost pillar.’ The pew in 
the chapel was repaired by Alexander 
Rigby. The precise position of every 
other pew and the name of the owner 
liable for its repair are also given. 

160 A window formerly in this length of 
wall, between the vice of the tower and 
the west wall of the aisle, is now built up. 

‘| The tradition is that an old lady, 
by the proceeds of her industry at flax 


spinning, defrayed the expenses of building 
the tower to the height thus indicated ; 
Fishwick, op. cit. 24. 

182 The dexter shield has three cheve- 
ronels, differenced by a mullet (Singleton), 
but the sinister is indecipherable. The 
stone is illustrated in Whitaker’s Rich- 
mondshire, ii, 438, and in Fishwick’s 
Goosnargh, 23. : 

183 Fishwick, op. cit. 25, says that this 
was formerly the ‘rood screen,’ but it is 
not likely that it was ever across the chan- 
cel. The upper part of the tower arch is 
filled with modern glazed wood tracery. 


203 


184 All the monumental inscriptions, in 
the floor and elsewhere, were retained in 
the restoration of 1868-9, and are given 
in Fishwick, op. cit. 113-18. Two belong 
to the 17th and six to the 18th century ; 
the rest are modern. 

18 In 1677 it was ordered that the 
ringers should on Sunday ring one bell at 
7 aM. two at 8, and three at 9; also 
one bell at 12 noon, two at 1 p.m. and 
three at 2; ibid. 76. In 1682 the clerk 
was ordered to look after the clock and to 
ring the bell at 8 o’clock (daily) ; Fish- 
wick, op. cit. 77. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


The registers begin in 16 39, but are imperfect up 
to 1675. 

_In the churchyard to the south of the tower is a 
circular stone shafted sundial on two circular steps, 
the plate of which is dated July 1746 and bears the 
name of the Rev. C. Swainson. Further east is the 
socketed base of a churchyard cross. The oldest dated 
gravestone is 1668. 

The patronage is vested in the Dean and Chapter 
of Christ Church, Oxford. The following have 
been curates and vicars :— 


oc. 1330 William Cortays 1 
oc. 1342 Thomas [de Rawcliffe] 
oc. 1368 Richard de Sunderland !* 
oc. 1508-35 Christopher Parkinson 
oc. 1547~53 Ralph Parker 
oc. 1552 Lawrence Galter 
oc. 1562 Lawrence Kemp ™ 
oc. 1583 John Helme '* 
oc. 1605 William Duxbury ™ 
1641 Edmund Shaw 
1646 Thomas Cranage 
1648 William Ingham” 
Richard Harrison, B.A.’ (Brasenose 
Coll., Oxf.) 
c. 1675 James Butterworth, M.A. (Brasenose 
Coll., Oxf.) 
1692 William Bushell, B.A.™ 
1735 William Whitehead, B.A. (St. John’s 
Coll., Camb.) 
1740 Christopher Swainson, B.A.” (Univ. 
Coll., Oxf.) 
1770 Christopher Hull, B.D. (St. John’s 
Coll., Camb.) 
1790 Charles Buck, M.A.?” (St. John’s Coll., 
Camb.) 


18 Ormerod, loc. cit. Biographical 


notices of the later curates will be found 1554. 


He attended the visitations of 1548 and 


1790 Joshua Southward “ 

1815 Robinson Shuttleworth Barton, B.D, 
(Camb.) 

1822 Robert Studholme 

1867 William Shillito, B.A. (Univ. Call., 
Oxf.) 

1883 Charles Osborne Gordon, M.A. 
(Exeter Coll., Oxf.) 

1892 Edmund Dawson Banister, B.A. 
(Magdalen Hall, Oxf.) 

1899 James Thomas Kerby, M.A. (Dur.) 

1911 Thos. Bingley Boss, M.A. (Lond.) 


WHITECHAPEL, as the oratory in Threlfall 
was called, existed before the Reformation, as the 
pedestal of a cross in the churchyard gives testimony ; 
it belonged to the inhabitants, who had at one time 
used it for divine service, but long before 1581 it 
had been left alone, the chapel bell being then given 
to Alexander Hoghton of Lea until such time as it 
might again be wanted.™ In the Commonwealth 
time it was again used, an allowance of £50 being 
made out of Royalist sequestration." This probably 
did not long continue. About 1717 it was re- 
corded that the chapel had no endowment, and that 
It was ‘served now and then only, out of charity at 
the request of the people.’*” A bequest of £60 in 
1713 led to the schoolmaster becoming also the 
minister of the chapel, and other sums being given 
about 1720, augmented out of Queen Anne's 
Bounty, lands of £430 value were purchased for 
securing a minister’s salary. A further £400 was 
given in 1756.° The income is now £208. 

The church having become ruinous was rebuilt 
in 1738 and again in 1891. It is known as 
St. James’s.”” There is a sundial (1745) in the church- 
yard.” In 1846 Whitechapel became an indepen- 


197 «A diligent painful minister’ in 
1650; he became incumbent of Rib- 


in Fishwick, op. cit. 

17 In 1342 Roger son of William de 
Whittingham enfeoffed Thomas, parish 
chaplain of Goosnargh, of all his lands ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 1820. This is 
probably the Thomas de Rawcliffe, chap- 
lain, to whom in 1361 Henry son of 
Henry de Whittingham granted all his 
lands; ibid. no. 17S2. 

AS Ibid. no. 1776. John de Fumes, 
chaplain, occurs in similar feotfments, 
1369-70, and was probably in charge of 
Goosnargh. Later were Wiliam de 
Bispham (1384), Thomas de Mawdesley 
(1396-9), and Robert Brownall (1413). 
They are not formally stv.ed ‘chaplains 
of Goosnargh.’ 

18 He is named in the deed of Roger 
Singleton in 1508, and in the #"as2r Eccl. 
loc. cit. 

19 Raines, Cherri, 242. He was 
forty-two years of age in 1548, and had 
a pension of £4 trom the chantry In T5533. 
He appeared at the bishop’s visitation in 
1§54—at least his name is in the list— 
but not in 1562. He seems to have lett 
to act as Thomas Leyland’s private chap- 
lain, being undoubtedly the Ralph Parkin- 
son of the story in Foxe’s des ant Mer- 
cuoes (ed. Cattley), vill, 363-4. He was 
called his ‘servant and executor’ in 
Leyland’s will, and had an annuity of £5 i 
Piccope, Jf. (Chet. Soc), i, 103. He 
was buried at Leigh in 13043 Reg. 

191 His mame occurs as * parish priest’ 
in the inventory of church goods in 1552 5 
Chea Mase. (Chet. Soc, new ser) i 5. 


1? He appeared, but did not subscribe, 
at the visitation of 1562. He was 
ordained acolyte in 1555, but there is 
no record that he proceeded further; 
Chest. Ordination Bk. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), 85. 

13 In the Chester Consistory Court 
Records is preserved a letter certifying 
that Mr. Arthur Hoghton of Broughton 
and Goosnargh had received ‘the holy 
communion at Easter last in the church 
of Goosnargh according to the laws of 
this our English Church.’ The letter 
was addressed to the vicar of Preston 
by his ‘assured friend and fellow servant 
in Christ’s affairs ever to command, Sir 
John Helme, the under curate of 
Goosn argh.” 

John Helme, clerk, purchased 3 acres 
in Whittiagham in 1579; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 41, m. 130. 

1% In 1605 it was presented that he 
stood excommunicate for anything the 
churchwardens knew, and that he was 
‘nothing diligent in attending the church’; 
Visit. P. at Chester Dioc. Reg. He was 
‘no preacher’; Hist, 3155. Com. Rep. 
xiv, App. iv, 9. 

185 He signed the Protestation as curate 
of Goosnargh ; and was buried in the 
chancel 29 May 1645. 

1S Placd, Mics otecs. i, 265. He 
moved to Brindle in 1647; ibid. 46. 
The Goosnargh members of the classis 
of 1646 were T. Cranage, Alexander 
Rigsby and Edmund Turner; Baines, 
Lanes. (ed. 1865), i, 228. 


a4 
Pre 


chester in 1656, 

198 Afterwards vicar of Poulton. 

199 He was ‘conformable’ in 1689 ; 
Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 229. 
He appeared at the visitation of 1691, 
showing letters of orders ‘as in 1677 
&c.’ He had been appointed school- 
master in 1686. 

200 Also rector of Heysham; his son 
was the founder of the hospital. The 
Goosnargh Church papers in Chester 
Diocesan Registry begin at this time, 

701 In 1743 there were prayers and 
sermon every Sunday in the year and 
prayers on all holy days ; Visit. returns. 
In 1755 the families were classified 
thus: Protestants 230, Papists 96, and 
Protestant Dissenters 2. 

2@ Rector of Heysham. 

33 A letter of his touching his burial fees 
is printed in Gillow’s Haydock Papers, 75. 

24 Fishwick, op. cit. 393 there is a 
view of the present building, ibid. 46. 

25 Commonw. Ch. Surv. 155. Roger 
Shireburne was the minister at that time, 
1650-52; Plund. Mins, -tects. i, 2355 
244. An allowance of £40 had been 
voted as early as 1646; ibid. 101, 42. 

26 Threlfall was merged in Giosaargh 
in 1658, on the formation of an inde- 
pendent parish there ; ibid. ti, 265, 272. 

307 Gastre:., Norista, ii, 427- : 

® For details see Fishwick, op. cit. 
4i-7. Mm! Manch, Disc. Dir. ; 

20 Sentence of consecration was givc@ 
g July 1818. ; 

211 Fishwick, op. cit. 47- 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


dent parish”? ; the patronage is vested in the Dean 
and Chapter of Christ Church, Oxford. The follow- 


ing have been curates and vicars :— 


1716 William Birket 
c. 1738 John Penny”® 

1764 James Farrer“ 

1774 Benjamin Wright 

1796 Thomas Stephenson 

1808 Thomas Saul, M.A.™5 

1813 Philip Gerard Slatter, M.A. (Christ Ch., 
Oxf.) 

1815 James Radcliffe, M.A. (Christ Ch., Oxf.) 

1836 ‘Thomas Benn 

1873 Edmund Dawson Banister, B.A. (Magdalen 
Hall, Oxf.) 

1892 James Thomas Kerby, M.A. (Dur.) 

1g00 Joseph Rhodes, B.A. (Dur.) 

1909 Edwin Augustine Marshall Godson, M.A. 


(Oxf.) 

A free grammar school, under the will of Henry 
Colborne, was established in Goosnargh about 1673.7" 
At Whitechapel a school was founded in 1705 by 
William Lancaster, a linen-weaver.?”” 

The Congregationalists built a chapel at Ingle- 
white in 1826. It has some endowments.”® 

As will have been gathered from the foregoing 
account, the principal resident families adhered to 
Roman Catholicism long after the Reformation. In 
1632 the following compounded by small annual rents 
for the two-thirds of their estates which should have 
been sequestered for their recusancy : In Goosnargh— 
George Beesley, £3 ; Gabriel Hesketh, £4 ; Roger 
Hesketh, £6 135. 4¢d.; and Thomas Whittingham, 
£3 6s. 8d. ; in Whittingham—William Chorley, £2 ; 
and Ellen Nelson, £3.7° Bishop Gastrell recorded 
145 known ‘Papists’ in 1717, and in 1767 there 


312 By Order in Council 21 
1846. 


Jan. 
ceased), £2. 


Matthew Latus (for William Latus de- 


KIRKHAM 


were 316 above sixteen years of age, with two 
resident priests, in Goosnargh and 200 more in 
Whitechapel.”” Nothing is known of the secret 
ministrations of the 17th century, except that in 
1643 the Ven. Thomas Whitaker was captured at 
Edward Midgehall’s house in Longley." One of 
the English Franciscans established a ‘ residence’ of 
the Holy Cross at White Hill in 1687, obtaining a 
plot of land from Cuthbert Hesketh.” About a 
century afterwards the present St. Francis’ Chapel 
was built at the Hill,”’ and this branch of the Order 
served the mission till 1813.% The work was 
transferred to the English Benedictines about 1833, 
and they retain it still."° The congregation has 
dwindled away. 

To Newsham is supposed to have belonged Roger 
Wrennall, executed at Lancaster in 1616 for assisting 
Fr. Thewlis in an attempt to escape from the castle.” 
About 1715 there appear to have been two secular 
priests resident in this part of the township—one at 
Crow Hall?” and the other at Hough,” and they 
ministered as opportunity afforded in the neighbour- 
ing district. Mass was occasionally said at the 
former house till about 1800 ; at the latter New- 
house Chapel, St. Lawrence’s, was built about 1740. 
This was replaced in 1806 by St. Mary’s, Newhouse,” 
which in turn has been succeeded by the present 
church in 1907. 

The principal charity*® is the 

CHARITIES Hospital founded by William 
Bushell’s will, 1735. He devised 

almost all his estate to trustees for maintaining 
“decayed gentlemen or gentlewomen or persons of the 
better rank of both or either sex, inhabitants of the 
towns or townships of Preston, Euxton, Goosnargh, 
Whittingham, Fulwood and Elston . . . being 


seems to have served the Hill also, until 
1833. The English Province of the 


218 He was also master of the school. 
In 1743 there was service three Sundays 
in the month. 

214 The church papers in the Chester 
Dioc. Registry begin with this curate. 

*15 Correspondence in a dispute between 
this incumbent and the parishioners is 
printed by T. C. Smith, Longridge, 222-8. 
He did not reside, and had another curacy 
in Yorkshire. In consequence heresigned. 
Whitechapel had then an income of 
about £100 a year ; it was unconsecrated, 
but services were regularly held twice each 
Sunday, except four times a year, when 
the curate assisted at the Sacrament at 
Goosnargh Church, 

46 End. Char. Rep. Kirkham, 38; 
Bishop Gastrell gives a somewhat different 
account ; Notitia, loc. cit. Richard Cook- 
son, a native of the place, and school- 
master for forty years, published Goosnargh 
Past and Present, &c.; he died in 1888 ; 
T. C. Smith, op. cit. 244. 

°17 End. Char. Rep. Kirkham, 39 3 

Gastrell, op. cit. ii, 428. 
_ 8B. Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. 
i, 163-5. Preaching began in 1815 or 
before. The chapel site was obtained by 
a little trick described loc. cit. 

™9 Trans. Hist, Soc. (new ser.) xxiv, 
177-9. For arrears there compounded 
(mostly by conformists), John Adamson (for 
Jobn Lawrenson), £1 ; Nicholas Norris of 
Kidsnape (for Grace Morton), £4; Robert 
Boyes of Whittingham (for Robert Boyes, 
his grandfather), £2; Edward Midgehall 
(for George Midgehall his father), £2 ; 


The Thomas Whittingham named in 
the text was no doubt the ‘Mr.’ T. W. 
living in Threlfall in 1625; Fishwick, 
op. cit. 67. 

220 Trans. Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xviii, 
217. 

1 Challoner, Missionary Priests, no. 
186; Whitaker ‘was apprehended by a 
gang of priest-catchers, armed with clubs 
and swords; who, it seems, fell to club 
law with their prisoner immediately and 
ceased not to beat and abuse him (threaten- 
ing also to murder him on the spot) till 
they had extorted a confession from him 
that he was a priest.’ 

222 Thaddeus, Franciscans in England, 
186-7. A few years after the Revolution 
the station was described as consisting 
of ‘a chapel and a little dwelling place at 
one end. Cuthbert Hesketh gave £200 
(yielding £10 a year) for the missioner, 
who was bound “to say two masses per 
week for the said Mr. Cuthbert and his 
wife, to serve the poor Catholics of the 
parishes of Goosnargh and Chipping,” and 
if permitted make his abode and live at 
the chapel of White Hill. The chapel 
being uncovered by the mob, the walls are 
ordered to be taken down, and all the 
materials either sold or laid up safe’ ; 
ibid. 

223 Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. 
iii, 260. The registers at the Hill begin 
about 1770. 

224 The last appointment to the Hill 
was Fr, Anselm Millward, 1809-13. 
Afterwards the Franciscan at Lee House 


205 


Order was dying out, ending about 1840. 

225 Gillow, loc. cit.; Trans. Hist. Soc. 
(new ser.), xiii, 168. 

226 Wrennall was a weaver, in prison 
for religion ; Challoner, Missionary Priests, 
no. 176. The cause of his beatification 
was introduced at Rome in 1886 ; Pollen, 
Acts of Martyrs, 382. 

227 Gillow, Haydock Papers, 67-8. In 
1716 Samuel Peploe, the vicar of Preston, 
reported to the government that Crow 
Hall was devoted to ‘superstitious uses’ ; 
the estate went in William Shepherd’s 
name, and the lease was supposed to be 
in his name in trust for the priests ; 
ibid. citing P.R.O. Forfeited Estates, 
P 134. 

298 Ibid. 69 ; Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. 
Cath. i, 411. Vicar Peploe denounced 
this mission also, but apparently without 
success. John Swarbrick, a later priest 
in charge, died in 1731, bequeathing his 
effects to the building of a chapel at 
Midgehall. It was, however, built at 
Newhouse in Newsham, Edmund Fish- 
wick of that place being a benefactor. 
The mob at the turbulent Preston 
election of 1768 marched out to destroy 
the chapel, but were persuaded to retreat 
by a friendly Protestant. 

229 Haydock Papers, 73. 

280 An official inquiry into the charities 
was made in June 1903, and the account 
in the text and notes is taken from the 
report published in 1904. This report 
includes a reprint of the earlier one, 
made in 1824. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Protestant;, in a house or hospital to be provided in 
Goosnargh, where he then resided, at or near the 
dwelling-house of his late father.’ 7! William Bushell 
died in the same year, and the trust became effective 
ten years later when his daughter Elizabeth died. 
In 1824 there were thirteen persons in the hospital ; 
each had a separate room, but they dined together, 
and one of them read prayers to the rest ; they were 
supplied with clothing, and each received tos. a 
quarter for pocket money. They were all advanced 
in life, of the class designated by the founder, mem- 
bers of the Church of England and required to 
attend the services in the church at Goosnargh, 
wherein the trustees had built a special gallery for 
them. The income at that time was £855 and the 
expenditure considerably less. ‘The Hospital is an 
18th-century building of stone, in a simple and 
dignified classical style. 

Owing to the growth of Preston, in which much of 
the property lay and lies, the income greatly increased 
during last century,” and the charity is now governed 
by a scheme enforced by the Charity Commissioners 


founder, with a slight relaxation in favour of the 
lower class of people. Married couples may be 
received. The immediate charge of them is en. 
trusted to a salaried manager and matron, assisted b 
servants and a trained nurse. ‘The life of the in- 
mates resembles that of residents en pension at an 
hotel : they do not even assist in tending the flower 
garden and they are not permitted to follow any 
occupation. They have books from Mudie’s as well 
asa permanent library, and are well supplied with 
newspapers. The diet is ample... . An inmate 
dying is buried at the cost of the charity.’ There is 
power to appoint out-pensioners, The income js 
about £3,300, and the ordinary expenditure some- 
what less. 

In addition to educational endowments,™ a pension 
fund for the poor of the chapelry was founded in 
1878 by Richard Cookson,™* and £6 5s. is paid in 
money.” For Goosnargh with Newsham £7775. 8d. 
is available for the apprenticing of children by the 
gift of John Parkinson, and £47 185. 8d. is given 
in money and kind from the foundations of Lawrence 


in 1895.73 The house has been considerably enlarged, 
and the number of inmates is fixed at twenty-four ; 
they are to have the qualifications fixed by the 


781 The founder provided that ‘no 
person, being a Papist, nor any one who 
should have received any relief out of the 
rates for the poor’ should be eligible, and 
if any one already in the house ‘should 
become a Papist, such person should im- 
mediately be displaced and turned out’ 
without further benefit. 

32 Full particulars of the estates, and 
various sales and purchases, are given in the 
official report. The gallery in Goosnargh 
Church has been taken down, but seats are 
reserved for the inmates in the body of 
the church. 

233 This scheme was imposed in conse- 
quence of various unsatisfactory incidents 
in the management of the hospital. 

334 In 1903 fourteen of the inmates 
were from Preston, five from Fulwood, 
two from Goosnargh, and one from 
Whittingham, 

335 For schools at 
Whitechapel. 

335 The capital fund consists of £1,201 
consols, with an income of £30 05. 8d. 
By a scheme of the Charity Commis- 
sioners in 1893 seven annual pensions of 
£3 each were founded for poor persons 
resident in Goosnargh or Whittingham, 
aged fifty-five or upwards. The residue 
of the income is given in school prizes. 

°37 Of this sum {£5 is derived from the 
benefaction of Henry Colborne, 1655, 
of which an account has been given under 
Kirkham ; it is given in money doles by 
the vicar of Goosnargh, £3 10s. 6d. 
having been the usual share of Goosnargh, 
and £1 9s. 6d. that of Whittingham. 

From the estate known as the Dun 
Cow Rib in Whittingham 255. has since 
1691 been paid yearly for the poor, 205. 
being given to Whittingham and 5s. to 
Goosnargh. This is known as Lund’s 
charity, because about a century ago the 
estate was the property of Anthony Lund, 
the priest at Fernyhalgh. It is dis- 
tributed with Waring’s charity. 

338 The benefactor in 1676 gave a mes- 
suage and land in Newsham and Hollow- 
forth for apprenticing poor children, and 
further land was purchased in 1814 with 
borrowed money. In 1824 it was found 
that ‘for a long period this charity has 


Goosnargh and 


been in fact confined to the children of 
Roman Catholics, and it has been left to 
the Roman Catholic priest at Goosnargh 
to select such objects as he thought fit,’ 
and the Commissioners expressed their 
objection to this. The debts on the 
charity were paid off, and there being in 
recent times little demand for apprenticing 
fees, much of the annual income is allowed 
to accumulate. Under a scheme of the 
Charity Commissioners in 1880 the 
trustees were allowed to use the fund not 
only for apprenticing, but to supply an 
outfit for qualified children on entering 
a trade. The charity owns Boggart 
House Farm in Newsham, rented at £65, 
and has £453 in consols. 

39 Lawrence Parkinson in 1719 gave 
land and money for the use of ‘poor 
needy necessitous housekeepers of Goos- 
nargh,’ to be distributed ‘in corn called 
groats’; also for providing ‘six good 
penny manchets every Sunday’ for poor 
people attending divine service at Goos- 
nargh Church. He also left money for 
books, but this does not seem to have 
become operative. The bread distribution 
has been kept up, but in 1903 there was 
only one recipient. The distribution of 
meal (eight or nine loads of 240 lb. each) 
had been suspended since 1897, the money 
being required for improvements of the 
property, which brings in £26 a year. 

Thomas Knowles of Sowerby in 1686 
charged his estate of Loudscales in Goos- 
nargh with certain sums for the poor, 
one-fourth (sos.) being for Goosnargh, 
the remainder of the income from it being 
left to the trustees, In practice a fourth 
part of the net revenue has been devoted 
to the poor of Goosnargh. Anew scheme 
was made by the Charity Commissioners 
in 1901, by which the real estate became 
vested in the official trustee, and local 
trustees were appointed to distribute the 
income, the share of Goosnargh being 
about £14 a year. Gifts of money or 
goods, medical relief, nursing, &c., are 
allowed, but the money is in practice 
given in doles, this being the least trouble- 
some to the trustees, who stated that 
‘there were really no poor in Goos- 
nargh.’ 


206 


Parkinson and others. 
is given yearly in money doles.% 
Goosnargh have been lost.™ 


*° In Whittingham £8 135. 84, 
Several gifts to 


William Waring of Goosnargh in 1728 
left his personal estate (about £300) for 
the poor of that place. The capital was 
spent on a workhouse at Inglewhite Green, 
and in 1824 the poor rates were charged 
with £12 12s, for the charity, distributed 
partly in doles of linen and woollen cloth 
and partly in money. The capital was 
repaid, and is represented by £316 con- 
sols, paying £7 175. 8d. This is now 
distributed, along with Colborne’s charity, 
in money doles, ‘No share of the income 
has ever been given to Newsham, probably 
because there have been no poor there 
within memory.’ 

John Lancaster in 1866 left the residue 
of his estate (£42) for the benefit of the 
poor of Goosnargh and Newsham who 
might be debarred from other charities 
through having had relief from the rates. 
The income is £1 1%. yearly. From 
1895 onwards no one in the township had 
had poor relief, so that the income has 
been added to capital. 

240 Thomas Houghton in 1613-14 gave 
money and land (in the Green Nook) for 
the benefit of the poor. The gross rent 
is £3 10s. 

Jeremiah Waring in 1731 left £40 for 
the poor. This gift is now represented 
by £207 consols, yielding £5 35. 8d. a 
year. 

The above sums, to which are added 
the Whittingham shares of Lund’s and 
William Waring’s charities, are distributed 
chiefly in money doles, but partly in food, 
by the trustees of Houghton’s charity and 
the vicar of Goosnargh. 

241 Jane Adamson in 1732 added {4° 
to a gift of £20 made by her brother 
Thomas Adamson for the poor. James 
Sidgreaves in 1824 paid £2 144. as interest, 
as heir of his grandfather, who had been 
the trustee ; but his estate was not legally 
charged with it. The amount was paid 
till his death about 1840. 

Miss Eccles, it was believed, left Le 
for the poor. This was spent on the 
workhouse, and in 1824 there was a sum 
of £1 16s. paid out of the rates and die 
tributed with other charity money. The 
workhouse was sold in 1838-9, and 
nothing was recovered for this charity. 


WuittincHam : Cuincre Hatz, Bripce over Moat 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


WHITTINGHAM 
Witingheham, Dom. Bk.; Whitingham, 1199 ; 
Witingheham, Witingeheim, 1202 ; Hwytingham, 
1246; Wytingham, 1257; Quytyngham, 1292. 


Cumberhal, 1292 ; Cumberhalgh, 1301. Asshe- 
legh, #346. 
This township has an area of 3,192 acres! The 


western half or Lower End is Whittingham proper ; 
the eastern half or Higher End? being formed of 
Comberhalgh or Cumeragh in the south and Ashley 
in the north.? Chingle Hall is three-quarters of a 
mile south of Goosnargh Chapel. Duxendean lies at 
the west end of the township.* The general slope of 
the ground is down from east to west and north to 
south, but the surface is intersected by many depres- 
sions, down which flow some brooks ; the chief is 
Blundel Brook, flowing west south-west and for about 
two miles forming the southern boundary. Savock 
Brook is the boundary on the south-east. The 
ordinary population in 1901 was 805, but there 
were also 3,236 persons in the lunatic asylum as 
patients or attendants. 

The principal road, from Preston and Broughton 
to Longridge, goes east through the centre ; one cross 
road goes north to Goosnargh and another south to 
the above-named asylum. This is the chief institu- 
tion in the township ; it was built in 1869 by the 
county authorities and has a single line railway con- 
necting it with Grimsargh station on the Preston 
and Longridge line. A large part of the township 
belongs to it. 

The soil is clayey, and the land is chiefly in 
pasture. 

The township is governed by a parish council. 

The local legend of the Dun Cow Rib Farm is 
that there was once on the moors an old dun cow of 
great size, which had no owner but gave milk freely 


KIRKHAM 


to all comers. An old witch once took a riddle 
instead of a pail, and the cow, mortified at being 
unable to fill it, died. The people much regretted 
its loss and preserved its ribs for a memorial. One 
of them is chained over the door of the farm-house 
named, which stands in Halfpenny Lane, near Long- 
ridge. It is a good type of the small stone-built 
17th-century yeoman’s dwelling, of two stories, with 
low mullioned windows and stone slated roof over- 
hanging at the eaves and with a gable at each end. 
The front faces south with the door at its east end, 
and the east wall is blank except for an oriel window 
corbelled out on the first floor, the entrance to which, 
however, is blocked up on the inside. Over the 
door are the initials of Adam Hoghton and the date 
1616, together with the Hoghton arms on a shield. 
Over the shield fastened to the wall with iron bands 
is the bone referred to, which is about 2 ft. long. 
The door is the original nail-studded one and retains 
its original heavy oak bar. The interior was 
modernized in the middle of the 19th century and 
the plan altered. The original oak staircase remains, 
but its position has been changed ; partitions have 
been introduced and the ceiling raised. The house 
was also known as Moor House.® 
Forming part of Earl Tostig’s Preston 
MANORS fee in 1066, when it was assessed as two 
plough-lands,6 WHITTINGHAM was 
afterwards a member of the barony of Penwortham 
and held with other lands by knight’s service by the 
lords of Freckleton.?. These, retaining one moiety in 
demesne, gave the other plough-land to subordinate 
tenants to hold by the eighth part of a knight’s fee. 
In 1242 the tenants were Alan de Singleton, Warine 
de Whittingham and Robert de Dutton,® each, it 
would seem, holding equally. Soon afterwards, by 
steps unknown, this portion was held equally by the 
heirs of Singleton ® and by the Hoghton family 1° ; 


Grace Shakeshaft in 1740 left £60 
(reduced to £40) for the poor. This 
with other sums, amounting in all to 
£138 tos. had been in the hands of 
Thomas Clifton till about 1822, when he 
died in very embarrassed circumstances. 
Letitia Barrow (née Moore) left £40, 
which may have been part of the last- 
named £138. Nothing further is known 
of these sums. 

1The 1901 Census Rep. gives 3,193 
acres, including 2 of inland water. 

? This seems to have been known as 
Alley tithing in 1671. The name may 
be the Heyley of the Hospitallers. 

3 Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 421. 

‘Henry Waring, in right of the Earl 
of Derby, claimed a waste called Duxen- 
dean, &c., in 1587 ; Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. 
Com.), iii, 207. 

5 Gillow, Haydock Papers, 64-6. The 
estate came into the possession of An- 
thony Lund, priest at Fernyhalgh in 
Broughton, and in 1808 he settled it upon 
St. Cuthbert’s College, Ushaw. The bone 
Is not a _cow’s rib; Fishwick, Goosnargh, 
192; Harland and Wilkinson, Lancs. 
Legends, 16-19. For Moor House see 
notes 86 and 95 below. 

5 V.C.H, Lancs, i, 2884. 

"Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), i, 36. In 1324 again 
Whittingham was described as part of 
the Freckleton lordship, the immediate 
tenants not being recorded ; Dods. MSS. 
cxxxi, fol. 395. 


8 Lancs. Ing. and Extents,i, 152. From 
note 12 below it will be seen that Alan 
was the common ancestor of the various 
Singleton families. 

One of the divisions may be due to an 
arrangement in 1202 by which Roger de 
Freckleton confirmed 8 oxgangs of land 
in Whittingham and Elswick to William 
de Winwick and Maud his wife in ex- 
change for other lands there and else- 
where ; Feet of F. Yorks. 4 John, no. 45. 

Maud, called ‘de Thornton’ or 
‘daughter of Robert,’ gave land in Whit- 
tingham to Cockersand Abbey, 3 acres 
with her body, and 6 acres (in Flecher 
Oatley) for the soul of her lord William 
de Winwick ; Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 
231-2. The Abbot of Cockersand in 
1246 made an agreement with Alice de 
Thornton (daughter of Maud) as to land 
in Whittingham ; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 103. 

9 William father of Adam Banastre was 
in 1323 found to have died seised of lands 
in Whittingham held of Adam lord of 
Freckleton by paying 2s. when a scutage 
of 40s. was demanded (i.e. by the twentieth 
part of a knight’s fee) ; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents, ii, 159. Adam Banastre, then a 
minor, seems to have had but a small 
revenue ; ibid. 113. 

As in other cases, the Banastre inherit- 
ance descended to Balderston and became 
divided among the heirs of this family, 
the later fines and inquisitions showing 
portions to have been held by Thomas 


207 


Earl of Derby, 1521 (succeeding Harring- 
ton); Alexander Osbaldeston, 1544 ; 
William Radcliffe of Winmarleigh, 1561, 
and Gilbert Gerard, 1593. 

10 Hoghton succeeded Dutton before 
1290. Robert de Dutton gave his brother 
Hugh part of the wood of Whittingham ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 1913. Hugh de 
Dutton granted land to Alexander son of 
Randle de Goosnargh, the bounds of it 
going down to Ashley Clough, by the 
clough to the high way, thence to the 
carr, and round to the starting-point ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 324. Adam son of 
Sir Adam de Hoghton about 1284 (Gilbert 
de Clifton being sheriff) released to the 
same Alexander all his claim in that 
oxgang of land which Robert de Dutton 
had granted to Randle father of Alexander ; 
ibid. no, 320. 

A sixth part of the manor of Whitting- 
ham was in 1306 included in the estate 
of Richard son of [Sir] Adam de Hoghton; 
Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 207. This seems to show that at that 
time the ‘manor’ was the moiety granted 
out, and that each of the three holders 
shared equally. Nevertheless in 1322 
Richard de Hoghton was said to hold the 
manor of Whittingham by the eighth part 
of a knight’s fee of the honour of Pen- 
wortham ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, ii, 136. 

In 1422 Sir Richard Hoghton was said 
to hold a moiety of the manor of Whit- 
tingham by the sixteenth part of a knight's 
fee, paying 74d. for castle ward and 6d. to 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


the Whittinghams may have failed in the legitimate 
line, or may have been compelled to sell part of their 
holding, as to the remainder of it becoming tenants 
of Hoghton. The mesne lordship of the last-named 
family was sometimes neglected!! and sometimes 
regarded as the sole manor. 

The moiety at first retained in demesne appears 
to have been acquired by one of the numerous off- 
shoots of the Singleton family. John de Singleton 
died in or before 1398 holding a moiety of the 


having apparently been called the manor of FER. 
M.4NHOLES "5 ; and the Shireburnes of Stony hurst 
whose estate was known as the manor of COM. 
FORTH HALL, the fortieth part,'® having acquired 
the share of the Clitheroes of Bailey. In all these 
shares form the eighth part of a knight’s fee, corre. 
sponding with one plough-land of the ancient assess. 
ment. 

The lordship of the manor was thus early divided 


manor of the duke in chief, and leaving a son and 
heir Robert, only four years of age.}8 
became subdivided, for in the 16th century it is 
found that the Singletons of Chingle Hall, offshoots 
of those of the Tower in Broughton, held of the king 
as of his duchy the twentieth part of a knight’s fee in 
Whittingham “ ; the Leylands of Morleys, as heirs of 
the Singletons of Withgill, the same, their estate 


Penwortham ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 146. Lands in Whittingham 
were in 1479 enumerated among the 
possessions of Henry Hoghton held by 
knight’s service, but nothing was said of 
any ‘manor’; Lancs. Rec. Ing. p.m. 
no. 47, 48. Later, in the inquisition 
after the death of Alexander Hoghton, 
his lands in Whittingham and Comber- 
halgh were said to be held of the king, 
but the tenure was unknown ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, no, 66. Later still 
Sir Richard Hoghton, who died in 1630, 
was found to have held his ‘manors’ of 
Whittingham and Comberhalgh of the 
king as of his duchy by the twentieth 
part of a knight’s fee ; ibid. xxvii, no. 13. 
This is the same as the Banastre tenure 
of 1323. 

11 Compare the tenures of William 

and Thomas Whittingham in 1437 and 
1530. 
i Richard de Freckleton gave land in 
Comberhalgh to Richard Drury ; Towne- 
ley MS. DD, no. 1915. Richard son of 
William Drury claimed 44 acres in Whit- 
tingham against Master Robert de Single- 
ton in 1295 ; De Banco R. 110, m. 73; 
111, m. 39d. William son of Robert 
de Singleton was plaintiff in 1317-18, 
and Randle de Singleton in 1319; De 
Banco R. 220, m, 376d, 3 223, m. 273 
231, m. 109 d. 

In 1324 a jury decided that Richard de 
Hoghton was lord of one-sixth of Comber- 
halgh—a distinct hamlet in Whitting- 
ham—and Randle de Singleton of the 
remainder, various minor tenants being 
defeated, viz. Maud widow of Thomas 
de Kendal, Adam de Elswick, Thomas 
son of Hugh de Goosnargh, and Hugh 
son of Randle de Goosnargh; Assize R. 
425, m. 5d. ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 340. 
As a result Richard Drury released all 
his claim in the sixth part of Comberhalgh 
to Richard de Hoghton ; ibid. no. 180, 
319 (fol. 274, &c.). In 1332 Richard 
Drury made claims against William son of 
Alexander son of Adam de Elswick and 
against Sir Richard de Hoghton and 
Randle de Singleton; Assize R. 1411, 
m. 12. 

Randle’s lordship appears to have been 
derived, in part at least, from a grant by 
Joan widow of Thomas Banastre to her 
brother Randle de Singleton of all her part 
of Comberhalgh and all her lands in 
Whittingham at the rent of a pair of 
gloves ; Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 744. In 
1324 Randle granted to Adam son of 
John de Singleton a fourth part of all the 


This moiety 


wood and waste between Brunden and 
the Crombrook in Comberhalgh for the 
rent of a pair of spurs; Add. MS. 
32106, no, 671. Ten years later there 
was a dispute between William son of 
John de Whittingham and Alice widow 
of John de Singleton on one side and Sir 
Richard de Hoghton and Randle de 
Singleton on the other as to an approve- 
ment of waste between Brunden and 
Ashley ; Towneley MS. DD, no. 1854. 
See the note on Pleasington below. 

In 1246 Adam de Singleton claimed 
part of an oxgang of land as part of his 
inheritance from Thomas his father ; 
Assize R. 404, m. 9. 

The Shireburne abstract book preserved 
at Leagram Hall throws light on the 
Singletons of Whittingham. It appears 
that Alan de Singleton (whose wife 
was named Alice) had two sons named 
William, and the younger of them gave 
lands in Whittingham to Robert and 
Alan, sons of his brother William. 
Robert had a son John, who by his wife 
Alice (a widow in 1319) had ason Adam, 
whose son Robert had Chingle Hall from 
his father in 1354. This Robert with 
Alice his wife had a grant from Sir T. 
Banastre in 1372. See notes 28, 59. 

Alan the (? elder) brother of the former 
Robert granted lands in Comberhalgh to 
his son Henry. Gilbert (of Broughton) 
and Randle were apparently other sons. 

13 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 69. 
It was probably the daughter of this John 
de Singleton (Margaret) who married 
Robert son and heir of Nicholas de 
Clitheroe of Bailey in 1403 ; Shireburne 
Abstract Book. 4 See below. 

15 Something has been said of this 
family in preceding townships (e.g. in the 
account of Middleton in Goosnargh), 
but a clear descent is wanting. 

Henry son of Thomas de Singleton in 
1361 leased to Robert son of Adam de 
Singleton his manor of Fermanholes with 
mills and lands in Whittingham ; Shire- 
burne Abstract. Henry de Singleton had 
Fermanholes in 1394, in which year hisson 
William is named as having been indicted 
for waylaying and killing one of the 
king’s justices ; Cal. Pat. 1391-6, p. 388. 
William Singleton of Withgill — ob- 
viously the William Singleton of Fer- 
manholes of another writ—complained in 
1408 that he had been outlawed unjustly ; 
Add. MS. 32108, no. 1583, 1636. From 
the pedigree given below it would appear 
that this estate went to another Singleton 
family, previously of Chingle Hall. 


208 


into small fractions, held in many cases by nop. 
residents, and it is impossible to say what has become 
of all of the parts, 
a partition of estates between the heirs in 
assigned to the Earl of Derby," and about 1610 was 
acquired by the Heskeths of Rufford,!8 being held b 
them for a long time as the manor of NETHER 
WHITTINGHAM.) 
sold or mortgaged in 1631.20 


The original Singleton Manor on 
1564 was 


The Hoghton Manor was 
Fines and suit of 


Sir William Leyland of Mortleys 
married Anne daughter and heir of Alan 
Singleton of Withgill; Visi, of 1533 
(Chet. Soe.), 88. Sir William died in 
possession in 1547 holding lands j 
Whittingham and Ashley oF ihe king Ms 
of his duchy by the twentieth part of a 
knight’s fee; Duchy of Lane, Ing. p.m, 
ix, no. 4.3. Similar statements were made 
in later inquisitions, as in that of his son 
Thomas in 1564 (ibid, xi, no, 20) and 
that of Edward Tyldesley of Morleys in 
1621 5; Lanes. Ing. p.m, (Rec. Soc, Lancs, 
and Ches.), ii, 261. 

Richard Whittingham in 1$43 com- 
plained that Thomas Leyland of With- 
gill and others had entered ‘a great 
waste ground containing 100 acres and 
more, with divers cottages built there,’ 
which had belonged to plaintiff and his 
ancestors. Thomas Leyland replied that 
a certain John Singleton his ancestor had 
inherited the ‘manor of Fernarweles,’ 
which included the said waste, and he 
gave the following pedigree : John Single- 
ton -s. Robert ~s, Alan ~da, Anne, 
Plaintiff denied the existence of such a 
manor; Duchy of Lance. Dep. 35 
Hen. VIII, xxxix, W 4. 

Part at least of the Tyldesley estate 
(Ashley) was in 1681 sold by Edward 
Tyldesley of Myerscough to Thomas 
Patten of Preston and Thornley, from 
whom it has descended to the Earl of 
Derby ; information of Mr. Windham E. 
Hale. 

16 Sir Richard Shireburne was found to 
have held it in 1594, as also Richard 
his son in 1628; Duchy of Lance, Inq 
p-m. xvi, no. 3 3 xxvi, no. 4. 

The manors of Comforth Hall and 
Whittingham are named among the 
Shireburne estates in 1579; Pal of 
Lance. Feet of F. bdle. 41, m. 199. 

17 Pal, of Lanc. Plea R. 216, m. 10. 

18 In a fine of that year respecting this 
and other manors Robert and Richard 
Hesketh were plaintiffs and Thomas Lord 
Ellesmere, Alice his wife, Sir Thomas 
Leigh and Thomas Spencer were defor- 
ciants ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 74, 
no. 28, 

19 It occurs in a feoffment by Robert 
Hesketh of Ruffard in 1696 ; ibid. bdle. 
237, m. 52. Again in a recovery im 
1748 ; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 569, m. 8d. 

20 In a fine of that year respecting the 
manor of Whittingham only Miles Berry 
and Samuel Knott were plaintiffs and 
Sir Gilbert Hoghton deforciant ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle, 120, 00,17. It 


wavy aly Mod NAG + WVHONILLIA AA 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


court were claimed for the superior manor of Pen- 


wortham as late as 1544.7 


The chief resident family was that of Whitting- 
ham, but in the 16th century that of Singleton of 
Chingle Hall became important for a time. 


were several minor houses. 


Warine de Whittingham occurs as early as 1210,” 
and is no doubt the Warine who had possession of a 
share of the manor in 1242 and 1246." 
he made an agreement with Alan de Singleton and 
his partners of the vill of Whittingham for a division 
of the wood into two parts, of which Warine was to 


does not occur again among the family 
manors, but land in Whittingham was 
sold by Sir Henry Hoghton in 1772 to 
William Shawe ; Pal. of Lanc, Plea R. 
615, m. 7d. 

1 Duchy Plead. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), ii, 200. 

3 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 115, &c. 
Warine was a benefactor of Cockersand 
Abbey, giving the canons an acre in 
Kilnehalgh ; Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 232. 

3 He was plaintiff in the latter year; 
Assize R. 404, m. 3. He complained 
that he had been disseised of common of 
pasture by Robert de Freckleton and 
others, and recovered. 

At the same time Maud widow of one 
Thomas de Whittingham claimed a mes- 
suage against Alexander the Clerk, Maud 
his wife and Randle de Goosnargh. 
Maud said she had recovered the land 
c, 1228-9 against Alice de Singleton and 
had had possession for seventeen years. 
She recovered ; ibid. m. 5 

It should be noticed that Warine had 
ason Richard, occurring 12463; Richard 
had a wife Hawise and a son Warne; 
Cockersand Chartul. i, 1843 Final Conc. 
i, 99. He had also a son John in one 
deed described as ‘lord of Whittingham’ ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 1906. 

3 Add. MS. 32106, no. 327. The 
bounds began at ‘Barndehurt’ and were 
defined by marked oaks, brooks and 
ditches as far as the White Oak at Cros- 
tanesnape. 

Warine granted land within certain 
bounds to Simon his son, Richard de 
Goosnargh and Randle his brother being 
witnesses ; Towneley MS. DD, no. 1909. 
To Henry, another son, he granted an 
oxgang of land to be held by knight's 
service, eight plough-lands there making a 
knight’s fee ; ibid. no, 1838. Geoffrey 
the clerk, another son, had land on the 
west of Smalldene, the service for 1 ox- 
gang of land to be rendered for it; no. 
1853. The date of this lies between 
1235 and 1241, Simon de Thornton being 
sheriff. It was probably this Geoffrey 
who was a juror in 12473; Lancs. Ing. 
and Extents, i, 166. 

8 Warine de Whittingham granted his 
son Adam an assart within certain bounds ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 1835. 

% Lanes. Ing. and Extenss,i, 210. To 
Cockersand Abbey he gave two-thirds of 
an oxgang of land, the bounds touching 
Whitacreley, Brundene and Blenesgill ; 
Cockersand Chartul. i, 230. As Adam son 
of Warine he attested a grant made by 
Robert son of Warine to his son Adam 
of land in Hevesclough ; DD, no. 1907. 
From John de Whittintham and Adam 
son of Geoffrey be Whittingham he ac- 
quired the sixth part of a mill called 
Cowanthwaite, also a part of Hurst from 
John son of Richard de Whittingham ; 
ibid. no. 1892, 1900. To Richard Drury 


7 


There 


Christiana.8 
In 1232-3 


he gave 8 acres in the north of Comber- 
halgh ; no. rgo1. 

Y Lanes. Ing. and Extents, i, 274. An 
account of his lands is given in 1297 ; 
ibid. 283. As his sisters were heirs, the 
father must have married twice. 

38 Tbid. ii, 1. © His ‘manor’ of Whit- 
tingham was held of John de Whitting- 
ham by a rent of 4d.; he also held a 
messuage and land of the Prior of St. 
John of Jerusalem by 2s. tod. rent. 

William de Whittingham, clerk, ac- 
knowledged that he owed the prior 435. 4d. 
in 1292 ; Assize R. 408,m. 51. This is 
perhaps the William who is mentioned 
in 1293 and took precedence of John de 
Whittingham in 12973; Lanes. Ing. and 
Extents, i, 281, 282. 

A grant of land by William de Whit- 
tingham to Richard his son was attested 
by William de Whittingham, clerk, and 
John de Whittingham ; DD, no. 1873. 

John de Singleton and Alice his wife 
frequently occur. They were plaintiffs 
in respect of lands in Whittingham in 
1308-9, while Geoffrey son of Adam was 
an idiot and his tenement in the king’s 
hands ; Assize R. 423, m. 1d. 

In 1311 William de Ravenshaw ob- 
tained part of Alice’s inheritance from her 
and her husband, and Adam le Fevre had 
another portion; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 12, 13. 

Richard de Hoghton in 1324-5 re- 
covered 40s, rent from lands in Whitting- 
ham, Haighton and Broughton against 
Alice widow of John de Singleton and 
Adam and Thomas his sons ; Assize R. 
426, m. 8. 

Alice widow of John de Singleton in 
1314-15 gave lands to Adam son of Alan 
son of Gilbert de Whittingham ; DD, no. 
1784. She was living in 1329, when an 
agreement was arrived at between her, 
her son Adam and Sir Richard de Hoghton 
as to the wood of Haylegh Shaw in Whit- 
tingham ; they surrendered it to him for 
a release of the above-named rent of 4os. ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 319; also no. 331. 

29 John son of Adam son of Warine de 
Whittingham in 1306 claimed 6 acres in 
the township against Richard son of Wil- 
liam de Whittingham ; De Banco R. 151, 
m. 206 ; 162, m. 258. John de Whit- 
tingham had been engaged in disputes 
with neighbours concerning a mill dam 
and the diversion of the course of a boun- 
dary brook in 1284 and 12943 Assize R. 
1268, m. 13 3 1299, mM. 15. 

As John de Whittingham he made 
grants to William his eldest son, to 
Richard de Feris (the land by the mill 
pool), to Henry son of Richard, and to 
Adam his uncle; DD, no. 1780, 1807, 
1834, 1914, 1902, 1905, 1908. 

About the same time there was another 
of the name, son of Richard de Whitting- 
ham, who made various grants; ibid. 
no. 1896 (in the field of Ashley), 1898, 


209 


KIRKHAM 


have the northern part and Alan and the others the 
southern.” Warine was apparently succeeded by his 
son Adam,” who was living in 1257," and he by his son 
John. Adam’s younger son Geoffrey became an idiot,” 
and on his death in 1310 his heirs were found to be his 
sisters Alice (wife of John de Singleton) and Margery, 
and another Margery daughter of his third sister 


John de Whittingham,” who was living in 1309,” 
was succeeded by a son William,®! who made nu- 
merous grants of lands to his children," and was 
about 1347 succeeded by his son Adam,™ followed 


1916-17. Also William son of Amery de 
Whittingham, defendant in 1309 to a 
claim by John son of Richard de Hother- 
sall; De Banco R. 178, m. 255 d. 

80 Ing. p.m. of Geoffrey, above cited. 

51 He attested a deed in 1314-15, so 
that he had probably succeeded his father 
by that time ; DD, no. 1784. In 1315 
he was called to warrant by Richard son 
of Amery de Comberhalgh ; De Banco R. 
212, m. 302. The following year he re- 
ecived land in Will croft from Adam son 
of Alot and regranted to Adam and Milli- 
cent his wife ; DD, no. 1804, 1837. 

As William son of John de Whitting- 
ham he gave to Richard Wawayn (after- 
wards Wawne) land within bounds begin- 
ning (on the north side) at the lower head 
of a certain ditch on Spenclough bank, 
following the ditch south to the upper 
head, by a hedge west to the cross-marked 
oak, thence along Spenclough north to the 
starting-point, together with another 
piece of land, at a rent of 2s. Various 
easements were allowed, including a pro-~ 
portion of wood for building and burning 
from the common wood of Whittingham ; 
Court of Wards and Liveries, Deeds and 
Evid., box 13 A, no. FD 17. William 
son of John also made a grant to Adam 
de Whittingham the Smith ; DD, no.1852. 

William de Whittingham and Alice 
his wife obtained certain land in the Eves ; 
ibid. no. 1889. The same William and 
Alice obtained a grant from Robert de 
Greenfield in 1322-3, and were re-en- 
feoffed by Robert son of John de Singleton 
in 1327 3 ibid. no. 1794-5, 1775. 

32 Several grants have been preserved 
to Roger, William and Cecily ; DD, no. 
1899, 1903, &c. In 1346 William de 
Whittingham and Adam his son made an 
agreement whereby the lands formerly 
belonging to William son of William 
should go to Adam, who had granted 
land to his sister Cecily for life and other 
land to Henry the son of William (son of 
William) ; ibid. no. 1826, 

Roger had a son Robert who in 1368 
was married to Maud daughter of John 
de Clare and had lands in Whittingham 
settled with remainder to William son of 
Adam de Whittingham ; ibid. no. 1776. 

33 William son of John de Whittingham 
and Alice his wife were in 1344 and 
1347 defendants to a claim for 12 acres 
put forward by Henry son of Thomas de 
Comberhalgh ; Assize R. 1435,m. 45d., 

d. 
ae) Adam son of William son of John 
de Whittingham was plaintiff as early as 
1314-15, his father being defendant, 
with regard to certain messuages in 
Whittingham ; Assize R. 424, m. 6. It 
appears that the father had married a 
daughter of Adam de Lever of Lever. 

In 1327 his father William gave him 
land in Whittingham on his marrying 
Aline; DD, no. 1787. At the same 


a} 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


by a son William,*® and a grandson Adam,* de- 
scribed as ‘lord of Whittingham. * ; 
probably the Adam Whittingham who accompanied 
Henry V to France and died at the siege of 


Harfleur in 1415 57 


of Whittingham of Sir 


son and heir was five years of age.*° 


_ John Whittingham “ was about 1500 succeeded by 
his son Thomas," who married Joan daughter of 
John Singleton of Withgill,? and had a son Roger,” 
who came to a violent end about 1521. 
died in 1530 ** holding various messuages and land in 
Whittingham of the king as of his duchy by the 
thirtieth part of a knight’s fee and a rent of 74/. ; 
his son Roger had left a son Richard, who was the 
heir, being then ten years old.” 
in or before 1552 holding similarly and leaving a son 
Thomas in or before 1566 


Thomas, ten years old. 


time Adam made a grant of land in 
Ashley clough and Eves clough to his 
brother Roger ; DD, no. 1781. 

Adam de Whittingham in 1352 gave 
land to Vale Royal Abbey for a tithe 
barn ; ibid. no. 1862. 

35 In 1364 Adam son of Willam de 
Whittingham gave certain lands in Ashley 
to his son William, with remainders to 
John and Thomas, other sons of the 
grantor, and then to Robert son of Roger 
de Whittingham ; ibid. no. 1836. 

Adam must have died soon afterwards, 
for in 1369 William de Whittingham and 
Maud his wife made a settlement of the 
manor of Whittingham, the remainders 
in default being to John and Thomas, 
brothers of William, to Robert de 
Whittingham and to Cecily and Aline 
daughters of William ; ibid. no. 1828-7. 
Maud was a widow in 1384-5; no. 
1812, 1874-5. 

In 1377-8 John de Whittingham, 
probably the brother of William, received 
certain land from the trustee ; Add. MS. 
32107, NO. 1050. 

36 Maud widow of William de Whitting- 
ham, Adam his son and William son of 
Thomas de Singleton in 1383 agreed to 
sell to Richard de Hoghton the wardship 
and marriage of John son and heir of 
Robert de Singleton ; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 339- : 

‘Adam de Whittingham attested charters 
in 1390-1; DD, no. 1877, 1880. In 
1394-5 Maud the widow of William de 
Whittingham and William de Singleton 
the elder made a feoffment of the manor 
of Whittingham, and then Maud and 
Adam de Whittingham contracted that 
‘Adam should marry Alice sister of 
Edmund Skillicorne ; 10. 1830, 1872. 
In 1398-9 Adam de Whittingham and 
Alice his wife received the manor of 
Whittingham from the trustees; 10. 
1829. 

37 Adam de Whittingham, lord of the 
same, granted to Thomas Browne, Robert 
de Bispham and John Browning turbary 
and pasture in respect of a tenement 
formerly William de Cottam’s ; DD, no. 
1863. From another deed (no. 1811) it 
appears that Thomas Browne, chaplain, 
evas son of Maud Ward, daughter and 
heir of William Cottam. 


leu The next in possession w 

a William Whittingham, probably a or eae 
o: Adam*; he died in 1437 holding the manor 
a Richard Hoghton by 
knight’s service and a payment of 74d. yearly ; also 
holding messuages and land in Ashley of the same 
Sir Richard by knight’s service and 7¢. John his 


This was of Ribbleton.” 


following year.” 


Thomas 


Richard died 


37a Exchequer K. R. Accts. bdle. 46, 
no. 17. 

33 There does not seem to be any 
evidence on this point, except the un- 
trustworthy pedigree of 1567. 

39 DD, no. 1474; Dep. Keeper's Rep. 
xxxiii, App. 37. Elizabeth widow of 
William Whittingham soon afterwards 
leased her lands in Whittingham, Goos- 
nargh and Comberhalgh to Sir Richard 
Hoghton for sixteen years; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 875. John Whittingham in 
1467 gave to trustees lands of Elizabeth 
his mother; DD, no. 1857. She was 
living in 1476, being then widow of 
Peter Radcliffe ; Kuerden fol. MS. 357. 

49In 1456-7 John son and heir of 
William Whittingham married Elizabeth 
daughter of John Boteler of Kirkland ; 
DD, no. 1790, 1824, 1858. In 1483 
he released to feoffees lands in Ashley 
croft ; ibid. no, 1821. 

41 In deeds of 1498-1500 Thomas is 
called son and heir-apparent of John 
Whittingham ; ibid. no. 1785, 1796. 

42Lands in Whittingham were in 
1477 settled for life on Joan on her 
marriage with Thomas ; ibid, no. 1867, 
1789. 

43 Roger first married Agnes Brock- 
holes, but they were divorced in 15133 
ibid, no. 1868. His next wife was named 
Isabel; she made complaints against 
several in 121 for complicity in the 
death of her husband; Pal. of Lanc. 
Plea R. 131, m. 154.5 Fishwick, Goos- 
nargh, 186. She afterwards married James 
Lambert and in 1544 made complaint a8 
to her dower ; DD, no. 1801. 

44In 1523-4 he made a feoffment of 
all his lands ; DD, no. 1912. This was 
probably on account of his son’s death. 

45 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. Vly NO. 
19. Some of the deeds above quoted are 
recited. It appears that Agnes Brock- 
holes was daughter of Ellen the widow of 
Roger Brockholes. 

Christopher Standish bought from the 
king the marriage of Richard Whitting- 
ham, next of kin and heir of Thomas 
Whittingham deceased, and sold it to 
William Singleton, who in 1531-2 made 
a grant of certain lands in Ashley 5 
Kuerden fol. MS. 383. 

Richard Whittingham in 1550 made a 


210 


married Bridget sister and co-heir of Richard Browne 


A pedigree was recorded in the 


Like his neighbours, Thomas Whittingham was 
hostile to the change of religion made by Elizabeth, 
but on being summoned before 
the Bishop of Chester about 
1577, a8 a person suspected, 
he affirmed that he went to 
church and was conformable.” 
The conformity may have 
been external merely, for two 
of his grandsons became Jesuits, 
one of them being a prisoner 
in Newgate for some years.” 
Thomas was living in 1590,°! 
but before 1600 had been 
succeeded by his son Richard,” 
who died in 1611 holding 
lands in Whittingham, Ashley 
and Comberhalgh of the king by the twentieth part 
of a knight’s fee. His son Thomas, twenty-five years 
old,** followed and held possession “ all through the 


Woirtincuam — of 
Whittingham. Argent 
a fesse awure, over alla 


lion rampant gules, 


settlement of his manor of Whittingham, 
&c., and made provision for his (younger) 
son Richard; DD, no. 1833, 1859. 
About the same time he complained of 
various trespasses on the waste of the 
manor; Ducatus Lane. i, 247, 261, 27}. 

46 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. ix, no. 16. 
In 1553 the king granted the third part 
of the manor of Whittingham, together 
with the wardship and marriage of 
Thomas the heir, to William Waring ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Misc, Bke. xxiii, 81d. 

7 DD, no. 1843. A settlement of the 
manor of Whittingham and various lands 
was made by Thomas and Bridget in 
1585; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 47, 


m. 42. 

4 Visit, of 1567 (Chet. Soc.), §0. 

49 Gibson, Lydiate Hall, 215, quoting 
S. P. Dom. Eliz. xviii, 49. 

5 Paul Whittingham, born at Whit- 
tingham, entered the English College at 
Rome in 1606, aged seventeen. He had 
made his first studies at Goosnar, h, 
Chipping and Whalley, and then went to 
Douay. [1605—‘a poor Englishman’ ; 
Diaries, 286.] His parents and rclatives op 
both siles were of the upper class of society, 
and he had two brothers. ‘He died most 
piously in the college, 11 July 1611, 
having been first admitted to the Society '; 
Foley, Rec. S.J. vi, 238. 

His younger brother William was ad- 
mitted to the same college in 1607, and 
became ‘dear to all for his remarkable 
virtues and candour of soul.’ He had 
made his early studies at Pocklington and 
Whalley and then went to Douay. [1606 
—‘a poor Englishman’ ; Diaries, 286.) 
He entered the Society of Jesus in 1611 
and was sent on the London mission 
in 1620, taking the alias of Rediste. 
He was killed in the accident at Black- 
friars, 26 Oct. 1623 5 Foley, op. cit 4 
85; vi, 247. ; 

51 Misc. (Cath, Rec. Soc.), iv, 177- 

82 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lance. and Ches.), 
i, 232. 

58 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Chrs.), i, 195- 

4 Thomas Whittingham and Margaret 
his wife in 1633-+ made a settlement of 
the manor, with land:, dovecete, &c, 10 
Whittingham and A-hley ; Pal. of Lance 
Feet of F. bile. 122, no. 42- 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Civil War period,” recording pedigrees at the visita- 
tions in 1613 °° and 1664." 

He died in 1668, and was, it appears, succeeded 
by his grandson Thomas. ‘The estate descended in 
the male line ® to Richard Whittingham, who sold it 
in 1779, and died soon afterwards without issue. 
It was purchased by Edward Pedder of Preston, and 
descended in his family till about 1866, when it was 
again sold. It now belongs to the asylum. 

CHINGLE HALL first appears by name in 1354, 
when it was held by Robert son of Adam de Single- 
ton,” a descendant of the Alan de Singleton who held 
part ofthe manor in 1242. It wasabout 1500 settled, 
apparently by a family arrangement, upon John Single- 
ton, a younger son of William Singleton of Broughton 
Tower.” He died about 1530," and his son William 
in 1541,” Chingle Hall being then recorded as held 
of the king by the twentieth part of a knight’s fee.™ 
John the son and heir was twenty-nine years old, 
but he died only three years later, leaving a son 
Thomas, aged one year,“ and Thomas dying shortly 
afterwards, a younger son John became heir.* John 
Singleton held the manor of Chingle Hall, with 
windmill, &c., till his death in 1571, and then, his 
son William having just died, the heir was a daughter 


KIRKHAM 


Eleanor, four years old.“ She became an_ idiot,” 
and died in 1585, when her heirs were Anthony Wall 
of Preston, Thomas Preston, Katherine wife of 
Thomas Eccleston and Jane wife of Christopher 
Harris.° After some disputation ® the hall became 
the property of Anthony Wall,” in whose family it 
remained till 1764. It was then purchased by a 
family named Singleton, and about 1860 was sold to 
Richard Newsham of Preston.” Soon afterwards the 
hall was acquired by the trustees of Goosnargh 
Hospital, the present owners.” 

The hall stands on rising ground a little less than 
half a mile to the north of the Blundel brook. It 
is now a two-story farm-house very much modernized 
and retaining little of its ancient appearance. The 
front faces south with a projecting gable towards the 
east end, and a new wing has been built at the back. 
The walls appear to be of brick on a stone base, but 
are now covered with stucco, and all the windows 
are modern, but the front door is the original 17th- 
century one of oak with Y knocker and ornamental 
hinges. The chief interest of the house lies in 
the well-preserved remains of the moat on the 
south side, crossed by a ‘bridge’ or passage-way 
with cobble paving and low brick walls. 


55 Thomas Whittingham must have been 
certainly known as a Protestant before 
1643, for he was made captain of a troop 
of horse for the Parliament, which troop 
he actually raised when Prince Rupert 
came into the county; War in Lancs. 
(Chet. Soc.), 43. 

56 Visit, (Chet. Soc.), 63. He paid £10 
in 1631, having refused knighthood ; 
Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 221. 

57 Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 333. 
The ages of Thomas Whittingham and 
his son are given wrongly. The descent 
is thus shown: Thomas -s. Godfrey 
-s. Thomas. Some further genealogical 
particulars can be obtained from the 
Preston Guild R. (Rec. Soc.), and there 
is a pedigree in Fishwick’s Goosnargh, 
185-8, from which the later details in the 
text have been derived. 

53 The descent is thus given in the 
work quoted : Thomas, died 1710 —half- 
bro. Richard, d. 1717 -s. Henry, d. 1753 
-s. Richard, d. 1777 -s. Richard, the 
vendor. Richard, who died in 1717, gave 
his lands to trustees to the use of his 
son Henry, ‘provided that the said Henry 
conformed himself to the Protestant 
religion according to the Church of 
England ’—which Henry refused to do— 
in default they were ‘only to allow a com- 
petent maintenance for him and his wife 
and children’; Fishwick, op. cit. 188. 
Henry Whittingham was a Jacobite ; 
Gillow, Haydock Papers, 45. There is a 
note of his marriage in Piccope MSS. 
(Chet. Lib.), iti, 272, from roll 18 of 
Geo. II at Preston. 

5° Shireburne Abstract above cited,which 
also shows that the manor of Chingle 
Hall, with lands in Whittingham, Haigh- 
ton, Preston and Newsham, was in 1431 
held by Thomas and Robert Singleton and 
Richard Clitheroe. A division was ar- 
ranged. (The Singletons concerned appear 
to be those of Broughton and Withgill.) 

® William Singleton and his feoffees in 
1484-5 made a grant of all his lands to 
his son John; Kuerden fol. MS. 382. 
This grant was no doubt in trust, for in 
Tso1 a division was arranged by which 
Richard Singleton (son of Robert son of 
William) should have lands, &c., in 


Broughton, Warton and Preston, and 
John Singleton should have the manor of 
Chingle Hall and messuages and lands in 
Whittingham, Haighton, Goosnargh and 
several other townships ; ibid. 383 ; Final 
Conc. iii, 150. 

61 John Singleton and William his son 
and heir-apparent occur in receipts and 
bonds in 1525, 1527 and 1528-9; 
Kuerden fol. MS. 383 ; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 796. In 1530-1 Elizabeth widow of 
John Singleton and her trustees agreed 
with William as to her dower ; Kuerden 
fol. MS. 381. 

62 William Singleton married Anne 
Heaton some time before 1534, when the 
110 marks he received with her was 
fully discharged ; ibid. 382. 

63 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. viii, no. 9. 

64 Tbid. vii, no. 15 ; his brothers Richard 
and Henry are named, also his wife Alice 
and daughters Anne, Elizabeth, Kathe- 
tine and Jane. 

There was a divorce between Alice 
Duckett and John Singleton pronounced 
in the ecclesiastical court at Ribchester 
in 15323 yet she seems to be the Alice 
named in the inquisition, and claimed 
dower in 1569 (being then wife of Lancelot 
Marten) as widow of John Singleton the 
elder ; Court of Wards and Liveries, box 
86, no. I, 2. 

6 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. vii, no. 22. 
The wardship and marriage of John 
Singleton were in 1545 granted by the 
king to Sir John Perient; Duchy of 
Lanc. Misc. Bks. xxii, 219d. Anthony 
Laton, apparently the actual guardian 
of John Singleton, was of Chingle Hall 
in 1549; Kuerden fol. MS. 247. John 
was probably posthumous. 

66 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiii, no. 16 5 
an agreement of 1571 is recorded, by 
which William the son and heir was to 
marry Mary daughter of George Astley. 
John Singleton married Isabel, afterwards 
wife of Richard Livesey ; she was living 
at Chingle Hall in 1585 ; ibid. xiv, no. 67. 

87 Ibid. xiv, no. 74, dated 1582; her 
age was then given as fifteen. 

68 Ibid. 67. Her father’s sisters above- 
named were married as follows: Anne 
to William Wall of Preston -s. Anthony ; 


ee 


Elizabeth to Richard Preston —s. Thomas ; 
Katherine to James Bolton ~s. Nicholas 
and da. Katherine wife of Thomas Eccles- 
ton; Jane to Christopher Harris. See 
the pedigree in Fishwick, op. cit. 192. 

69 Many references will be found in the 
Ducatus Lane. (ii, 237, &c.), and abstracts 
of some of the pleadings are given in 
Fishwick, op. cit. 191. Christopher Harris 
and Joan his wife in 1568 claimed a 
moiety of certain lands bequeathed by 
Alice Singleton, mother of Joan, but her 
brother John, to whom Joan had trans- 
ferred in 1564, refused to pay; Duchy 
of Lanc. Plead. Eliz. lxxii, H 20. 

Nicholas Bolton in 1586, on behalf of 
himself and the co-heirs, complained that 
one Roger Burton and Elizabeth his wii 
had wrongfully obtained possession of part 
of the estate ; ibid. cxliv, B 8. 

William Farington of Worden in 1596 
complained that Nicholas Bolton, who as 
heir of Chingle Hall had sold him certain 
land, was trying to evade the performance 
of his bargain by hiding himself and chang- 
ing his name ; ibid. clxxiii, F 3. 

William Farington in 1611 held lands 
in Whittingham of the Earl of Derby ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 182-4. 

The following refer to the estate: Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 49, m. 267; 
50, m. 1945 51, m. 575 52, m. 1993 
59, m. 97, 181. 

7 Anthony Wall of Preston died in 
1601 holding lands in Whittingham, of 
which the tenure isnot recorded ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xviii, no. 6. His son 
William died in 1626 holding of the king 
by the hundredth part of a knight’s fee ; 
ibid. xxvi, 50; Towneley MS. C8, 13 
(Chet. Lib.), 1301. A pedigree of Wall 
Sof Chingle Hall’ was recorded in 1664 ; 
Dugdale, Visit, (Chet. Soc.), 323. See 
further in the account of Preston. 

Thomas Eccleston of Great Eccleston, 
another of the heirs, in 1592 held lands 
in Whittingham, but the tenure was not 
recorded ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvi, 
no. 38. 

71 Fishwick, op. cit. 192. 

72 End. Char. Rep. for Kirkham, 123 ; 
the hall and 41 acres of land, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


The family of Sinzleton of Brockholes and Bank 
Hall in Broughton was represented in Whitting- 
ham, holding of the Prior of St. John by a rent of 


12d.” 


4°HLEY™ and COMBERHALGH™ gave sur- 
Families 
Wawne,’® Fishwick,” Taylor,’ Walton,” and Bra- 
boner ® were connected with these parts of the town- 


landholders there. 


names to 


73 This was the tenure of Robert 
Singleton of Brockholes in 1525, and of 
his successor William; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. vi, no. 64 3 x, Mo. I. William 
Singleton of Bank Hall, however, was in 
1573 said to hold of the queen by knight’s 
service, or else of the Earl of Derby by a 
rent of gauntlets, payable at Preston fair ; 
ibid. xii, no. 30, 34.3 xvi, no. 50. Compare 
the grant by Joan Banastre in note 12 
above. 

‘+ John de Whittingham gave a moiety 
of Lower Ashley to Robert son of William 
de Ashley, and William son of John made 
a grant to the same Robert ; Towneley 
MS. DD, no. 1894, 1887. 

John de Whittingham granted half the 
field called Over Ashley to Richard de 
Ashley ; Add. MS. 32107, no. ro8r. 
This may have been the Richard son of 
Gilbert de Ashley who released lands to 
William his brother; DD, no. 1891. 
John son of Gilbert de Ashley also had 
land in Ashley from John de Whittingham 
(DD, no. 189-), but in 1316 released his 
right in them to Robert son of Richard 
de Ashley and Avice his wife; Dods. 
MISS. lili, fol. 24. Among the witnesses 
were tw» named Robert de Ashley. The 
cift was confirmed or augmented by 
William de Whittingham; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 326. 

Margery daughter of William son of 
Richard de Ashley of Waittingham claimed 
land in Elston in 1346 ; De Banco R. 348, 
mM. 304. 

7 William son of John de Whittingham 
gave g acres to Richard son of Amery 
de Comberhu'zh and Alice his wife ; DD, 
no. 1858. Alice daughter of Adam del 
Eves in 1331 sought two-thirds of a tene- 
ment in Whittingham against Henry son 
of Thomas de Comberhalgh (under age), 
and the other third against Eva widow of 
Thomas; De Banco R. 287, m. 5823 
290,m. 276d, The land called the Eves 
is named in a much earlier charter ; DD, 
no. 1876. 

Alice daughter of Roger de Comber- 
halgh was non-suited in 1360 in a claim 
against Sir Adam de Hoghton and Gilbert 
de Hyde; Duchy of Lance. Assize R. 8, 
m. 8. 

A portion called ‘a moiety of the manor 
of Comberhalgh’ was in 1364 in the pos- 
session of Rict.ard de Pleasington (of 
Dimples) and Sibyl his wife; Dods. MSS. 
cxlix, fol. 725. A note on the pedigree 
states that the lands came from Margaret 
daughter and co-heir of Randle de Singleton, 
formerly wife of Thomas de Knoll ; ibid. 
fol. 73; Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 2, m. 8. 
William Pleasington in 1621 held 
messuages, &:., in Comberhalgh of the 
king in socage; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. 
Soc.), ii, 240. 

Henry Projen (who had a son John) 
had land in Greenhurst in Comberhalgh 
in 1412; Add. MS. 32104, no. 623. In 
1583 Richard Crook purchased land in 
Whittingham, Ashley and Comberhalgh 
from Edmund Proden and Robert his son 4 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 45, m. 71. 
Sir Richard Shireburne made a purchase 


ship. 


disappeared.** 


named 


from John Pruden in Ashley in 1589 ; 
ibid. bdle. 51, m. 273. 

76 Deeds of this family are in the Court 
of Wards and Liveries (box 13 A, FD 17, 
zo, &c.), and there are some in the 
Anct. D. (P.R.O.), A8g31, &. They 
had lands in Ashley and Comber- 
halgh. The descent cannot be clearly 
established, We have Richard -s, William 
-s. John between 1300 and 1350; 
Thomas in 1372 granting lands to Aline 
del Chambre (Add. MS. 32106, no. 323) 5 
John the elder and Alice his wife in 14.09 ; 
John (son of Thomas) in 1423 ; Robert in 
1§25, and Nicholas in 1574. 

Edmund Wawne (son of Nicholas and 
Ellen) died in or before 1592 holding 
two messuages in Ashley of Thomas 
Whittingham by knight’s service and 
6s.rent. His heir was a brother Thomas, 
thirteen years of age; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. xv, no. 13. 

77 Adam de Fishwick obtained land in 
1383, perhaps part of his inheritance ; 
Final Conc. ii, 17. William Fishwick in 
1414 gave land in Over Ashley to John 
Moton, tailor ; Add. MS. 32107,no. 1125. 

James (son of John) Fishwick, who died 
in 1585, held lands in Comberhalgh, viz. 
in Savock Hey, of the queen as of the 
late priory of St. John of Jerusalem by 
3d. rent; he also held messuages, &c., in 
Whittingham of the queen as of her duchy 
by the thousandth part of a knight's fee ; 
Duchy of Lanc, Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 52. 
His heir was a son John, ten years of age. 

Col. Fishwick supplies the following 
notes: In 1358 Richard son of Thomas 
de Greenhall granted to Adam son of 
Richard de Fishwick all his lands in 
Comberhalgh and Whittingham, and in 
1408 Roger Waring granted his lands 
there to William son of Adam de Fishwick. 
In 1432 John son of William de Fishwick 
and Ellen his wife, daughter of R. Hol- 
croft, made a feoffment of Jands in the 
place (Shireburne D). In 1607 and in 
1618 John Fishwick and Jane his wife 
occur (Plea R.). 

7 Roger Taylor died in 1586 holding 
messuages, &c., in Comberhalgh of Thomas 
Whittingham by the hundredth part of a 
knight’s fee and 74d. rent. Robert his 
son and heir was three years old ; Duchy 
of Lane. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 43. A later 
inquisition corrects this by stating that 
the land was held of Richard Shireburne ; 
ibid. xvii, no. 19. 

79 William Walton died in 1559 hold- 
ing lands in Comberhalgh, &c., of Thomas 
Whittingham by 4s. rent ; ibid. xi, no. 27. 
His son Richard died in 1594 holding 
the same estate ; ibid. xvi, no. 423 xvii, 
no. 48. 

°0 Braboner’s House was in the south- 
west corner of Comberhalgh. Some 
16th-century deeds of this family are in 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 388-94. There 
are references to them in Ducarus Lanc. 
ili, 15, &c., from which it appears they 
held of the Fishwicks ; one of them was 
tector of Ashton-under-Lyne ; ibid. 107. 

8°a Information of Col, Fishwick. 

§1 John de Bradkirk held land in 13303 


212 


Comberhalgh now belongs to the :rustees 
of Lady Marling. 


The house has long since 


Among the early families of note were those of 
Bradkirk,” who seem to have been followed by 
Parker of Whittingham House ; Elswick, perhaps 
succeeded by Southworth of Samlesbury; Goos- 
nargh,® and _ Preston.” 


Later that of Waring 


De Banco R. 284, m. 304. Adam de 
Bradkirk died in 1349 holding two 
messuages and 40 acres of Sir Adam de 
Hoghton by knight’s service and &d, 
rent ; Inq. p.m. 28 Edw. III (2nd nos.), 
no. 15. 

This is possibly the estate held by a 
family named Parker from early in the 
17th century. Its founder was Henry 
son of William Parker of Bradkirk. Whit- 
tingham House descended to Martha 
Parker, who died in 1856, leaving issue 
by her husband James German otf 
Preston, There is a pedigree in Fish- 
wick, op. cit. 189, 

8? Adam de Elswick died in 1325 
holding lands, &c., of Adam Banastre, a 
minor, by a rent of 19/. and paying ¢}d, 
in a scutage of 4os, There were a 
messuage, 19 acres of arable land and an 
acre of meadow, in all worth 14s. 4d. 
William the son and heir was thirty 
yearsold ; Ing. p.m. 19 Edw, II, no. 58, 

Alexander son of Adam de Elswick 
and William his son were defendants to a 
claim made by Richard Drury in 1332; 
Assize R. 1411, m. 12. John de 
Elswick received lands from his feoffees 
in 13993 Kuerden fol. MS. 153, 114. 
Thomas Elswick of Whittingham and 
Edmund his son and heir made in 1469 
a grant of messuages and lands, including 
one tenanted by Richard Dukedale ; 
ibid. 115. Edmund Elswick of Witton 
made a feoffment of his lands in 
Whittingham and Goosnargh in 1506-7 ; 
ibid. John son and heir of Edmund 
Elswick occurs in 15313; Add. MS. 
32107, no. 1048. John Curtes, who had 
married Margaret daughter and heir of 
John Elswick, claimed varivus lands in 
Goosnargh and Whittingham in 1553-4 ; 
Ducatus Lanc. ii, 130. Their deeds are in- 
cluded among those of Southworth by 
Kuerden, and Sir John Southworth in 
1595 had land in the township, but the 
tenure is not recorded ; see also Ducatus 
Lane. iii, 314. 

83 Adam son of Sir Adam de Hoghton 
about 1290 released to Alexander son of 
Randle de Goosnargh all right in an 
oxgang of land in Whittingham ; Dods. 
MSS. Ixx, fol. 154. This Alexander and 
Alice the widow of Randle appear in 
pleadings in 1292, the latter claiming 
land against Robert de Singleton, who 
showed that he had entry through 
William de Singleton and not through 
her husband; Assize R. 408, m. 46, 
18d. 

It appears that Randle de Goosnargh 
had two other sons, Henry and Hugh. 
Hugh's sons Richard and Thomas gave 
lands in Whittingham to William de 
Whittingham, which gift was confirmed 
in 1324-5; Towneley MS. DD, no. 
1890. In 1330 Alexander son of Henry 
claimed messuages and lands against his 
cousins the said Richard and Thomas; 
De Banco R. 282, m. 179 4. 

In 1331 William son of Joha 
brother of Henry de Tunstall claimed a 
messuage, mill, &c.. in Whittingham 
against John son of Robert son of Adam 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


occurs.’ George Waring died in 1557 holding two 
messuages in Over Whittingham of Thomas Whit- 
tingham by a rent of 5s. 3¢., and owning land in 
Nether Whittingham also. The family can be 
traced down to the 18th century ; the site of their 
house, Got Field, is part of the Asylum estate.®” 
Thomas Salisbury died in 1630 holding Lower House 
in Whittingham of Thomas Singleton * ; Christopher 
his brother and successor died in 1641. A number 
of other owners occur in the inquisitions.™ 

Cockersand Abbey. the Knights Hospitallers,” 
and the Franciscans of Preston had land in the 
township. 


LYTHAM 


Only one or two sequestrations appear in the 
Commonwealth period,” but some ‘ Papists ’ registered 
estates in 1717.° 

The Presbyterians had a licensed meeting-place in 
1689," but it has disappeared. 

The Wesleyan Methodists began services in a dis- 
used cotton factory, but in 1831-2 a chapel was 
built, which continues in use.” 

There was a large number of convicted recusants 
in Whittingham about 1670,"° and Roman Catholics 
formerly had a chapel at Duxendean at the west 
end of the township, but it was taken down in 
1840." 


LYTHAM 


Lidun, Dom. Bk.; Lithun, Lithum, c. 1190; 
Lethum, 1347. 

The township occupies a level tract of land at the 
mouth of the Ribble; Lytham proper is at the 
eastern end, and is bounded on the south by the 
Ribble ; while St. Anne’s, formerly called Heyhouses, 
occupies the north-west portion and looks out over 
the Irish Sea to the west. The area between the 


two extremes is known as Ansdell ; the new residential 
district called Fairhaven is here,’ while Heyhouses 
is more inland. Formerly a large part of the total 
area of 5,3094 acres” was occupied by sandy wastes 
on the sea side and mosses inland, but there was 
arable land to the north-east of the village. The 
township by the county lay of 1624 had to pay 
£2 6s. 24d. to each £100 levied on the hundred.* 


de Preston, but the defendant showed a 
release from William himself ; Assize R. 
1404, m. 19. 

Henry Preston of Preston died in 
1549 holding land of Richard Whitting- 
ham by 12d. rent ; Duchy of Lance. Ing. 
pm. ix, no. 193 x, no. 10. Margaret 
widow of Henry Wilkinson was occupier 
of Preston House in 1563-6; Ducatus 
Lanc. ii, 273, 333- George Preston in 
1602 held of the king by the two- 
hundredth part of a knight’s fee 3 Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), i, 103-4. The 
same estate was in 1608 held by Leonard 
Chorley, who was succeeded by a son 
William ; ibid. ii, 9. 

To these may be added Thomas 
Bretherton, who died in 1443 holding 
among other lands a messuage and 30 
acres in Whittingham of Sir Richard 
Hoghton by ros. net, and 6 acres of 
Thomas Singleton the elder by 2s. rent ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 1490. John 
Catterall of Eaves Green and Selby, 
attainted of high treason in 1461, had 
lands, &c., in Whittingham which were 
bestowed on Sir John Pilkington ; Chan. 
Ing. pm. 11 Edw. IV, no. 335 19 
Edw. IV, no. 77. 

% Henry Waring of Whittingham was 
a debtor in 1448; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 
Io, m. 8. 

8 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xiii, no. 18. 
John his son and heir was twenty-five 
years of age. He died in 1592 holding a 
capital messuage called the Moor House, 
&c., and his son George, aged eleven, was 
heir; Chan. Ing. p.m. (Ser. 2), ccxxxvi, 
31. 

A William Waring appears in 1579- 
823 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 41, 
m. ISt, 196; 44, m. 139. His son 
John died in 1594 holding messuages, &c., 
of the Earl of Derby by the hundredth part 
of a knight’s fee and 4d. rent ; Duchy of 
Lane, Ing. p.m. xvi, no. 10. The heir, 
his brother Richard, then seventeen years 
old, died in 1598 holding the same estate, 
with the addition of 7 acres approved 
from the waste and held of the queen by 
the hundredth part of a knight’s fee ; ibid. 


xvii, no. 12. The heir was his son 
William, three years old. 

87 Fishwick, op. cit. 189. 

88 Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 
1078. He also held Westsnape in Ashley 
of Thomas Tyldesley of Withgill (as 
assignee of Henry Singleton, deceased), 
and his heirs were his daughters Janet 
wife of Richard Pope, Elizabeth wife of 
Nathaniel Woodward, Anne wife of 
Thomas Cowell and Jane wife of Richard 
Singleton, their ages lying between thirty- 
eight and twenty-four years. 

89 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xxix, 
no. 77. The heir was a son Richard, 
aged seven. 

90 The following held of the Whitting- 
ham family ; Evan Browne of Ribbleton, 
1545, by 18d. rent; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. vil, no. 24. Ralph Clitheroe 
of Bailey, 1556, by 6d. rent; ibid. x, 
no. 26. Alexander Rigby, 1621 3 Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), iii, 457. Thomas 
Beesley of Goosnargh, 1637 ; Towneley 
MS. C 8, 13, p. 72. 

These held of the Crown or the duchy : 
Leonard Houghton (in right of his wife 
Anne), 1583, by the hundredth part of a 
knight’s fee; the heir was a daughter 
Bridget, aged six; Duchy of Lance. Inq. 
p.m. xiv, no. 89. Edward Robinson, 1608, 
by the three-hundredth part of a knight’s 
fee ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), 1, 114+ 
John Robinson of Whittle, 1628, by the 
hundredth part ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13, 
p. 1013. Stopford of Ulnes Walton, by 
the two-hundredth part ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. i, 
169; ii, 73. Thomas Holden, 1617, by 
knight’s service; ibid. ii, 57-8. Robert 
Hesketh of Rufford, 1620, lands in Nether 
Whittingham in socage ; ibid. ili, 356. 

John Kighley of White Lea in Goos- 
nargh, 1616, held of Sir Richard Hoghton ; 
ibid. ii, 33. Henry Gregson, 1621, held 
of the same; he left a son and heir 
Robert ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13, p. 465. 
Adam Rigby, clerk, 1627, held of the same 
a messuage, with Lockfield, Dodgecroft, 
and Cowhey wood, by the two-hundredth 
part of a knight’s fee; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. xxvii, no. 30. William Critch- 


27% 


Jurors, GO, 91, 138-9. 


lowe, 1637, held of Richard Shireburne 
as of the late priory of St. John of 
Jerusalem ; his heir was his son William, 
aged twelve; C 8, 13, p. 252. 

In some cases the tenure was not 
recorded : Sir William Molyneux, 1548 
(part of the Clifton estate) ; Henry Cottam 
of Haighton, 1592 ; Leonard Helme of 
Goosnargh, 1601. 

91 The charters have been cited above. 

99 They had in 1292 lands in Whitting- 
ham, Heyley (? Alley), and Comberhalgh ; 
Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 375. 

®3 Lawrence Houghton of English Lea 
gave to Philip warden of the Friars 
Minor of Preston a tenement in Whitting- 
ham in 1509-10; Harl. MS. 2112, fol. 
1524. It was probably a temporary gift. 

%4 Richard Waring in 1649 desired to 
compound, ‘ being sequestered for delin- 
quency in the beginning of the wars’ ; 
Cal. Com. for Comp. iii, 1999. Two- 
thirds of a small house and acre of land, 
sequestered for the recusancy of Ellen 
Jackson, the lessee, was the subject of a 
petition by Thomas Whittingham in 
1651 ; ibid. iv, 2768. 

% Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cuth. Non- 
The names were 
Richard Duckworth, William Sturzaker 
(Moor House), Thomas Daniell, Robert 
and Richard Stanistreet. 

9 At Richard Dicconson’s house ; Hiss. 
MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 232. 

97 Fishwick, op. cit. 197. 

98 Misc, (Cath. Rec. Soc.), v, 184-6. 

99 Fishwick, op. cit. 196. ‘ Over one 
of the doors was the following inscrip- 


IHS 


tion: 1611 RL. Eels eee There was 


also a wooden cross, which was removed 
to Hill chapel’ in Goosnargh. 

1 Cross Slack was in the same neigh- 
bourhood,. 

2 The Census Rep. of 1901 gives the 
following acreages for Lytham and St. 
Anne’s respectively : Land, 2,453, 3,341} 
inland water, 11, 13 tidal water, 300, 
402 ; foreshore, 775, 4,633. St. Anne’s 
includes part of Marton. 

3 Gregson, Fragments (ed. Harland), 23. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


About 130 years ago L:tham came into notice as a 
sea-bathing place for summer visitors‘; in 1825 it 
was stated that ‘if the company is less fashionable 
than at Blackpool it is generally more numerous and 
usually very respectable.’* The development of the 
place was then restricted by the ‘reservations and 
covenants of the old feudal life-leases’ inserted in 
grants of building land,° and the town has long 
ceased to be in the same rank with Blackpool. It 
is of pleasant appearance and attracts a large number 
of visitors in the season, while its mild climate makes 
it a favourite resort in winter also. There are wide 
sands, an open promenade with a stretch of grass 
called the Green along the sea front, and a pier 
builtin 1864-5 and rebuilt in 1891. From this pier 
steamers go to Southport and Blackpool. A windmill 
near it is still working. 

A branch of the Preston and Wyre railway was 
made to Lytham as early as 1846,’ and was continued 
along the shore to Blackpool in 1863 with stations at 
Ansdell and St. Anne’s. An electric tramway starting 
at Lytham also goes through St. Anne’s to South 
Shore ; it is owned by a private company. 

A pool on the eastern boundary under the control 
of the lord of the manor was formerly useful when 
the state of the Ribble prevented any but the 
smallest vessels going up to Preston.® A graving 
dock there led to the establishment of shipbuilding 
works. The hamlet of Saltcotes adjoining is said to 
have taken its name from a salt refinery formerly 
worked there.® 

The market-house was built in 1848." A cottage 
hospital was opened in 1871, and the institute, con- 
taining a library, &c., in the following year. At the 
same time Mr. Clifton gave the Lowther Gardens at 
the west end of the town. There are public baths 
on the central beach." 

St. Anne’s-on-the-Sea sprang into existence’? in 
1875. It extends over the boundary into Marton. 
Here, as at Lytham proper, are a sea promenade, a 
pier, an institute and a public hall. There are three 


‘Whittle’s Marina (1829) contains 
an account of Lytham composed in 1799 
by Captain William Latham ; this speaks 


Acts. 


tr Vict. cap. 251, amended by later 


™ Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 31813. In 


convalescent homes for children and a home for the 
blind. 

Weekly newspapers, the Times and Standard, are 
published at Lytham and St. Anne's. 

The agricultural land '* is thus occupied :— 


Arable Permanent Woods and 
land grass plantations 
ac. ac. ac. 
Lytham 509 1,062 280 
St. Anne’s. 728 1,134 = 
1,237 2,196 280 


For Lytham a local board was formed in 1847, 
and Heyhouses acquired a local board in 1878"; 
but in 1894 the parish was divided into two town- 
ships, Lytham and St. Anne’s, each with an urban 
district council.“ The Lytham council consists of 
twelve members elected by four wards —North-east, 
North-west, South-east and South-west ; it owns the 
gas works,'’ while water is supplied to the whole 
district by the Fylde Water Board. The St. Anne's 
council also consists of twelve members elected b- 
four wards —North, East, South and West ; it owns 
electric lighting works, but gas is also supplied by a 
private company. 

In 1676 there were 181 Protestant inhabitants 
and seventy popish recusants; no Dissenters. In 
1755 the number of Protestant families was returned 
as eighty, of Papist forty-four.'* 

The population of Lytham numbered 7,185 in 
1901, and that of St. Anne’s 6,838, but thirty-one 
of the latter belonged to Marton ; thus the popula- 
tion of the old parish was 13,992. 

The descent of the manor of LYTHAM 

MANOR may be given in very few words, In 
1066, assessed as two plough-lands, it 

was part of Earl Tostig’s Amounderness lordship.” 
Afterwards it was held of the Crown in thegnage 
by the lord of Woodplumpton,"* and about 1190 was 
granted to the great monastery of Durham," which 


Ballam ; from Ballam across the most, 
which had been divided between the 
grantor and John Count of Mortain (his 


of the place as then ‘only advancing into 
fame,’ but mentionsa tradition that there 
was formerly a ‘town of some note .. . 
between the present church and the 
sandhills, in a direction towards the 
common side.’ 

5 Baines, Lancs. Dir. (1825), ii, §3- 

® Ibid. See also the account in Porter's 
Fylde, 437-51. 

7 The terminus of 1846 stands some 
distance to the east of the present station. 

* Baines, op. cit. ii, §5; ‘the pool in 
Lytham, situated about a mile east of the 
village, is nearly formed into a natural 
dock, large enough to contain a fleet of 
men-of-war, and there is a small graving 
dock at its northern extremity where 
vessels are built and repaired. This pool 
belongs to Mr. Clifton and at the summer 
assizes at Lancaster in 1824 he established 
his claim for anchorage on vessels loading 
and unloading there.’ 

9 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1870), ii, 326. 

10 A market was authorized by an Act 
1o & 11 Vict. cap. 251. 

U The baths and assembly rooms were 
opened in 1862. 

2 Porter, Fylde, 433. 

1a Statistics from Bd. of Agric. (1905). 

L By a special improvement Act 10 & 


1897 a further order was made (no. 36320) 
extending Lytham and St. Anne’s to 
include the foreshore. 

15 These works were established by the 
local board in 1850. 

16 Hist. of Lytham (Chet. Soc.), 20-4 3 
the names are given. A Subsidy Roll of 
1546 is printed ibid. 16; another of 
1640-1, ibid. 31-4; and a list of sub- 
scribers to a ‘voluntary present to his 
majesty’ in 1661, ibid. 17-19. 

16a Visit. returns at Chester. 

W V.C.H. Lancs. i, 2884. 

8 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 46. 

19 Farrer, Lancs, Pipe R. 346 (from the 
Charter R. 130, of 1335); Richard son 
of Roger, with the consent of his wife 
Margaret and of his heirs, gave in pure 
alms all his land of Lytham, with the 
church of the same vill, and all appur- 
tenances, in order that the monks might 
bu'ld a house of their order there. The 
bounds were described as beginning on the 
west side of the cemetery of Kilgrimol, 
where the benefactor had raised a cross, 
and thence westward to the sea, From 
the same cross the boundary went east 
along the Cursed mere beyond the great 
moss and the Suinebrigg brook as far as 


214 


lord) as far as the east side of Estholme 
carr, and thence to the water coming 
from Birchholme between the said carr 
and Bryning carr; then following the 
water south to the middle point between 
Estholme and Couburgh, returning west- 
ward and going round the moss southward 
to the Pool beyond Swartesalt, and the 
sand by the sea; thence by the thread of 
the Ribble and the sea back to the 
starting-point. Islands, sands and all 
rights were given as fully as possible. 
These bounds seem to have been pre- 
served down to the present, with iittle 
if any variation. : 
Another charter, perhaps earlier, gives 
the bounds in reverse order ; Lytham D. 
at Durham, 1, 2 a,4ae,Ebor. From this 
it is clear that the ‘islands’ were in the 
inner marsh. : 
Count John showed his good will aot 
only by confirming the grant, but also by 
remitting the thegnage rent of 8: &d. 
due from Lytham, and after he became 
king he ratified these acts; ibid. 149, 
137 3 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, loc. cit. j Cal. 
Rot. Chart. (Rec. Com.), 88, The original 
charter is at Durham, 2, 4.2¢, Ebor. no. 20. 
There was an inspeximus of the charter 
in 13193 Cal. Pat. 1317-21, Pe 4o+ 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


established a cell or priory.” After the Dissolution 
Lytham was sold by the Crown in 1554 to Sir 
Thomas Holcroft," and in 1606 it was acquired by 
Cuthbert Clifton of Westby.” It became the chief 
residence of its new lords, whose descent has been 
traced in the account of Clifton in Kirkham. The 
lord of the manor, who is practically the sole land- 
owner, is Mr. John Talbot Clifton, who resides at 
Lytham Hall. 

The hall stands in a park of over 600 acres on the 


LYTHAM 


north-west of the town half a mile immediately to 
the north of the parish church. It is a fine classic 
building of two stories and an attic, begun in 1751 
from the designs of Carr of York but not completed 
till 1764." The principal front faces east and has a 
pediment supported by Ionic columns the height of 
the upper floors. 

The Priors of Lytham (or of Durham) had various 
disputes with their neighbours as to boundaries and 
common rights,“ and in 1292 were summoned to 


From deeds preserved at Durham it 
seems that Evesham Abbey had had a 
grange at Lytham; Lytham D. 12, 2a, 
4ae, Ebor. &c. 

20 See the account of the religious 
houses in V.C.H. Lancs. ii, 107-10. 

21 Pat. 2 Mary, pt. ii, the church and 
hall formerly belonging to Durham. The 
Prior of Durham had in 1539 granted a 
lease of the manor to Thomas Dannett 
for eighty years at a rental of £48 19s. 6d., 
and this seems to have been confirmed by 
the Crown in 1549, with a reduction of 
the rent due; D. at Lytham. Dannett 
was to pay 3s. 4d. to the king for wreck, 
waifs and strays, and 40s. to the Earl of 
Derby as steward’s fee. 

Sir Thomas Holcroft died in July 
1§58 holding the manor of Ly ham of 
the Crown by knight’s service. His son 
Thomas was a year old ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. x, no, 13. 

In 1586 Thomas Holcroft had a dispute 
with William Clifton as to waste called 
Westmoss; Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), 
il, 173, 187. 

® Cuthbert Clifton (afterwards made a 
knight) came of age in 1603, and pur- 
chased Lytham in 1606 from Sir Richard 
Molyneux and Frances his wife ; Pal. of 
Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 70, no. 60 ; Piccope 
MSS. (Chet. Lib.), iii, 50. How the 
vendors obtained the manor has not been 
ascertained, In the year of purchase 


LytHam Hatz 


Cuthbert Clifton madea settlement of the 
manor, rectory of the church, view of 
frankpledge, free warren and fishery, lands, 
&c.; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 70, 
no. 40. In 1609 Gilbert Sythworth 
had a rent of £24 out of the manor 
from Cuthbert Clifton and Anne his 
wife; ibid. bdle. 76, no. 34. In 1612 
the manor appears among the other 
Clifton properties, and continues to do so 
in later settlements, &c.; ibid. bdle. 80, 
no. 24 3 156, m. 247, &c. 

The tenure of the manor was declared 
to be by knight’s service in 1634 ; Duchy 
of Lanc, Ing. p.m. xxvii, no. 43. 

23 EF. B. Chancellor, Lives of British 
Architects, 251. There is a view of it in 
Twycross, Mansions of Engl. and Wales 
(Lancs. ii, 33). 

?4In 1272 a declaration of the bounds 
between Kelgrimoles and Layton was 
made by Ranulf de Dacre, the sheriff, 
and other arbitrators. The old cross on 
Cross How was the starting-point ; from 
it the boundary line went west to the 
sea, and east to another cross set up by 
the arbitrators on the road from Lytham 
to Layton, and thence through the middle 
of the great moss between Marton and 
Lytham on the north side of Miggylund 
as far as Swinebridge Brook ; but Kel- 
grimoles and the Northhows were to be 
common for both Layton and Lytham ; 
2a, 4.ae, Ebor. no. 14. 


215 


In 1291 the Priors of Durham and 
Lytham, Alan a monk at Lytham and 
Robert de Millum chaplain there had to 
answer Robert de Holland and Margery 
his wife as to land alleged to be in 
Westby, the defence being that it was in 
Lytham ; Assize R. 407, m. 3. Next 
year a similar dispute between the Prior 
of Durham and William de Clifton resulted 
in a division; Assize R. 408, m. 25. 
There was a further dispute in 13503 
De Banco R. 360, m. 23. Pasture land 
in Holmecarr was in 1347 declared to be 
in Lytham, not in Kellamergh as claimed 
by Adam and John de Sharples; Assize 
R. 14.35) Ms The 

In July 1351 the Prior of Durham 
proved his right to 100 acres of moor and 
marsh against Robert de Beetham, Eleanor 
his wife, Thomas son of Gilbert de Single- 
ton, Gilbert his son and Isabel his wife, 
Richard son of Richard Banastre and 
others; Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 1, 
m.4. The prior was in 1356 defendant 
to a claim put forward by William Boteler 
of Warrington and Sir John Boteler ; 
ibid. 5, m. 12. 

In 1530 the Botelers asserted their 
boundary claims in a violent manner, 
throwing down an ancient boundary cross, 
another cross and the image of St. Cuth- 
bert, and threatening the priory itself, 
being held in check only by two monks 
who brought the sacrament out, for the 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


show by what right they claimed wreck of the sea at 
Lytham.” Later they are found paying the Earl of 
Lancaster 35. 4d. a year for this right.* In 1498 a 
number of other claims were called in question, in- 
cluding free warren.” Estholme Carr was at one 
time held by the Bradkirk family. here are but 
few traces of other freeholders.” 

Several accounts of the furniture and stock of the 
priory have been preserved.” The house its:lf seems 
to have been deserted by the monks before the 
Dissolution ; they returned to Durham. 

In addition to the lord of the manor several yeomen 
and others r-gistered estates as ‘ Papists’ in 1717.3! 

The church of ST. CUTHBERT 
stands at the west end of the town and 
is a modern building in red brick erected 
in 1834 on the site of an older edifice built in 1770, 
which in its tur: had replaced one of still earlier date. 
This earlier church was built of cobbles and was very 
low, with a ‘steeple,’ a porch, and a ‘ pulpit against 
the south wall.’ A description of the building as it 
was in 1764 has been preserved in a brief of that 
date,” in which it is stated to be a ‘very ancient 
structure standing upon the sea-coast and so much 
decayed in every part that the parishioners cannot 
assemble therein for the worship of God without 
manifest danger to their lives, the walls being so 
bulged out, in some places near three feet from the 
perpendicular, that the parishioners have laid out 
considerable sums of money from time to time in re- 
pairing and endeavouring to support the said church, 
yet the same is by length of time become so ruinous 
and decayed that it cannot any longer be kept up, 
but the same with the steeple must be taken down 


CHURCH 


honour of which they desisted. They 


for Estholme Carr from the 


and rebuilt.” The building was acoortiaely taken 
down ™ anda new church erected, which in plan wasa 
simple rectangle under a gabled roof with a ‘ whitened’ 
west tower containing one bell.“ The interior of the 
building, which is described as being ‘extremely 
simple, light, and elegant’ ** and ‘preserved in the 
neatest possible order,’ was ‘fitted up with thick 
narrow oak frames ornamented with elbows or scrolls 
and having two rows in the middle and one at 
each side.”** The walls were above a yard in thick- 
ness, the main door having a small porch, and to the 
east and west were the remains of thick walls, as if 
they might have been the ruins of some former and 
larger edifice.” The parish maintained the west 
end, which was ‘about half of it,’ and Thomas 
Clifton the east end.* This second church was 
pulled down in 1834, being found too small to meet 
the requirements of the growing number of visitors in 
the season, and the first stone of the present building 
was laid in March and the church opened in the 
same year. It consists of chancel with north vestry 
and organ chamber, clearstoried nave with north and 
south aisles and west tower. The chancel, which 
was originally sma‘l, was extended in 1872, and the 
north aisle was widened in 1882, being increased to 
double its width and covered with a separate gabled 
roof. The style is Gothic with embattled walls to 
nave and tower, the roofs being covered with stone 
slates, and though architecturally of little merit is 
perhaps super:or to much Gothic work of the period, 
the brickwork showing nothing of the hardness of 
line so common in stone churches of the early part of 
the last century. A new vestry on the north side of 
the old one was erected in 1909 in memory of Bishop 


Prior of | amounted to 18 qrs., in seed 10 qra.; 


were ordered not to interfere in the Hawes, 
but might use their common in Kilzri- 
mosse as before; Duchy Plead. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 206-10, A 
renewal of the dispute has caused some 
further in‘rmation as to the priory lands 
to be recorded. The Priory of Lytham 
stood at the end of the church; the 
Kilgrimoles churchyard had been (so it 
was said) ‘worn into the sea.’ One 
Cursed mere was near the priory ; another 
was in the moss. The name was given 
because many beasts had bern drowned 
therein. The decision was in the prior’s 
favour; ibid. 1, 9-19. 

Plas. de ua dF arr, (Ree. Com.), 386. 
The king recovered this rh", and in 
1204 transferred it to his brother Edmund ; 
Cx. Chart, Ro 02571 255 Pe oh 

® Sureey of 1340 Chet. Soe, 4p 

Y Pal. of Lanc. W: ¢s Proton. 20 Aug. 
13 Hen. VII; the claims were view of 
frankp cde, with waifs and strays, as:ize 
of bread, wreck of sea, sox, sak, team, 
&o. 3; freedom from common services and 
amereements, pontage, £2. 5 also ‘ree 
warren in the demesne lands in Lytham. 

33 The Prior of Durham im 1327 
granted all his waste of Estho:me Carr in 
Lytham to John de Bradkirk and Alice 
his wife, with remainder to John their 
son for his ‘ve only, A rentof 47. was 
to be paid for each acre newly approved 5 
com growing on the land was t2 De crvit: 
at the Lytham mill, and suit of court was 
code performed as aone Sy other tenints 
of Lycham and Esthsime ; Lytham D. at 
Daram, g and 5, 2a, gac. Ebor. 

From plesdings of rr-y it appeared 
that John de Bradxirk bad had a chirter 


Durham, and by his wice Alice had three 
sas, John, Edmund and Adam ; the last, 
as heir of h's brothers, surrendered to the 
prior; Assize R. 1435, m. 39. In the 
status domus for 1245 asumof £7 111. 8d. 
was put down for this plea; § marks 
were given to Adam de Pradkirk. 

In 1246 the Prior of Durham demised 
for life 24 acres in the marsh of Edric- 
holme to John Sauener of Lytham and 
Adam son of Rozer the Priest for 8s. 
rent 3 2a, 4 ae, Ebor. no. 7. 

® Richard Caréwe.. in 1572 claimed a 
tenement in Lytham by descent against 
R: -hard Salthouse, whose title was derived 
trom Thomas Holcroft; Ducatus Lanc. 
ill, 4. 

Robert Clark died in 1599 holding, 
besides other property, a messuage, &c., in 
Novsrtss in Lytham, but the tenure was 
not recorded 3 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
xvii, mo. 4. Smail plats were held by 
Thomas Jfelice and Thomas Bomber of 
Layton; in those cases also no tenure 
was given, John Walsh of Layton in 
162+ held 3 acres in Lytham of the king 
br che three-hunre:th part of a knight's 
fee ; Towneley MS. C 8,13 (Chet. Lib.) 
IZUL. 

"The profits of the portion of the estate 
of Wiliam Harris of Lytham s:zusrered 
for recusancy were in 1607 granted by 
the Crown to Sir Richard Coningsby ; 
Cal. S. P. Dim. 1603-12, p- 383. James 
Beesley, a recusant, had two-thirds of his 
estate sequestered by the Commonwealth 
authorities before 16533; Cal Crm 
Came. iv, 3174 
aztr com ia the crantry and 


nai the uthe 


gtancs from the d-me-ne 


216 


[other corn ] 2 qrs., in seed 1 qr. 2 bushels ; 
barley 24 qrs.; beans and peas 18 qrs., 
which were considered enough for seod 
and for the food of the house; oats 
200 qrs., also sufficient. 

The stock of oxen for the ploughs was 
243 cows 22, with 2 bulle; younger 
cattle, 365 sheep and ewes, 78 ; lambs, 
36 ; pigs, &c., 14, with 2 boars. 

Moncy in hand and due was considered 
enough for the creditors. 

In later years much more detailed 
statements were compiled; see those 
printed in Hist. of Litham (Chet. Soc.), 
73-93, from the Durham records. ; 

The site of the priory with the lands 
attached was valued at £8 8s. in 1535; 
the rents, &c., in Lytham amounted to 
£22 115, in Estholme £3 71, Med- 
holme £7 21. 8.7., Pillhouses and Bank- 
houses 12s. 11d., other lands 425. ; in all 
£43 8.74.3; Valor Eccl. (Rec. Com.), 
¥, 305. 

3) Estevurt and Payne, Enel. Cath. 
Noejursry 94, 106, 147. Their rames 
were Wiliam Snape, James and Joho 
Harrison, Robert Bennett, Henry Fletcher, 
Elien Smith and Roger Charnley. 

32 Quoted by Fishwick, Hist. of Lytham, 


7% As far as is known neither p'19 nor 
sk<tch has been preserved ; ibid. 38. 

M There isan ilustration from a water- 
ccicur drawing, ibid. 37. 

% Capt. Latham, Desultory Heseery of 
Lythi, in Witte, op. cit. 41. 

® Thornber, Hist. of Bescepici, “4'- 

¥ Ibid. 

% Terrier of 17-3, quoted by Fish- 
Wik, Op. cit. 45. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Pym of Bombay (d. 1908), who was assistant curate 
at Lytham.” The church was reseated in oak in 
1888. There are several Clifton monuments, in- 
cluding four 18th-century ones from the old church. 

There is a ring of eight bells, six cast in 1857 by 
C. & G. Mears, and the treble and tenor in 1874 
by Mears & Stainbank. 

The plate consists of a chalice of 1844, no longer 
used; two chalices, a bread-holder and a flagon 
presented by Thomas Clifton in 1845 ; a paten of 
1846; a paten of 1871-2; a small silver almsdish 
of 1874-5 ; and a large repoussé almsdish of un- 
burnished silver presented in 1895 by the Rev. 
Samuel Ashton Thompson Yates. In a case in the 
vestry are preserved the bowls of two pewter chalices 
and a pewter flagon, together with the loose foot of 
one of the chalices, which is inscribed ‘The gift of 
William Hornsby to Lytham Church, 1816.” The 
flagon is ‘The gift of William Hornby, Esq., of 
Kirkham, to Lytham Church.’ 

The registers begin in 1679. The first volume, 
which contains the baptisms and burials from 1679 
to 1761 and the marriages from 1679 to 1754, has 
been printed.” 

On the south side of the church is an undated 
stone pedestal sundial, the plate bearing the motto 
‘Dum spectes fugio,’ and with the name of 
Waller, maker. The oldest gravestone is dated 
1672." 

The earliest record of the church 

ADVOWSON of Lytham is that contained in 
Reginald of Durham’s book of the 

miracles of St. Cuthbert.“ The grandfather of 
Richard son of Roger, he tells us, pulled down the 
ancient wattled church, and built a new one of stone, 
on an adjacent site, in honour of St. Cuthbert, 
‘wherein the grace of God on account of the merits 
of B. Cuthbert wrought many miracles, to be admired 


LYTHAM 


of all men.’ A servant of Richard son of Roger 
named Uvieth,* having committed a secret sin, was 
smitten in the face by St. Cuthbert and was like to 
die. Being carried to the church, the faith of his 
friends was rewarded by a vision of the saint, who 
healed the man he had punished. Another servant, a 
youth, walking in the cemetery, saw a young sparrow 
Ay from its nest on the church roof and rest on the 
remains of the altar of the old church still visible.“ 
The youth captured it, not thinking he was breaking 
‘the peace of the saint,’ and was surprised to find 
that he could not leave the cemetery until he had 
released his prey. Richard son of Roger himself, 
being, as it was thought, at the point of death, was 
carried to the church of St. Cuthbert, ‘whom he had 
always loved,’ to die there, and was cured as soon as 
he entered the building ; afterwards he went to 
Durham to watch at the shrine ® and return thanks 
for his cure. His son also, being at the point of 
death, was restored to health after a night’s watching 
in the church. For testimony of this restoration the 
father took his son to Durham and offered a gold 
ring, which was to be fixed on the tomb of St. 
Cuthbert, at the same time telling the story of all 
these wonders.”® 

Apart from Reginald’s stories the existence of the 
church before 1190 is proved by the priory charter.” 
The church was probably at one time dependent 
upon Kirkham, but the founder obtained a formal 
release from the Abbot of Shrewsbury,** and the 
chapter of Lancaster decided that Lytham was a 
parish church and not a chapel.“® ‘The church was 
given absolutely to the monks, and the Prior of 
Lytham, the nominee or removable deputy of the 
Prior of Durham, took the position of rector, assisted 
by one or two other monks and a secular chaplain or 
more. In 1291 the value of the church was £4, 
but after the raid of the Scots in 1322 *' was reduced 


39 The Rev. Walter Ruthven Pym was 
appointed assistant curate at Lytham in 
1880 and served till 1882. 

40 Lancs. Parish Reg. Soc. Publ. xxxiii 
(1908). Transcribed by Henry Brierley. 

‘| The terrier of 1778 has a note to 
this effect: ‘The church yard fence is 
very ordinary, being composed of earth 
which falls in frequently and is impos- 
sible to be repaired without loss to the 
churchyard. There are stones enough 
left from the rebuilding of the church 
which would repair the worst of it, but 
that the parishioners are against it. I 
mean the Papists and some who are set 
on by them.’ 

* De admirandis B. Cuthberti virtutibus 
(Surtees Soc. i), 280-4. 

48A Roger son of Wlfiet occurs in 
1184-5 ; Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 56. 

{This story was written after the 
foundation of the priory, for the old altar 
was ‘outside the circuit of the new 
monastery,’ yet nothing is said of the gift 
of the church to Durham. 

‘ ¢Cum lumine pervigil oravit.’ 

ae These miracles should be compared 
with a slightly varied series (ibid. 138 
48) said to have happened at ‘ Lixtune,’ 
a place ‘in Coupland’ according to the 
heading, but ‘in the furthest part of 
Cheshire, on the very edge of the sea- 
shore,’ according to the text. The place 
had a little church, founded in honour of 
St. Cuthbert, which though but a mean 
country chapel was a baptismal church. 


7 


A boy who climbed to the roof, damaging 
the crazy walls in doing so, in order to 
destroy a crows’ nest, found his hand 
clenched so that the nails pierced through. 
A great man of the district, whose face 
was horribly distorted by some illness, on 
appealing for the saint’s help was cured, 
and in thanksgiving pulled down the old 
church, vimine fenoque contcctam, rebuilt 
it of stone, and bountifully endowed it. 
The only son of another great man of the 
district was carried to the church almost 
dead and made whole. A wayfarer go'ng 
into the church to pray first thrust his 
spear into the ground of the cemctery, and 
a thief seizing it could neither move it 
nor release his hand from it until the 
owner came. The priest’s steward saw 
a little sparrow fly down from the church 
roof and caught it, though it took refuge 
by the church door; and he wandered 
about the cemetery all the afternoon 
unable to get out. These and other 
stories were told to Reginald by the 
priest of the place and his neighbours 
who made a pilgrimage to Durham in 
1165. 

a? waeed de St. Edmund, Archdeacon of 
Richmond (c.1200), confirmed to God and 
St. Cuthbert the grant of the church of 
Lytham made by Richard son of Roger of 
good memory; Lytham D. at Durham, 
2a, 4.ae, Ebor. no. 8. Morgan, another 
archdeacon, also confirmed it ‘for the 
maintenance of their monks dwelling at 
Lytham’ ; no. 9. 


217 


48 This grant may not have been 
needed for any supposed dependence on 
Kirkham ; it appears to be the release of 
one of the Shrewsbury monks, Robert de 
Stafford, for whom Richard son of Roger 
had asked in order to make him head of 
the monastery he proposed to erect at 
Lytham ; ibid. no. 11. 

49 Ibid. no. 28. 

50 The Archdeacons of Richmond 
appear to have made several inquiries as 
to the position of the removable Prior of 
Lytham. In 1347 it was formally 
declared that the priors might, as had 
been accustomed, by themselves or by 
secular chaplains hear the confessions of 
the parishioners, absolve them, minister 
the sacraments to them, &c., as deputies 
of the Prior of Durham it would seem ; 
2a, 4ae, Ebor. no. 18. The Priors of 
Lytham were instituted by the arch- 
deacons or their deputies just as rectors 
of the church would have been ; ibid. no. 


ee 1265 the priory had a staff of 
three, the following attesting a charter: 
S. the prior; S. his socius; and Simon 
the chaplain ; ibid. 3a, 2 ae, 4.ae, Ebor. 
no. 44. 

51 Pope Nich. Tax. (Rec. Com.), 309, 
327- The goods of the Prior of Lytham 
were valued at £11 6s. 2d. 

A testimony by Hugh, cantor of York 
and archdeacon, names the payment of 
an ancient due of 6d. called chrism pence 
(denarii crismatis), and says that a further 


28 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


to {2 ; this remained the nominal value in 1341.” 
In 1535, however, the value of the tithes and obla- 
tions was reckoned as £9 135. 11d. 3 out of which 
3s. was paid to the Arcndeacon of Richmond and 
tos. was distributed to the poor on Maundy Thurs- 
day according to ancient custom.” 

An inventory of the church goods made in 1446 
shows that it was well furnished with books and 
vestments. 

After the dissolution of the monastery it does not 
clearly appear what provision was made for divine 
worship,” but the king as rector and then the 
Holcrofts and their successors would pay a chaplain to 
perform at least the minimum service. The stizend 
also would be a minimum, and in 1610 Lytham was 
reported as ‘an usurped impropriation’ (as it was 
supposed) possessed by one Mr. Roger Lev, gentle- 
man, dwelling in the parsonage-house ; the stipendiary 
minister (was) a bare reader and careless. In 1604 
it was reported that the parish clerk could neither 
read nor write.” In 1650 the tithes were worth 
£29 a year; the patron and impropriator was 
Thomas Clifton, ‘a Papist and delinquent’; the 
minister hai no allowance or salary, but {50 was 
allowed by the Committee of Plundered Ministers.” 
In 1717 Bishop Gastrell found that {£20 a year was 
allowed to the curate by the lay rector, who nomi- 
nated him ; and the surplice fees cameto £2. There 
were then neither schools nor charities.” A grant 
was afterwards obtained from Queen Anne’s Bounty 
and other endowments were given,” the vicar’s income 
now amounting to about £400." The trustees of 
J. T. Clifton are patrons. 

The following have been curates and vi-ars :— 


oc. 1646-54 William Armisteed® 

oc. 1678-1701 James Threlfali® 
1701 Josiah Birchall * 
1717 Timothy Pollard” 
17410 Asht n Werden, M.A" (9.C.D ) 
1743 Robert Willacy ™ 
1759 Thomas Place 
1760 John Gibson # 
1800 Robert Lister, B.A.” 
1834 Richard Barton Rolinsen, M.A." 

(Queen’s Coll., Oxf.) 

1870 Henry Beauchamp Hawkins, M.A." 


(Trinity Coll., Camb.) 


At the east end of the town St John’s Church 
was built in 1848-50; the Clifton trustees are 
patrons.” At Fairhaven St. Paul's was built as a 
chapel of ease to the parish church in 1904. St. 
Anne’s-on-the-Sea has taken its name from St. Anne's 
Church built in that part of the township in 
1872-3 °; Lady Drummond’s trustees are pa‘rons. 
There is a mission church of St. Thomas built in 
1900; the present vicar of St. Anne’s is the 
patron, but Mr. J. T. Clifton will succeed after his 
death. 

The Wesleyan Methodists opened a chapel in 
1846 ; the present church succceded it in 1868”; 
they also have chapels at Fairhaven, 1899, and 
St. Anne's, 1892, with mission halls. The Strict 
Baptists have long had a meeting-place™; their 
present chapel is at Pollux Gate, Fairhaven. “here 
are two more recent Baptist chapels, at Ansdell and 
St. Anne’s, 1884-6; the former was rebuilt in 
1908. 


oc. 1548-62 George Lorimer” 


oc. 1610 Hugh Grimbaleon 
oc. 1619 Peter Bullock“ 
oc. 1622 — Brown ® 

oc. 1639 Robert Brodbelt * 


payment of 1d. to the synod or to the 
taoric of the mother church of York had 
been refused in the time of Toemas the 
elder (1070-1100), formeriy archbishr p. 
The chrism pence were remitted by 
Archbishop Thurstan; Lytham D. at 
Durham, 2 a, 4.a¢, Fbor. no. 6. 

82 Jay, Nenarum (Rec. Com.), 37- The 
reduction was accounted for by 205. 
altarage and 20s. loss by the destruction 
wrouzht by the Scots. 

8 aise Eccl. ut sup. 

4 Lytham D. at Durham; printed in 
Hit, of Lytham (Chet. Soc.), 29. 

55 Thomas Dannett by the lease of 
1§39 was bound to provide an able and 
honest priest to celetrite divine service ; 
Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), iti, 78. 

56 Hist, MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 9 

57 Visit. P. at Chester Dioc. Reg. 

SS Commonce. Ch (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.\, 156. An allowance 
of £40, increased to 459, was decreed in 
1646 out of the lay rector’s sequestrated 
tithes: Piet Ween. feces Ong 5% 

88 Nessa Cesrr. (Chet. See.), i, 446-7. 
There were two churchwardens. 

© A board in the church stated that 
the Countess Dowager Gower gave £150 
in 1765 and Queen Anne's Bourty 
£200; this was invested in the purchase 
of Ryheads in Goosnargh in 1748. 

About £1,109 was given between 1801 
and i814. 

O Nisucs. Dio, Oe, 


Sure, 


3 1862°; 


The Congregationalists opened their first church in 


they have now 
1903-4, and a third at St. Anne's, 1894-6." 


another at Fairhaven, 


At 


the last-named place the Christian Brethren also have 


a meeting-room. 


64 Visit. Lists at Chester. Thomas 
Primett, pricst, o° Kirkham, in 1564 be- 
queathed his velvet cap, &:., to Geor,¢ 
Lor:mer 3 Riche ind Wills (Surtees Su:., 
teas 

“63 From his presentment of recusants 
in the Consistory Ct. papers, Chester. 

64 Wo sit. parsers, Chester. 

6 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Clic), 
i, 69 ; Vist. Lists, 

Ibid. i, 124; he was at Bispham in 
ibid. 65. The will of Rob-rt 
Br-dbelt of Bispham, cierk, “674, is pr.nted 
in Fishwick’s Bispham (Chet. Soc.), 43. 
He may have been a Royalist, as he does 
rot appear during the Commonwealta 
periods. 

@ Plund. Mics. Acets. iy 47, 141. He 
had been curate and schoolmaster of 
Kirkham ; Misc. (Rec. Soc.), i, 6+, 124. 

* In the Visitation List of 1691 he is 
stated to have been crda‘ned in 1663 ; he 
may have Seen at Lytham the whole time. 
He was the ‘minister’ in 1678 when a 
collect on of £1 3s. 8d. was made for the 
rebuilding of St. Pa_l’s Cathedral, 3.r 
Thomas Clifton and Mr. James Thre:fall 
headinz the list with 5s. each ; Nand Q. 
(Ser. 5,, x, 164. He was ‘con!-rmable’ 
in 1689 3 fis. Mos. Com. Rep. xiv, App. 
iv, 226. He bequeathed £2 used f-r the 
school, the date being given as 1-22. 

69 In 1-27 the minster did not wear 
the surplice ; Visit. returns. 

70 Nominated by the University of 


218 


PAgoue 


Cambridve. The vacancy was cause! by 
the death of the preceding incumbent ; 
Chester Dioc. Reg. In 1725 the sacra- 
ment was administered thrice a year. 

71 Nominated by Alex inder Osbaldeston 
of Preston, who also nominated the next 
incumbent. Went to Bispham. 

2 Buried at Lytham, 17583 /din of 
Lytham (Chet. Soc.), 61. 

In 1745 the holy sacrament was ad- 
min‘stered five times a year; V.a.t. 
retusa, 

“3 Nominated by Abigail Clayton of 
Lark Hill, Blackburn, as widow and 
executrix of Thomas Clayton, executor 
of Alexander Osbaideston, 

™ Nominated by John Clayton of 
Little Harw: od. 

7» He was nominated by Thomas 
Clifton. He died in 1872; there is a 
memorial tablet in the church, subscribed 
by parishioners. 

76 Hon. Cancn of Manchester, 1891. 

77 Porter, op. cit. 446. 

78 A district was assigned to it in 
1877; Lond. Gaz. 26 Oct. 

"* Porter, op. cit. 445. 

™ Thid. 4393 the original sma!l chapel, 
held'nz about thirty worshippers, was 
open: d about 1829, 

*l Nightinga’e, 
106-9. 

In C sis a memorial brass for W. J. 
Porritt, who is regarie! as tue founder ct 
St. Anne's. 


Lana,  Noneenfh i 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Worship according to the Roman rites was probably 
maintained at Lytham Hall during the 17th and 18th 
centuries,®® there being a domestic chapel.“ The 
list of convicted recusants about 1670 is headed by 
Sir Thomas Clifton, and contains many names still 
known in the district.“* The number of ‘ Papists’ 
returned to the Bishop of Chester in 1767 was 384 ; 
the priest was ‘John Mansel a/ias Talbot, Jesuit,’ and 
‘Thomas Clifton esq.’ followed him.“ In 1800 an 
old tithe-barn on the edge of the park was used as 
achapel.® After the squire became a Protestant the 
present St. Peter’s was built in the town in 1839.°° 
At St. Anne’s the church of Our Lady Star of the Sea 
was built in 1890." St. Joseph’s, Ansdell, was founded 
in 1908. 

The free school at Lytham was founded in 1726 


POULTON-LE- 
FYLDE 


or a little later.8 A second school, or branch, seems 
to have been opened at Heyhouses in 1775. 

Official inquiries were made as to 
the charities in 1824 and 1899, and 
from the reports issued in 1900 it 
appears that, apart from the educational endowments, 
amounting to £720 a year, there are only two 
charities in operation, Elizabeth Layland in 1734 
left £60 for the poor or the education of children ; 
this now produces {5 10s. a year, of which £2 2s. 
is given to the cottage hospital and the rest is dis- 
tributed to the poor in kind. Harriet Jane 
Quartley in 1878 left £19 19s. to the vicar of 
Lytham for a Christmas gift to the poor ; the income 
is 135. 2¢., but the capital has been increased by 
accumulations,” 


CHARITIES 


POULTON-LE-FYLDE 


POULTON 
CARLETON 


THORNTON 


This parish, from which Bispham has been 
detached, has an area of 16,6914 acres, including 
1,523 acres of tidal water, and its population in 
1go1 numbered 27,987. The country is in general 
level, with gentle undulations. The town of Poulton 
was formerly a place of importance in the district, 
being called the ‘metropolis of the Fylde’ in 1837," 
but the formation of Fleetwood at the mouth of the 
Wyre, and, still more, the growth of Blackpool, have 
left it far behind. In former times the estuary of the 
Wyre was ‘ proverbial for the safety of its navigation,’ ? 
and Poulton was the port on it. 

The history of the parish has been that of a quiet 
agricultural community. There are slight traces of 
Roman occupation.* Before the Reformation a large 
portion of the land was held by religious houses, 
represented by the bailiffs at their granges, and the 
resident gentry were little more than yeomen, 
cultivating their estates and apparently living in peace 
with each other. The destruction of the monasteries 
made little practical change, though it introduced an 
important resident family—that of Fleetwood of 
Rossall—but the religious revolution found a number 
of victims, great and small. One or two here, as in 
other parishes of the Fylde, suffered death for their 
work as missionary priests, and the most powerful 
opponent of the Elizabethan establishment of religion 
was a native of the parish—Cardinal Allen. ‘The 
Civil War and the Revolution do not scem to have 


MARTON 


HARDHORN-WITH-NEWTON 


disturbed this parish in any noteworthy manner. 
One of the minor gentry, Thomas Singleton of 
Staining, lost his life in 1643 in the cause of Charles I. 
The school at Rossall, though of recent origin, 
provides a distinctive feature. 

To the tax called the county lay of 1624 the 
various townships contributed as follows when the 
hundred paid {100: Poulton, £2 10s. 642.; 
Carleton, £1 16s. 1$¢.; Thornton, £2 os. 53d. ; 
Hardhorn-with-Newton, £2 tos. 2}d. ; and Marton, 
£2 os. 34¢.; in all, £10 175. 7$¢* The older 
fifteenth shows much the same relative values.° 

With the exception of Fleetwood the district 
remains almost entirely agricultural. The land is 
now occupied very largely as pasture, as may be seen 


by the following table * :— 


Arable Permanent Woods and 
land grass plantations 
ac, ac. ac. 
Poulton . . . 664 644 5 
Carleton . . . 149 1,7524 — 
Thornton . 470 1,962 104 
Fleetwood . 475 1,032 17 
Hardhorn-with- 
Newton. . . 578 1,951 27 
Marton . . 1,261% 1,8514 20 
3,000 9,193 793 


8 As usual there are practically no 
records of the 17th century. A list of 
priests in charge from about 1615, com- 
piled by Mr, Gillow, is printed in Hist. of 
Lytham (Chet. Soc.), 47~54. 

% Tt is now a lumber-room. 

a Misc. (Cath. Rec. Soc.), v, 188-90. 

%) Trans, Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xviii, 
218. There was a priest at the hall 
m 17123; Tyldesley Diary, 37. 
Jesuits had charge of the mission, and 
'n 1701 Ralph Hornyold alias Gower was 
in charge with a salary of £10. In 1750 
there were 200 general confessions and 
230 ‘customers,’ while in 1793 there 
were 250 Easter communicants and 75 
Persons were confirmed ; Foley, Rec. S. J. 
¥, 320-5. About 1794 a Benedictine 


The. 


succeeded the Jesuits, but remained only a 
short time; Trans. Hist. Soc. (new ser.), 
xiii, 166. The secular clergy have been 
in charge since 1803. 

85 There is a description in Whittle, 
Lytham, 10, 11. 

86 Liverpool Cath. Annual. There is a 
cemetery with a mortuary chapel at 
Saltcotes. & Ibid. 

88 End. Char. Rep. for Lytham, 1900. 
The original endowments, though small, 
were inyested in land near Blackpool 
which has become vaiuable. 

89 The income is derived from a piece 
of meadow in Freckleton, called Hanning’s 
land. 

90 An old charity founded by Thomas 
Cookson, for books for poor children, is 


219 


supposed to have been merged in the 
school fund. 

1 Thornber, Blackpool, 281. 

2 Baines, Lancs. Dir. 1825, ii, 463. 

3 Traces of a Roman road leading north 
through Marton and Poulton to the Wyre 
mouth have been noticed. A hoard of 
Roman coins was found near Fleetwood 
in 1840. 

4 Gregson, Fragments (ed. Harland), 23. 

5 Ibid. 19 ; the payments were: Poul- 
ton, £1 9s. 64d. ; Carleton, £1 15. 144.5 
Thornton, £1 35. 8d. ; Hardhorn-with- 
Newton, £1 9s. 4d¢.; and Marton, 
Li 3s. 6$d. This gives a total sum of 
46 7s. 24d. when the hundred paid 


£56 45. 8d. 
9a Statistics from Bd. of Agric. (1905). 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


A village called Singleton Thorp, near Rossall 
Grange, is said to have been destroyel in 1555 by an 
irruption of the sea.° 

One Robert Hey,‘ a wise man, a witch or charmer,’ 


ew, 
pa a\\ 
ae 


4 


4 Stalmine 


ae ev 
ail pburn 
Pilea 
Ritherham Holme, Stone NN 
2 a= am, f} S y 
° d ‘ 
3 dervnact ‘= 
3 ae ee x 
orcro rs 


> 
2V 
Wp 
Od, 


ELEN S ete ARS 
ee ws ‘Normoss \ 
MSs. HARDHO . 
Liffle~*..- 
> LayfonN, ied .. 
BLACKPOOL. eNewton ° 


n | 


pass K 
tha TON 
sisehg MAR 


Ca \ 


\ LYTHAM a WS ee 
YS WS. gay ~ 


POULTON 
AND 


BISPHAM. 


was presented by the vicar in 1611 for the Bishop of 
Chester’s censure for telling fortunes and the like. 
He was known as ‘the wise man of the Fylde,’ but 
appeared to disclaim the title, and as the vicar did 
not press his accusation and the churchwardens 
averred that he was ‘an honest man, a good church- 
man’ and a communicant, he was merely ordered to 
appear in Poulton Church on Sunday during service 
and declare his sorrow for giving offence, renouncing 
publicly the title of ‘ wise man of the FylJe.’” 

The protestation of 1641-2 was signed by Peter 
White the minister and ninety-seven inhabitants. 

In 1643 a large Spanish ship laden with arms for 
the Low Countries appeared in the Wyre, having been 
driven out of its course, and created great excitement 
by firing guns as signals. The Parliamentarians first 
seized it, but the Earl of Derby having heard visited 
the place, took possession, and ordered the ship to 
be burnt, allowing the crew to go free. A Parlia- 
mentary major who also went to see the vessel was not 
able to save it; his force being small, he had to avoid 
the earl.° 

Several ancient customs lingered in the Fylde till 
recent times, such as the bonfires on All Hallows’ Eve, 
known locally as ¢Teanley night.’ A gala day marked 
the close of marl-getting. Onion seed had to be 
sown on St. Gregory’s Day. A small stone through 
which a hole had been bored was tied to the stable 
key to protect the horses from witchcraft. ‘Ignaging’ 
was a dance performed by the village lads at Easter."° 

John Hull, M.D., a botanist of some note, was 
born at Poulton in 1761. He practised as a physician 
at Manchester and died in 1843."" George Long, a 
classical scholar, was born at Poulton in 1800 ; he 
became Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, edited 
the Penny Cyclpadia, 1833-46, and afterwards estab- 
lished the Bidsiotheca Classica. He died in 1879." 

The church of ST. CHAD stands on 
an elevated site in the centre of the 
town of Poulton at the north end of the 
market-place, and consists of an apsidal chancel 20 ft. 
by 17 ft. 6 in., nave g3 ft. 6 in. by 36 ft. and west 
tower 12 ft. square, all these measurements being 
internal. The site is an ancient one, but all trace of 
the original church has vanished, the oldest part of 
the present building being the tower, which is said to 
have been erected in the reign of Charles I. The 
nave dates from 1752-3 and the apse from 1868. 

The old structure,"® which was pulleddown in 1751, 
is described as being built of red sandstone with 
double-gabled roof supported down the middle by 
four octagonal pillars and semicircular arches and lit 
by round-headed windows. It appears to have been 
originally, like Bispham, a narrow, aisleless building 
with small chancel, enlarged at a later date by the 
addition on the north side of an aiste which perhazs 


CHURCH 


© Thornter, op. cit. 54, referring to 
Dodsworth. The story is very doubtful, 
but the coast-!ine has suffered much from 
erosion. 

* Chester Dioc. Reg. 

8 The names are printed by Fishwick, 
Pox't:1 (Chet. Soc.), 31-3. Another list 
of the inhabitants, from an assessment of 
1660, wi!l be found ibid. 222-4. 

9 J "ar ia Lancs. (Chet. Soc.), 25-7. This 
my be the origin of the ‘tradit'on' of a 
vessel of the Spanish Armada ha-ing been 
ia danger off Rossall ; Thornd<r, op. 
ct. 6a, 


10 Details of these and other local cus- 
toms are given by Thornber, op. cit. 82- 
105; and Trans. Hist. Soc. iv, 102-15. 
The Teantey fires were lighted on a cairn 
in Hardhorn. 

" Dict. Nat. Biog. ; see notes on Carleton 
township. 

2 Dice, Nat. Biog. 

13 A description of the church is given 
by Thornber ( Blackp::/, 285), who, after 
recording the wanton destruction of a 
monument to the Singletons of Staining, 
adds : ‘Two other relics which belonged 
to this house of God long before the 


220 


Refo-mation are still existing [1842] in 
the possession of the Roman Catholics, 
viz. a rude brass crucifix, the property of 
the Reverend Mr. Platt, late priest of the 
Breck Chapel, and a chalice, which, 
having fallen into the hands of James 
Hesketh Brockholes, esq., «f Mains Hall, 
was presented by him to the Popish chapel 
at Claughton.’ There does not seem any 
evidence that either of these had belonged 
to Poulton Church. 

Its appearance about 187< is jescribed 
by A. Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 
391. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


doubled its width. The descriptions left of the 
building do not materially assist in determining the 
date of its erection. ‘The tower, which stood at the 
west end of the original nave, was retained when the 
church was pulled down, and, the walls of the new 
building being erected on the old foundations, is 
therefore at the south-west corner of the present 
church. A stone with the date 1622 and the name 
of Peter White, vicar, and another with the initials 
of six churchwardens and the date 1638, apparently 
indicate some rebuilding or alterations in those 
years." In 1883 the building underwent extensive 
repairs, and a further renovation and decoration took 
place in 1908. 

The apse is built in a modern Norman style with 
three groups of double round-headed windows, and 
forms the sanctuary, the chancel arrangement being 
carried into the nave for a distance of 19 ft. The 
chancel arch is of 1868 date and is semicircular in 
form. The nave is a fairly good example of 18th- 
century work, with round-headel two-light windows 
and drafted quoins at the angles. On the south side 
are two good classic doorways with Tuscan pilasters 
carrying entablature and pediment, above which the 
wall is pierced by elliptical windows. The doorway 
on the north side has a plain moulded architrave. 
The roof, which is of one wide span and covered with 
slate and with an external stone cornice, is divided 
inside into nine bays by eight plain principals 
plastered between. On the south-east corner is the 
vault of the Fleetwood family, approached from the 
outside by a door within a small stone porch of good 
classic design with moulded architrave and pedimented 
head carried on consoles. Over the door is the 
inscription, now somewhat defaced, ‘Insignia Rici 
Fleetwood afi hujus eccliae patronis, Anno Dni 
1699.’"* The spout heads on each side of the 
building are of handsome design with the date 1753, 
the arms of Fleetwood-Hesketh, and the Hesketh 
double-headed eagle. 

The tower is of gritstone and very plain in design, 
with diagonal buttresses of seven stages and a vice in 
the south-east corner. It finishes with an embattled 
parapet and angle pinnacles of Renaissance type, and 
the belfry windows are of two plain, round-headed 
lights with slate louvres, but without hood mould or 
any ornament, the whole having the appearance of 
very late work and giving some credibility to the 
local tradition of its being of 17th-century date. The 
west side is quite plain, without door or window, but 
the masonry in the lower part appears to have been 
rebuilt in a way suggesting a former window. There 
is a clock on the south side to the market-place, 
and also a small round-headed doorway, apparently 
an 18th-century insertion, which is the only means 
of access to the tower, the arch having presumably 
been built up when the nave was erected. The 
interior of the tower was renovated in 1908. 


4 These two stones are now fixed in the 


POULTON LE. 
FYLDE 


The nave has galleries on the north, south and 
west sides supported by small stone classic columns 
and approached by a staircase in the north-west 
corner. The north and south galleries, which stop 
about 20 ft. from the east end of the nave, retain 
their orig'nal square pews, but the west gallery, 
along with the nave, has been reseated with modern 
benches and all the fittings are of modern date. 
Over the vault in the south-east corner were originally 
the Fleetwood pews, but the whole of the east end 
of the 18th-century structure is now thrown into 
the quire, the organ being placed on the north side. 
The baptistery, however, which occupies the south- 
west corner, is formed by a carved oak 17th-century 
screen of good design, originally part of the pew 
belonging to Sir Peter Hesketh, the Hesketh garb 
being carved on two of the posts and the double- 
headed eagle and a griffon introduced into the 
decorative treatment. The low door, however, 
bears the crest of the Rigbys of Layton, together 
with the initials A.R. and the date 1636, and belongs 
to a pew of that family’s. In the baptistery are the 
two dated stones already mentioned, and there is 
also an oak cupboard with the date 1730 and the 
names of the churchwardens. On the south wall at 
the east end are preserved four sides of an octagonal 
oak Jacobean pulpit discovered in 1877 encased in a 
later pulpit supposed to have been erected in 1753. 
The sides are richly carved and divided into three 
panels of unequal size, the middle ones with the 
common semicircular arched ornament of the time, 
while along the top is carved CRIE ALOVD SPARE NOT 
LIFT UP THY VOYCE LYKE . . .'°© There are some brasses 
belonging to the older church, one to Ann wife of 
Richard Harrison, vicar (d. 1697), and others to 
Geoffrey Hornby (d. 1732) and Dorothy his daughter 
(d. 1740). A number of hatchments of the Fleet- 
wood and Hesketh families are hung on the walls 
above the galleries, and there are monuments to 
Fleetwood Hesketh (d. 1769), Francis Hesketh (d. 
1809), Bold Fleetwood Hesketh’ (d. 1819), and 
Edward Thomas Hesketh (d. 1820).” 

There is a ring of six bells cast in 1741 by Abel 
Rudhall of Gloucester. The sixth was recast in 1865 
and has the names of the vicar and wardens of that 
date. The whole were re-hung in 1908. 

The old plate consists of a large paten of 1698-9 
inscribed ‘Poulton 1699’; a small visiting chalice 
6 in. high and cover paten, the chalice inscribed 
“Given for the use of the poor sick Communicants in 
the Parish of Poulton in the County of Lancaster ’ 
and the cover ‘1735,’ both by R. Richardsun of 
Chester ; and a flagon with the makers’ mark B and 
W. There are also two modern chalices, two patens, 
and a flagon presented by the Rev. T. Clark in 
1866. 

The registers begin in 1591. ‘The three earliest 
volumes, extending to 1677, have been printed.” 


sweetly sing, ar. 174173 (5) ‘Able 


wall of the baptistery at the south-west 
corner of the nave. The latter was dis- 
covered in 1836 on the removal of the pul- 
pit. Thornber (op. cit. 286) conjectured that 
it commemorated the erection of the tower. 
: 8 <In 1882 some workmen discovered, 
in removing the lead gutter over this vault, 
that a portion of a similar inscription was 
cut on the stone cornice in raised 3-inch 
letters’; Fishwick, op. cit. 45. 


16 The panels were placed in their 
present position on the south wall in Nov. 
1878. 

7 The inscriptions on all the mural 
monuments in the church are given in 
full in Fishwick, op. cit. 50-8. 

18 The inscriptions are : (1) ‘ Prosperity 
to all our benefactors, ar. 174173 (2) 
‘Peace and good neighbourhood, ar. 
17413 (3) ‘Prosperity to this parish, 
AR. 1741’ 3 (4) ‘When you us ring we'll 


221 


Rudhall cast us all at Gloucester, 1741’ ; 
(6) Originality had names of church- 
wardens. 

19 A return of church goods sent to the 
Bishop of Chester in 1725 records a paten, 
flagon and chalice. 

20 Lancs. Parish Reg. Soc. Publ. vol. xix 
(1904), transcribed and edited by Wm. 
Edward Robinson, The Churchwardens’ 
Accts. begin 1708 ; Fisbwick, op. cit. 88. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


The churchyard, which is almo:t entirely inclosed 
by surrounding buildins:," is intersected by flagved 
paths and has an entrance at each of its four corners, 
that at the south-west leading from the market-place. 
It was at one time a ‘ filthy place almost surrounded 
by a ditch.’ On the south side is an octagonal 
stone sundial shaft without plate on two older circular 
steps. 

The church of Poulton, with one 
plouzh-land and all appurtenances, 
was given by Roger of Poitou to 
the Abbey of Sées in 1°94.% In spite of a confrma- 
tion,” Theobald Walter was able, a century later, to 
lay claim to the advowson, but in 1196 released his 
ri-ht to Poulton and Bispham on being allowed the 
aivow on of Preston.” The Prior of Lancaster, as 
representing Sées, appears to have retained a moiety 
of the rectory and given the other moiety to a 
clerk who would be responsible for the maintenance 
of divine worsi.ip. In 1247, however, it was agreed 
that on the next avoidance of the latter moiety the 
whole should be appropriated to Lanca-ter Priory,” a 
vicarive being ordained. The vicar was to receive 
20 mirk. a year, being responsible fer all ordinary 
dues, and was to be duly in.tituted by the archdeacon 
to the cure of souls.” Afterwards the vicar was paid 
out of the sma’l tithe: and oblations, but had a house 
provided for him.” In 1291, when the rectory was 
valued at 70 marks a year, the vicarage was estimated 


ADVOISON 


at 10 marks.” The destruction wrought by the 
Scots in 1322 seems to have been unusua'ly great in 
this parish, for the value of the rectory was reduced 
by 70 per cent. in consequence of it, while that of 
the vicarage fell to 4gos.%! As in other cas, the 
rectory was, as part of Lancaster Priory endowmen , 
in 1432 transterred to Syon Avbey,™ and was in 
1535 valued at £62,™ the vicarage being then w.rt., 
£7 16s. 7d. clear.™ 

During the wars with France the advowson 
had several times been in the king’s hands, 
owing to seizures of the temporalities of foreign 
houses, and on the suppression of Syon it was 
again taken by the Crown. It was in 1554 pur- 
chased by Thomas Flectwood of Rossall,* and has 
descended to Mr. C. H. Fleetwood-Hesketh of North 
Meols. 

The rectory tecame divided among several impro- 
priators.” In 1650 the vicar had a house with 
2 acres of land, the small tithes and tithe salt through- 
out the parish, which then included Bispham, but in 
some parts these dues were limited by prescription ; 
the who'e was worth about £55 a year. About 1717 
Poulton, without Bispham, was certified as worth 
only £28 185. a year, but some additional endow- 
ments were given.’ A terrier of 1755 has been 
preserved ; it shows a total revenue of (67 25. 6d." 
At present the vicar’s income is reported to be 


£260." 


1 S-me of these have becn con iemned 
to demolition (1979). 

™ Thernber, Blackp: /, 285. Ths 
probab!y re‘ers to the 18th century. It 
was surrounded by a ditch in 1751, on 
the borders of which were several fine 
sycamore trees, sudsequentiy cut down. 
The houses probably date from the end 
of the Sth or beginning of the 19th 
century. 

® Farrer, Lancs. Prpe R.299, 244. In 
a preud:ng in 1293 it was stated that the 
church was built by Roger of Poitou, who 
en. aed it wth a third part of the land, 
which was all that he heid tirectly in the 
piace; Lance, CA, (Chet. Soe.), ii, 456. 

™ Farrer, op. cit. 298; by John, when 
Count of Mortarn, 1139-93. 

> Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and 
Ches.), i, 6. 

* Honorius, Arci:deacon of Richmond 
(1198-1200), specially confirme ! to them 
the moiety of the church of Poulton and 
the moiety of the chirch of Bircham, 
which (among others) they had to their 
own uses according to a confirmation by 
Pope Celestine (III, 1191-8); Lance. C2. 
(Chet. Soc.), i, 117. 

" Tbid. 122. The Archdeacon 9/ 
Richmond agreed on condition that the 
monks released their claim to the advow- 
gon of Bolton-le-Sands and a pension of 
3 merks from that church. 

The right of Lancaster Priory was the 
subject of inquiry in 1351, and found to 
be established ; Fishw.ck, op. cit. 205. 

* Lane. Ch. i, 141. Bispham is called 
a chape! only. 

® Ibid. ii, 380. It was in 12-< ordained 
that the vicar, besides a suitah.e house, 
sh-uld have the who:e altaraze of the 
church of Pou!ron and chapel of B:s:ham, 
except living mortuaries and the t <hes of 
woo!, &c., in Great Layton and Thornton, 
which beionged to the Pricr and monks 
of Lancaster. 


© Pope Nich. Tax. 307, 327. The 
Prior of Nortsn had a tporten’--/£2, 
resuced to tos. The Abit of Stancaw 
a-ohad a portion— £13 63. 84, reduced 
to £6 131. 4.2, besices pay 2 10 marks 
to the Prior of Lancaster, “Uhis fast was 
in respect of Staining. Compositions 
between the pro ry of Lancaster and the 
abbess of Cockersand and Whalley as to 
uthes are printed in Law. C4. i, so, 79, 
§275 see also MM halley Coucher (Chet. 
Sec.'y tl, 395. 

a Tay, Nenarum (Rec. Com.), 37. The 
various townships were able to pay thus: 
Harshorn and Lavton, {2 6s. 8d. each ; 
Marton and Bispham, /.2 34. 4d. each; 
Thorsten, £0 03s g45 Carleton, £1 197.5 
and Poulton, {1 yn gd. £13 61. Bid. 
in all. The ¢ecbe was estimated at 
Lt 6s. 84, and the loss through lands 
waste by the destruction of the Scote at 


2 


gz. 


4Simpecs, Met and Antz. of Lane, 
241. 
33 Falor Eccl. (Rec. Com.), i, 425. In 
the minister's accvunts, after the [i:solu- 
tien, only £30 65. */. is recorded as 


coming from Amounderncss; Dugdale, 
M om. Vig S44- 
4 Valor Eccl. v, 262. The house and 


garden were worth only 15. 8d.; the 
tithes of calves, 75.3; of suit, 245.; flax 
and hemp, 20:.3 smzuii tithes, offerings, 
&c., as in the Easter roll, £5 18+. 3 in ail 
£38 35. 8d. For synodais 2;. 84. was paid, 
ani for procurations 45. 5d. 

© See the list of vicars. 

% Pat. 2 Mary; lands in Layton, &c., 
were purchased at the sime time. On 
12 July 31557 Thomas Fleetwood of 
Hesk n granted the next presentation to 
Joan Fleetwood of Penwarthar, Jorn 
Wrhtington of Staneish, Richird 
Wrightington his son and heir-yr reat, 
and Alexander Wrightington of Enfield ; 
Church Papers in Chester Dioc. Reg. 


222 


The advowson was bequeathed to a 
younger son Wiillam, who in 1§y6 sold 
it, together with the manor of Layton, 
&c., to hie brother, Edmund Fleetwood 
of Rossall, who died in 1622 holding 
the advowson 5 Lancs. In7. pom. (Ree. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 316. 

37 -The rectorial tithes, &c., were leared 
to Thomas Bradley and others in 1577 ; 
Pat.19 Eliz, pt. xii, In 1605 the rectory 
was sold to Lawrence Baskerville; [at 
3 Jas. I, pt. xii. See also Pat. 6 Jas. I, 
pt. iii, xv. 

In 1650 Baron Rigby had the tithes 
of Poulton, Marton and part of Bi-pham 
with Norlreck ; Sir Thomas Ty Ideeley 
those of Hardhorn-with- Newtun, Careton, 
Thornton and the retnainter of Bispham 
with Norbreck 5; A'crand-r Rigby those 
of Layton; Commonw. Ch. Surv. (Rec. 
Soc. Lanes. and Ches.), 150. 

% Ibid. 151. 

8 Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. (Chet. S«c.), 
ii, 4563 the glebe land and churchyard 
produced £2 95.5 prescriptive payments 
for tithe hav, hemp and flux, /-5 15. §d.; 
tithe hay in kind, £3 185.3 Easter dues, 
as let, £-g ; tithe geese, hemp and flas, in 
kind, as le, £1 161.5 tithe pigs, Lu ts; 
eirplice fees, £5. He states that Ri | ac: 
Fleetwood of Rossall had in 1687 gi.en 
£10 a year tothe church and Mr. [ines 
in 1717 land worth £4 105. 

There were five churchwardens clinen 
thus: ‘Every Easter the old church- 
wa dens write down every onethree persons 
living in the township for which he serves, 
out of which the minster chooses one, 
The c¢’k is chosen by the heir of Stain- 
ing Hall, now John Mayfield, gent, a 
Pasist: 2722" 5 ibid. 478, 


Gra.."* were later tecured from Queen 
Anne’s Bounty, 

Woe Rew 

“Mfaeci. Disc. Dir. There are a 


vicarage basz and 36 acres of glebe. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


The following have been rectors and vicars :— 


Instituted 
c. 1160 . . e 
c 1200 . « e 


oc. 1246-7 « 


Gamel 4 
Richard‘, 


Roger . , 


oc. 1294 . « - Joka 
ohn a, 


oc, 1325. 6 . 
OC. 1332 6 4 

1 Apr. 1338. 
2 July 1339 —- 
7 Oct. 1349 
OC: TR56 5 es 
oc. 1365-9 . . 
6 Sept. 1383. 
23 Aug. 1403. 
21 May 1422. 
7 Jane 1437 
25 Junel442. 
18 June 1463. 
oc 1500. . . 
c.1gl2-20 . . 
oc. 1530-5... 
oc. 1548-52. . 
20 Dec. 1552. 


OC E567 sw 


John Lytham ® 


John Oxcliffe °8 


Robert Clerke ® 


“ He attested a Bispham charter by 
Robert Abbot of Shrewsbury, who died in 
1167 ; Shireburne D. at Leagram. 

43 Farrer, op. cit. 335, 338, from deeds 
between 1194 and 1206; Cockersand 
Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 333. 

44 He was rector of a mediety ; Lanc. 
Ch, i, 122. See also ii, 431. He claimed 
certain lands in Poulton in 1246 ; Assize 
R. 404, m. 12d. He may have retained 
his rectory till 1275, when the ordination 
of a vicarage was finally settled. He is 
not called a ‘clerk.’ 

Robert son of Alexander de Stanford 
obtained a toft adjoining the cemetery by 
grant of Adam son of Robert de Poulton; 
Lane, Ch. ii, 387. 

4 Ibid. 421. 

48 Lancs. Ct. R. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), 134. 

“7 This vicar in 1332 came to an agree- 
ment with the Prior of Lytham as to the 
tithe of fish taken on the Warthes north 
or south of the Milne Pool of Layton. 
The prior was to have the tithe, but was 
to pay 2s, a year ; Lytham D. at Durham, 
3a, 4.ae, Ebor. no. 33. 

_ * Cal. Pat. 1338-40, p. 30. The date 
is that of presentation. The king pre- 
sented in this and other cases because the 
estates of alien priories had been taken 
into his hands during the war with France. 

For the king’s claim see De Banco R. 
316,m. 182. After presenting William de 
Stalmine it was found that one Henry de 
Carleton opposed, and he was fined for it ; 
ibid. 317, m. 288. 

® Cal. Pat. 1338-40, p. 264. William 
de Preston had been vicar of Giggleswick. 
See Whitaker, Craven (ed. Morant), 166. 
He had a dispute with his predecessor in 
1341 as to money owing ; De Banco R. 
325, m, 84. He was no doubt the 
William, vicar of Poulton, who was in 
1345 Joined with the Prior of Lancaster 
as liable for the repair of the chancel ; 
Fishwick, op. cit. 207-8, 


Alexander de Stinford! alta ae de 


William de Sellerdale 7. aren oa 
William de Stalmine*® 2. . 2, 
William de Preston®? . 2... 
John-de Fishwick®®  . . . . 
William de Clayton®). . 2... 
Ralph de Penwortham®? . . . 
William de Southworth®=  . . . 
William Tyndour®4 . 2... 


William Cronkshaw ** .. 
Richard Brown? . . 2... 


Richard Singleton ®® 2 . . . 
William Bretherton®. 2. 2... 
Hugh Sneyd, BD 2. 2. ww, 


Randle Woodward® . 2. 2 . , 
Richard Cropper** . . 2... 


Recrors 
Name 


. . . . . . 


The king 

The king 
Se ee ee ee » ‘ 
Sore Syon Abbey 
Theking . 


A William de Preston was Archdeacon 
of Stafford in 1339; Le Neve, Fusti, i, 
574+ 

50 Cal. Pat. 1348-50, p. 401. The 
church of Poulton with its chapel of 
Bispham became void in the time of pesti- 
lence between 8 Sept. 1349 and 11 Jan. 
1349-503; Engl. Hist. Rev. v, 526. 

51 Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xxxvili, 
105. William de Clayton was ‘late 
vicar’ in 13593 ibid. 383. He was 
styled the same in 1429, having been 
concerned, in conjunction with Ralph de 
Penwortham, chaplain—no doubt his 
successor as vicar—in a grant to John de 
Thornton, who died in 1396 ; Lancs. Ing. 
pom. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 24. 

53 This vicar occurs in 1365 and 1369; 
Kuerden MSS. iii, A 3 ; ii, fol. 260. 

53 Cal. Pat. 1381-5, p. 305. He was 
trustee in a Skillicorne settlement referred 
to in Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. vii, no. 3. 

54 Cal, Pat. 1401-5, pp. 261, 265. 

55 Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xxii, 397 3 
William Kenwolmersh, Treasurer of 
England, and others presented, Henry V 
having lately granted them the priory of 
Lancaster. This presentation is referred 
to by Bishop Gastrell, as if from the 
original register of Archdeacon Bowet ; 
Notitia Cestr. ii, 458. As John ‘Lathom’ 
he was still vicar in 1430; Rentals and 
Surv. R. 378. 

‘Richard’ is named as vicar in a decd 
of Sept. 14233 Add. MS. 32106, fol. 
309. This must be a mistake in dating ; 
see Richard Brown later. 

56 Fishwick, op. cit. 68. He is named 
in a deed of 1437-8 as vicar; Kuerden 
fol. MS. 213. 

57 Raines MSS. xxii, 409. 

58 Ibid. 385. John Oxcliffe was still 
vicar in 1487 ; Pal. of Lanc. Writs Proton. 
file 1 & 2 Hen. VII. 

59 Brockholes of Claughton D, 

60 William Bretherton was one of the 
feoffees of Cuthbert Clifton, who died in 


223 


Presented by 


POULTON-LE- 
FYLDE 


Cause of Vacancy 


i 


I | 


exch. W. deStalmine 


ran 


d. W. 'Tyndour 


‘ d. W. Cronkshaw 
d. R. Brown 


HTT 


15125 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iv, no. 
12. He is named in proceedings con- 
cerning the transfer (after 1518) of the 
lease of tithes, &c.; Fishwick, op. cit. 
69, quoting Duchy of Lance. Plead. iv, 
B37. 

61 He was witness to the will of George 
Allen of Rossall, 1530; Fishwick, op. 
cit. 127. A letter of his is printed in 
L. and P. Hen. VIII, xiv (2), 206. He 
was vicar in 1535 3 Valor Eccl. v, 262. 

A Hugh Snead (1513) occurs in the 
pedigree of Snead of Willaston near 
Nantwich ; Ormerod, Ches. (ed. Helsby), 
iii, 492. Two of the surname graduated 
at Cambridge, one as D. Civ. L. in 15 11- 
12 and another (Hugh) as D.D. in 1529— 
303 Grace Book B (Luard Mem.), ii, 5 ; 
i, 2543 ii, 156. Ralph Sneyd, LL.D., 
became rector of Woodchurch in 1530; 
Ormerod, op. cit. ii, 524. A Dr. Sneyd 
was vicar of Rye in 1535 and later. 

® He was vicar in 1548, the king being 
then called rector ; Visit. List at Chester. 
He signed the return of the church goods 
(which included two chalices and three 
little bells in the steeple) in 15523 Fish- 
wick, op. cit. 42. 

6 Act Bk. at Chester, 1502-76, fol. 
40. He compounded for his first-fruits 
14 Dec. 15523; Lancs. and Ches. Rec. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), ii, 408. 
Other vicars seem to have been excused 
this payment. His name is in the visita- 
tion list, 1554. 

64 Named as vicar in the will of George 
Hull of Poulton, 15573 Fishwick, loc. 
cit. He appeared and subscribed at the 
bishop’s visitation in 1562, but died soon 
afterwards, his will being dated and proved 
in 1565. From his bequests he appears 
to have been one of the Croppers of 
Lathom. He desired to be buried ‘ within 
the parish church of Poulton in the highest 
chancel near unto the table’; Fishwick, 
op. cit. 7o-1. The last word shows that 
the altar had been removed, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Instituted 
ONG TSO5 21% 
g Sept. 1573. - 
11 Jan. 152-3. Peter White ® 


16 Jan. 1644-5 . 
OG. TOSO su 
OCH165 3 ue, 


Peter White ® 


William Wrightington® . 2... 
Richard Greenhall® . 2. 2... { 
at Fleetwood 


Robert Freckleton® . . . . 


Thomas Rigby, MA? 2... 


Name 


Bridget 


William Parson . 
John Browne. . . . 


. . . . . . 


1 Aug. 1662 . George Shaw’). 
6 Oct. 1674 . Richard Harrison, B.A... . 
6 Aug. 1714 . Timothy Hall, BA. 2... 
4 July 1726 . Robert Loxham, M.A.4 2. 2... 
28 Nov.1770 . Thomas Turner, BA . 2... 
28 Dec. 1810 . Nathaniel Hinde, M.A. 2... 
13 July 1828 . Charles Hesketh, M.A? . . . 
6 Oct. 1835 . John Hull, M.A’ 2. 2... 
21 Jun2 1864 . Thomas Clark, M.A 2 2... 
Mar. 1869 . William Richardson, M.A*'. .. 
1o June 1589 =. Thomas Hill Guest, MAS... 
7 Apr. 1907. . John Young, M.A.” 2 2. 


The list of clergy contains nothing of note except 
the long incumbency of Peter White, nearly seventy 
years except for a very brief interval. 
Reformation there was no endowed chantry,*? and 
those at Staining and Carleton, of which there is early 
mention, were probably not permanent. 
tion List of 1548 shows four clergy in addition to the 


This and ‘ater institutions are from 
the church papers in the Diocesan 
Registry at Chester. Many of the par- 
ticulars concerning these incumbents have 
been derived from Fishwik, op. cit. 71- 
38>, where biographies will be found. 

John Fleetwood presented by virtue of 
a grant trom Thomas Fleetwood ; Kuerden 
MSS. ii, fol. 267. Wiliam Wrightington 
by his will 1573 made his brother John 
his executer; ibid. His family had land 
in Shevington, &c. 

@ The patrons were Bridget Fleetwood 
of the Vact.c, widow, and William Fleet- 
wood her son, 

& Act Bk. at Chester, 1579-1676, fol. 
g*. This vicar’s name appears constantly 
in the registers until aout 1633. He 
was a ‘preacher,’ but not resident in 
1590; S.P. Dom. Eliz. xxxi,no. 47. He 
was then or soon became a Puritan, for in 
1604 it was reporte! that he did not wear 
the surptice nor usc the sign of the cross 
in bapt:sm, ‘There was only one com- 
munion in the year, and the chancel of 
the church had filien down 3 Visit. Papers 
at Chestcr Dioc. Reg. In 1610 the rep: r 
of him was ‘a preacher but never 
preacheth'; Hist, AL:S. Com. Rep. xiv, 
App. iv, 8. 

* His institution and later ones are 
recorded in th: Inst tution Books, P.R.O., 
and printed in Lancs. and Civs. .dntz. 
Notes, i, 95, &e. Freckleton was son-in- 
law of Peter White and had charge of 
Bispham. He was in Chester when the 
city was taken by the Pari:amzntary 
forces (Feb. 1645-6), and had his goods 
sequestered for his ‘delinquency.’ He 
was pro tempore placed in charge of Back- 
ford and received an augmentation from 
the Committee of Plundered Ministers ; 
Cammceu, Ch Sure. 2183 Plund. Mins. 
etcest. 1, 224-11. It is reasonabie to sup- 
pose that he was appointed to Po.:ton as 
a relief to the vicar, not to supersede him. 

© Tn 1650 the vicar was ‘Mr. Pcter 
White, formerly an able and painful 


Before the 


The Visita- 


minister, but now very aged and infirm. 
The cure was supplied by Mr. John 
Brerelcy, who had no allowance; the 
parishioners desired he might have allow- 
ance and encouragement ’*; Commonw. Ch, 
ourt. 1§t. 

70 Educated at St. John's Cul!., Camb.; 
M.A. 1638, Fellow 1639; Mayor, 
Admissions, i, § 3 Baker, Hist. of St. JoAn's 
(ed. Mayr}, 1, 295. He was a son of 
Alexan ce R sty of Bureh and Layton, a 
Cavalier. “Thomas Rigby, who occurs at 
Breughton-in-Furnces in 1650-1, was 
vicar beture Nov. 1653, when a son of his 
was baptizei at Poulton. In 1660 it was 
agreed that an adJitional sum of £30 
should be paid to a ‘godly and painful 
minister’ at Poulton, approved by the 
committee, and it was next ordered that 
it be paid to Thomas Rigby ; Plund. Mins. 
etcct. ii, 116. Soon after the Res‘oration 
he went to Ireland and acquired bene- 
fees and prebend there. For pedigree 
sce Dugdale, /’ss11, (Chet. Soc.), 244. 

“\ An entry in the registers states that 
‘Mr. Georee Shaw was presented vicar 
and took quict possession according to a 
legal form the 16th day of December, 
1661.’ The presentation and institution 
by the bishop in 1662 show there wa. 
some defect in his title to Pouiton. 

He was of Cockerham, son of Robert 
Shaw, clerk; and after two years at 
Queen’s Coll., Oxf., was admitted to St. 
John’s Coll, Camb, in July 1658; 
Mayor, Admissions, i, 137. He married 
a dauzhter of Sir Paul Fleetwood, and 
sister of the then patron. 

7 Educated at Brasenose Coll, Oxf. ; 
B.A. 16633 Foster, Alumni. He was 
“conformab:e’ in 1689 ; Hist. MSS. Com. 
Rep. xiv, App. iv, 230. He enlarged the 
vicarage-house, For pedigree see Misc. 
Gen. et Her. iv, 118, 

73 Educated at Brasenose Coil., Oxf.; 
B.A. 1703 ; Foster, op. cit. He adminis- 
tered the holy sacrament seven t.mes in 
the year at least ; Visit. Ret. 1725. 


224 


Presented by 
John Fleetwood . . . 
and William 
Fleetwood 


Bishop of Chester. . 
Richard Fleetwood . . d 
Edward Fleetwood . . d. 
d 
d 


Frances Hesketh . . . 
Bold Fleetwood Hesketh 
Peter Hesketh. . . . 
Rev. C. Hesketh . .. 


Mrs. Hesketh, 
C. H. Fleetwood-Hesketh 


vicar ; one of them would serve Bispham.”! 
there were the vicar and an assistant at Poulton and 
another at Bispham, but in 1562 the vicar and the 
curate at Bispham were the only clergy recorded. 
This probably continued to be the regular staff till 
recent times, the building of Marton Chapel, about 
1750, leading the way to further changes. 


Cause of Vacancy 
d. R. Cropper 


ha. W. Wrightington 


| 


res. C, Hesketh 
res. J. Hull 

d. T. Clark 

d. W. Richardson 
res. T. H. Guest 


. . . 
. . . 


In 1554 ° 


74 Educated at Trinity Coll., Oxf. ; 
M.A, 17153 Foster, op. cit. He was 
rector of Workington 1724-6. In 1749 
he obtained another benefice, being pre- 
sented to Poulton a second time. 

7 The actual nominators were Richard 
Wilbraham Bootle of Lathom, Thomas 
Hunt and Robert Moss; with the con- 
scnt of Frances Hesketh, widow. 

Thomas Turner, described as formerly 
curate of Bradtord, was educated at St. 
John’s Coll., Camb., which he entered in 
17433 R. F. Scott, oddmisisons, tii, 109, 


‘This vicar purchased the living, then 
werth £75 per annum, for the sum of 
£200"; Thornber, Blackpool, 288. His 
juneral is said to have been the last con- 
ducted at night by tor.hlight; on such 
occasions cach houscholder illuminated 
his windows with candles ; ibid. 294. 

Educated at St. Mary Hall, Oxf. He 
woe vicar of Shifnal 1811-31, and rector 
of Kingswinford 1814. 

77 Educated at Trin. Coll, Oxf. ; M.A. 
1830. He was also incus.bent of Hisp 
ham. In 1835 he became rector of North 
Meols (q.v.). 

7 Educated at Brasenose Coll., Oxf. ; 
M.A. 1826. Hon. Canon of Manchester 
1852. Presented to the rectory of Eaglee- 
cliffe, Durham, 1864. 

79 Educated at Queens’ Coll., Camb. ; 
M.A. 1824. Incumbent of Christ Church, 
Pr ston, 1534-64. 

‘M.A. by Archbishop of Canterbury, 
1859. He was rector «t St. John’s, Miles 
Platting, 1852-69. 

-! Equcated at Christ's Coll., Camb. ; 
M.A. 1865. Rector of St. Mark's, 
Ilu.me, 1871-89. 

Educated at Christ's Coll, Camb. ; 
MLA. 1904. 

§ A Thornton chantry is mentioned in 
the 15th century ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soc, 41, 25% 

“4 These details are from the Viet 
Lists in Chester Dioc, Reg. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


A catalogue of the library at the parish church in 
1720 is preserved at Chester. 

Schools were founded by James Baines in 1717 at 
Poulton, Thornton and Marton. That at Carleton 
originated from a bequest by Elizabeth Wilson in 
1680." 

Official inquiries into the parish 
charities were made in 1824 and 
1898. The report of the latter 
inquiry, published in 1899, contained a copy of the 
former report, and from it the following account is 
taken. 

For the whole parish there is available the endow- 
ment given by the above-named James Baines in 
1717, the earliest charity known to have been estab- 
lished in Poulton. He gave £800 to trustees, for 
the ‘maintenance, use, and best advantage’ of the 
poor not receiving help from the rates and for the 
apprenticing of poor children. Half the interest was 
to be given for both objects to the township of 
Poulton and half equally for apprenticing only 
among the other four townships. The distribution 
was to be made at Christmas. A farm was bought at 
Little Carleton, now known as Carleton House Farm. 
The net income is about £112, which is divided 
into eight parts, Poulton receiving four and the other 
townships one each. Very few apprentices are now 
bound, and in Poulton the £30 given in doles 
‘appears to be wasted’ as to the greater part. Thus 
the capital is accumulating, but the charity is not so 
useful as it might be. The poor of this parish have 
an interest in the Foxton Dispensary at Blackpool. 

For the township of Poulton Nicholas Nickson of 
Compley, by will of 1720, left £100 to the vicar and 
the poor. Land called Durham’s Croft was pur- 
chased for £120, the additional {20 coming from 
the rates. ‘The rent was divided thus: one-sixth to 
the rates, the remainder equally between the vicar 
and the poor. The poor’s portion was given in 

small doles in 1824. The vicar of Poulton is in 
possession of the land, and gives {4 Is. 8d. a year to 
the overseers as the portion due to the poor rate and 
to the poor. Doles of 2s. are given to twenty-eight 
poor persons. 

Ellen Whitehead of Poulton (1727) left money or 
land for the poor of Hardhorn-with-Newton. In 
1824 there were three cottages and a weaving shed 
(built in 1817) on the land. The rents were dis- 
tributed in doles, but irregularly. The gross income 
is now {12 115. 8d., of which about £8 is distributed 
to the poor in gifts of 5s. or 5s. 6d. each. 

For Marton there are several charities, over £31 
being distributed in food and clothing. Edward 
Whiteside, a sailor, of Little Marton, in 1721 left 
his plot of land for cloth for the poor ; it consists of 
5 acres in Poulton called the Long Marsh, and is 
let for £20. About £18 is available for a distribution 
of cloth made in November to thirty or more persons. 
William Whiteside in 1742 gave {100 for clothing. 
This is represented by rent-charges on Marton Green 
and Webster’s farms.” John Hodgson in 1761 left 


CHARITIES 


POULTON-LE- 
FYLDE 


land to be sold for endowing a dole of meal for 
Great Marton ; it seems to have produced £100, and 
is represented by rent-charges of {2 ros. each on 
Top o’ the Town and Whittam farms. The two 
charities are combined in working ; the doles of meal 
have ceased, and the income of £8 6s. 8d. is used 
for doles of calico to a Jarge number of persons in 
Great Marton. Edward Jolly in 1784 gave {60 for 
a weekly dole of bread to be distributed at the chapel 
on Sunday mornings to such poor persons as might 
have attended service. Should the chapel become a 
dissenting meeting-house the destination of the gift 
was to be changed. ‘The income is {1 155. 8¢., and 
nine penny rolls are given each Sunday after service. 

The Thornton charities are recent. Elizabeth 
Goulding of Fleetwood left the residue of her estate 
for the benefit of poor widows living at Fleetwood ; 
the capital is represented by £151 115. 1d. consols, 
and there is an annual income of £4 35. 4d. distri- 
buted according to the founder’s wish. Elizabeth 
Bond of the same town in 1880 left securities, now 
bringing in about {£5 ros. a year, for the benefit of 
the poor, to be distributed by the vicar of Fleetwood 
at his discretion. 


POULTON 


Poltun, Dom. Bk. ; 
1196 to xvi cent. 
Pole-ton. 

This triangular township lies between two brooks 
which join together at its northern end and then 
flow into the Wyre, which is about half a mile to 
the north. ‘The parish church stands near the 
centre of the area in the part called Great Poulton. 
Little Poulton is a hamlet to the east, while Compley 
lies in the south-west corner. In general the sur- 
face is even with a slope to the north, but the 
three portions named are on slight elevations. 
Angelholme lies on the north-west boundary. The 
area is 914 acres,' and there was a population of 
2,223 in Igol. 

A road leads north through the township, passing 
the church to west and to east and descending the 
Breck to Skippool, as that part of the united streams 
flowing to the Wyre is called. The portion of this 
road to the south-west of the church has been formed 
into a little square or market-place, at the entrance 
of which are the market cross, fish stones, whipping 
post and stocks.? From the ends of the market-place 
roads branch off north-west to Fleetwood and 
Bispham and south-west to Blackpool. Pococke 
described Poulton in 1754 as ‘a little neat town 
built of brick, subsisting by trade and tillage.’ ® 

The Preston and Wyre railway goes through the 
centre of the township, with a station in the Breck, 
just to the north of the church, opened in 1896. 
The line then divides, part going north to Fleetwood 
and a branch turning west to Blackpool. The old 
station (1840), still existing, was lower down the 
Breck, the line to Fleetwood being straighter than at 


Pultune, 1160; Pulton, 
The local pronunciation is 


® Dioc. Reg. There is a brief account 
of this library in Fishwick’s Poulton, 197. 
é 88 Notitia Cestr. ii, 459, 4603 End. Char. 

ep. 

* The rent-charge became divided into 
thirds. Two of these are still existent : 
but the other, paid in 1824 by William son 


4 


of William Bonney and grandson of Robert 
Bickerstaff, has been lost, as the purchaser 
of the land from which it was due refused 
to pay on the ground that it was not 
named in the conveyance to him in 1870. 

1 The Census Rep. 1901 gives 915 
acres, including 2 of inland water. 


Deas 


2 Lancs. and Ches, Antiq. Soc. xx, 188-9. 
The stocks were renewed in 1874. There 
are remains of a churchyard cross, and 
another cross formerly stood in the 
Breck. 

8 Travels through England (Camd. Soc.), 
ii, 6. 


29 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


present ; the alteration was made to avoid the very 
sharp curve at which the Blackpool line turned off. 

‘The port at Skippool was formerly of local 
importance. There was a market on Monday and 
customary fairs are still held in February, April and 
November.’ A court of requests for the recovery of 
small debts was established in 1770. 

The soil is clayey, overlying stiff clay. 

Poulton is governed by an urban district council 
of twelve members. The town has been lighted by 
gas since 1851; the works were purchased by the 
council in 1903. 

There is a cemetery in the Breck, laid out in 
1883. 

A halfpenny token was issued in 1667 by James 
Smith, a Quaker, who had suffered imprisonment 
for refusing to take an oath.® A shilling token was 
issued about 1812.7 

Before the Conquest POULTON, as- 

MANOR sessed as two plough-lands, was held by 
Ear] Tostig® and afterwards became 

part of the lands of Count Roger of Poitou, who, as 
stated in the account of the church, gave it to the 
Abbey of St. Martin of Sées.® Thus it became part 
of the endowment of St. Mary’s Priory at Lancaster 
and afterwards of the Bridgitine Abbey of Syon in 
Middlesex. Beyond the charters of endowment and 
a few later acquisitions" there is but little record of 
the place, and no ‘manor’ seems to have been 


acknowledged in later times," except in 1634, when 
Alexander Rigby of Middleton and others held it.” 
Thornber, writing in 1837, says: ‘The principal 
part of Poulton . . . passed 
into the hands of the Rigbys 
of Layton Hall, in whose 
name the greatest number of Beth 
its houses are leased for the 
remaining term of ggg years.’ 3 

The Prior of Lancaster com- 
plained in 1330 that he had 
been seized and imprisoned 
at Poulton by Sir Adam 
Banastre, Richard the Demand 
and others, and that his men Ricay of Layton. 
had been assaulted, &c. A zim d x, oe 
fine of a mark was imposed. chef sable three aah 
The dispute seems to have foils or. 
arisen over a right of way and 
the collection of tithes, an agreement being made at 
the same time by which the prior and his men were 
to have two sufficient roads for men and wagons 
through Sir Adam’s lands in Thornton, Staynall and 
Singleton. One road was to go from Thornton and 
Poulton by Skippool through Little Singleton to the 
ford of Aldwath over the Wyre; the other road was 
to go through Poulton and Thornton, crossing the 
Wyre by the ford of Bulkes." 

Two families at least used the local surname," but 


“In 1722-3 it was a member of the 
port of Chester, and its bounds extended 
from Ribble mouth round to the Wyze 
estuary. Timber from America and flax 
and tallow from Russia were landed there, 
and the town did a considerable business 
in flax, which came from Ireland also ; 
Fishwick, Poulton (Chet. Soc.), 33-4. 

A rate for the repair of Skippool bridge 
was levied in 1702 ; ibid. 200. 

> Thornber, Blackpool, 290. 

6 Lancs. and Ches. Antiz. Soc. v, 87. 

7 By R. D. Hall; Pal. Note Bk. i, 84. 

8 V.C.H. Lancs.i, 288a. In later times 
Poulton was considered as three plough- 
lands ; Lanc. Ch. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 483, 
the plough-land given to the church being 
the third part of the vill. 

9 Ibid. i, 9 ; ‘in Amounderness Poulton 
and whatever belonged to it." This was 
confirmed by John when Count of Mortain, 
and again after he became king ; ibid. 
13, 16. 

In 1205-6 half a plough-land was 
in dispute between the Prior and monks 
of Lancaster on the one s de and Richard 
de Singleton, Robert the C erk his brother, 
Richard de ‘Workedel’ (Worsley) and 
Maud his wife on the other. The monks’ 
right was acknowledged, and the other 
parties received the land for life at a rent 
of 2s. ; ibid. ii, 385. 

Robert son of Alexander de Stanford 
teleased to the monks the toft he held, 
and received it again ata quit-rent of 3d., 
with remainder to his sister Edusa ; ibid. 
ii, 389-91. Several similar grants follow. 
Walter son of Wiliam del Moor gave 
them 2 acres of land lying in various 
places, viz, two lands on Carrfurlong, 
one fring next the ‘Orsegate’ leading 
to Carieton, half a land on the Trim- 
‘and:, half a land on the Ouand, ani 
half a land on the Fems; ibid. 402. 
He also gave land on the Overland of the 
Mars, on Cantelow (afterwards Cantley), 
&c., and half an oxgang of his land in 


Poulton ; ibid. 403-5. In one deed the 
‘vil of Great Poulton’ is named; ibid. 
4c8. 

In Little Poulton Geoffrey de Whit- 
tingham gave half an oxgang of land to 
Robert son of Richard de Poulton ; ibid. 
411. Robert del Marsh of Little Poulton, 
perhaps the grantee, having incurred a 
fine of 30 marks, pledged his lands, &c., 
to the Prior of Lancaster, who had 
became surety for him ; ibid. 418. 

In 1295 Nicholas son of John Baldwin, 
living in Poulton, released to his chief 
lord the prior all his title in half an 
oxgang of land he had had from his 
brother William ; ibid. 422. 

Inquiry was made in 1299 a8 to whether 
or not it would be to the king’s loss to 
allow the prior to acquire certain lands in 
Poulton ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 304 3 Cal. Pat. 
1292-1301, p. 482. 

A grant by Walter son of William de 
la Moor in the time of Henry III is in 
the Record Office ; Anct. D., B 2948. 

1 The lordship of the Prior of Lancaster 
was fully recognized in 1293, when he 
complained of disseisin by John son of 
James de Poulton, John son of Adam de 
Poulton and others, The two Johns 
alleged that their ancestors had been 
coparceners with Roger of Poitou, and 
had given freely, for the benefit of the 
church, a rent of 6d. per oxgang of land. 
The verdict was for the prior, who claimed 
an approvement in right of his lordship ; 
Lanc. Ch. ii, 480-6. There seems to have 
been a very determined resistance to the 
prior’s claims, judging by the numb>er of 
those who joined in throwing down the 
ditches, &c.; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, 
i, PFs 2 

1? The deforciants in a fine respecting 
the manor of Poulton, the tithes of 
Poulton and Marton, various lands in 
Goosnargh, &c., were Alexander Rigby, 
Lucy his wife, Joseph and George Rigby, 


226 


Robert Mawdesley and Dorothy his wife ; 
Pal. of Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 122, no. 21. 

18 Hist. of Blackpool, 291. 

" Lance, Ch, ii, 468, 471. 

'5 They occur ‘in the Lancaster Char- 
tulary quoted in preceding notes, 

Adam de Poulton, John de Poulton 
and James his son, John son of Baldwin 
and Robert his brother, and John de 
Kirkby successfully resisted a claim by 
Alexander rector of Poulton in 1246; 
Lancs, Assize R, (Rec. Soc, Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 48. At the same time Sibyl 
wife of Adam de Larbreck claimed a 
toft, &c., in right of her sister Agnes 
daughter of Adam; but Adam son of 
Robert de Poulton said that another 
sister, Avice, had left a daughter Alice, 
who should Lave been joined in the 
complaint ; ibid, 26. 

In 1301 John Curteys claimed a 
messuage and an oxgang of land in 
Poulton against Henry de Poulton; De 
Banco R, 135, m. 360. Alice widow of 
John son of Roger de Poulton in 1308-9 
claimed dower in a toft and an oxgang 
of land against Alice daughter of Roger 
son of John de Poulton; ibid. 174, m. 
225. Adam le Wayte in 1338 claimed a 
messuage and oxgang of land in Kirk 
Poulton held by Beatrice widow of John 
son of James de Poulton; ibid. 315, 
m. 214d. Thomas son of John son of 
James de Poulton occurs in 1346 ; ibid, 
346, m. 74. 

In 1353 the lands of Robert de Poulton, 
deceased, who held of the priory of 
Lancaster, were committed to John soa 
of Robert de Farington, together with the 
marriage of Nicholas, next of kin and 
heir, a minor; Fine R. 154 (27 Edw. 
Ill), m. 19. The poss:ssions of the 
priory were in the king's hands by 
reason of the war with France. The 
inquisition states that Robert had held 
a messuage, 40 acres of arable land, 
5 acres of meaiow and 1§ acres of pasture 


Povtron-Le-FyLpe ; Stocks anD Cross 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


there is practically no record ' of them. 
quisitions show that a number of the neighbouring 
landowners had possessions in the township” and 
after the Dissolution Thomas Fleetwood acquired 
Jand in Little Poulton with Rossall and in Poulton 
Heskeths 
recorded pedigrees as ‘of Poulton,’ ® but the resident 
owners seem to have been of no higher than yeoman 


The 


with the advowson.'® 


of the priory of Lancaster by knight’s 
service, rendering 2s. rofd. yearly. The 
heir Nicholas (son of John son of Robert) 
was fifteen years old; Ing. p.m. 27 Edw. 
III (1st nos.), no, 4. 

Nicholas de Poulton and Agnes his 
wife in 1408 made a grant of land within 
their manor of Poulton which afterwards 
(1461) came into the hands of John son 
of Nicholas Boteler of Rawcliffe ; Dods. 
MSS. lili, fol. 101d. 

16 Some minor cases may be recorded. 
In 1334 John son of Adam le Wayte of 
Kirk Poulton did not prosecute a claim 
against Roger son of John son of James 
de Poulton Parva and William de 
Bartaill; Coram Rege R. 297, m. 5d. 
The same John was plaintiff respecting 
an oxgang of land in Kirk Poulton in 
1357; his father Adam was son of 
Richard de Poulton by his wife Alice 
daughter of Walter del Moor. The 
defendant, Nicholas son of John son of 
Robert de Poulton, held in his grand- 
father’s right ; Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 
4, 54.5 6m. 3d. 

The above-named William de Bartaill 
acquired a messuage and land in Kirk 
Poulton in 1330 ; Final Conc. ii, 76. In 
1333 he claimed from Henry the Sumpter 
and Agnes his wife the performance of 
an agreement as to a toft, &c., in Little 
Poulton ; De Banco R. 294, m. 237. 

The Prior of Lancaster as rector of 
Poulton claimed a messuage and 2 
oxgangs of land in 1319 against Gilbert 
de Howath and Joan his wife, the matter 
of dispute being whether the estate was 
free alms or a lay fee; De Banco R. 
231,m.121d. It seems to have been the 
property of Joan, and in 1334 was settled 
on Alan son of Gilbert de Howath and 
his heirs by Cecily daughter of William de 
Howick, with remainders to Alan’s sisters 
Christiana and Maud; Final Conc. ii, 94. 

Alice widow of Robert del Marsh in 
1292 claimed dower against the Prior of 
Lancaster in three messuages and 3 
oxgangs of land in Poulton; Assize R. 
408, m. 24d. In Little Poulton in 1328 
Nicholas del Marsh obtained half an 
oxgang of land from William de Meols 
and Alice his wife ; Final Conc. ii, 72. 
The grant, dated 1326, is among the 
deeds of Mr. Fitzherbert-Brockholes. 

The custody of lands in Little Poulton 
vas in 1363~—5 claimed by the Prior of 
Lancaster against Alice widow of Henry 
de Worstey and William de Bradkirk, 
during the minority of Adam brother and 
heir of John son of Adam de Bradkirk ; 

- De Banco R. 413, m. 81d.; 420, m. 
257d. Adam de Bradkirk had held 3 
oxgangs of land of Lancaster Priory by a 
tent of 2s. 6/.; Ing. p.m, 28 Edw. III 
(and nos.), no. 12. 

Pleasington and Shaffar occur among 
the landowners in 1387 and 1395 3 Final 
Conc, ili, 29, 45. The former estate is 
said to have been sold to Richard Boteler 
in 1469 ; Fishwick, Poulton (Chet. Soc.), 
I1, quoting Harland’s MSS. 

1 Sir James Harrington of Wolfage in 
1497 held lands in Great and Little 


The in- 


rank.” 
district.?! 


of Mains 


Poulton, but the tenure was not known ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 168 ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, no. qo. 
After the death of his widow Isabel in 
1518 the lands in Poulton were said to 
be held of the priory of St. John of 
Jerusalem ; ibid. v, no. 2, The Poulton 
lands seem to have been applied to the 
endowment of a chantry at Brixworth, 
according to Sir James’s will ; afterwards 
they were given by Queen Mary to the 
Savoy Hospital; Pat. 4 & 5 Phil. and 
Mary, pt. xv. They were perhaps pur- 
chased by James Massey of Layton ; 
Thornber, Blackpool, 291. James Massey 
in 1562 purchased lands in Great Poulton 
and Marton from the Butler family ; Pal. 
of Lane. Feet of F. bdle. 24, m. 82, 117. 
Jehn son and heir of James held two 
messuages, &c., in 15853; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 47, m. 154. 

Sir Robert de Shireburne and Alice his 
wife received land in Poulton from the 
Prior of Lancaster in 1334.3 Anct. D. 
(P.R.O.), B 2945. Richard Shireburne 
of Stonyhurst was in 1441 found to have 
held a messuage and land in Poulton of 
the Abbess of Syon in socage; Lancs. 
Rec. Ing. p.m. no. 30, 31. His successor 
in 1513, Sir Richard, was said to hold of 
the heirs of Sir James Harrington in 
socage ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iv, no. 
46. This was recorded also of some of 
his successors, but Richard Shireburne in 
1628 was stated to have held of the king 
as of his abbey of Syon lately dissolved ; 
ibid. xxvi, no. 4. 

Thomas Catterall in 1579 held his land 
of Sir Richard Shireburne in socage ; 
ibid. xiv, no. 4. 

Alexander Rigby of Middleton in 1621 
held tithes and land of the king as of his 
manor of East Greenwich ; Lancs. Ing. 
pom. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 458. 

In some other cases the tenure was 
not recorded. This happened with Skilli- 
corne of Preese, whose lands were sold 
to William Hodgkinson in 1567; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 29, m. 64. 

18 Pat. 7 Edw. VI, pt. ix; 2 Mary. 
Thomas Fleetwood died in 1576 holding 
lands in Poulton as part of the Rossall 
estate by knight’s service; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xii, no. 2. 

George Allen in 1579 held his land in 
Poulton of William Fleetwood in socage ; 
ibid. xiv, no. 80. 

19 Their residence in Poulton was 
known as Little Poulton Hall. An 
account of the family has been given 
under Singleton. From the Brockholes 
of Claughton D. it appears that Bartholo- 
mew Hesketh, the father of George and 
Gabriel, was the Bartholomew Hesketh 
concerned in the foundation of Rufford 
chantry, and that he purchased lands in 
Great and Little Poulton, Hoole and 
Bretherton in 1523-4 from Thomas 
Harrington of Newingtonin Kent. George 
Hesketh died in 1571 holding messuages 
and lands in Poulton of the queen as of 
the late monastery of Syon by a rent of 
5s.; Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. xiii, no. 15 5 
Lancs, Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ili, 363. 


227 


POULTON-LE- 
FYLDE 


The Bamber family was prominent in the 


From about 1535 to 1570 there was a dispute 
about the mill-house and various lands between John 
Lancelyn and Margaret his wife on one side and 
William Butler on the other.” 

Cockersand Abbey had some land in Poulton” 
and the Knights Hospitallers also.” 


2 Thomas Bocher and Agnes his wile 
had an estate in 1556, the remainder 
was to Richard Law; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F. bdle. 17, m, 140. 

Robert Clark died in 1599 holding a 
messuage in Poulton and another in 
Carleton, but the tenure was not recorded. 
Henry his son and heir was nineteen 
years of age; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
xvii, no. 44. 

Thomas Atkinson, who died in 1640, 
held a messuage, &c., of the king as of his 
duchy, His heir was a daughter Alice, 
only five years old ; ibid. xxx, no. 48. 
She died in 1642, the heir being her 
uncle Christopher Atkinson, aged thirty- 
four ; ibid. xxix, no. 55. 

?l Fishwick, Poulton, 177. 

Thomas Bamber of Great Poulton in 
1616 held a messuage there of the king 
by the two-hundredth part of a knight’s 
fee, also lands in Thornton and Nor- 
cross by unknown tenures. His heir 
was his son John, aged fifteen ; Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 45. 

John Bamber of Poulton was among 
those who compounded for refusing 
knighthood in 1631; Misc, (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 222. 

#2 There are many references to the 
matter in the Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), 
i, 156, &c. From a statement made in 
1540 it appears that John Lancelyn and 
Margaret (in her right) claimed messuages 
and lands not only in Poulton, but in 
many of the surrounding townships. 
Margaret was the daughter of Richard 
Butler, who had two sons, George and 
Thomas. George dying without issue, 
the estate went to Thomas, and William 
Butler claimed as his son and heir; Pal. 
of Lanc. Plea R. 168, m. 6. 

The claimant’s legitimacy was disputed, 
and he was known as Butler alias Parr 
alias Ward alias Taylor. He appears to 
have succeeded, and as William Butler of 
Hackinsall died in 1586 holding land in 
Poulton of the queen as of her duchy in 
socage ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xiv, 
no. 47. 

*3 Robert son of Richard de Burgh (or 
Burrow) gave half an oxgang of land 
which he had purchased from Richard son 
ot Waldeve, for the souls of himself and 
Avice his wife, in payment of the third of 
their goods, which should go to Cocker- 
sand Abbey at their decease ; Cockersand 
Chartul, (Chet. Soc.), i, 189. Waldeve 
de Poulton released his right ; ibid. i, 190. 
For rentals 1451 to 1537 see ibid. iii, 
1266-9. 

In the Lancaster Chartulary (Lanc. Ch. 
ii, 413) is a grant by Richard son of 
Walter (sic) de Poulton to Robert son of 
Richard de Boure and Avice his wife of 
half an oxgang of land. John son of 
Waldeve also gave them half an oxgang 
(ii, 414); while Robert son of Richard 
son of Waldeve gave Lancaster Priory 
an oxgang of land; ibid. ii, 415. 

24 This appears from the Harrington 
inquisition above. It was not named 
among the hospital’s possessions in 
1292. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


James Taylor of Poulton wasa frecholder in 1600.” 
There appear to have been no Sequestrations under 
the Commonwealth, but Thomas Bamber as a 
Papist registered his estate in iA ere 
The parish church has been described above. 
Pes bien hee Methodists built a chapel in 
1819. ildi 
ie 9 a 1s was replaced by the present building 
The Congregationalists began preaching as early as 
1778, but their chapel was not built till 1809. Its 


fortunes have fluctuated, but the building was 
restored in 1886.” 


The Society of Friends had a meeting-house at 
Poulton in 1825,” but did not retain it. 

After the Reformation a considerable portion of 
the people in Poulton as elsewhere in the Fylde 
clung to Roman Catholicism openly or secretly. As 
the persecution slackened in the time of James I they 
appear to have thought concealment less needful, and 
in 1622 it was reported to the Bishop of Chester 
that various persons in the parish did ‘deprave 
publicly the religion now established and openly 
Maintain popery, wearing crosses in their hats as 
badges thereof.’ Further, Thomas Singleton of Stain- 
ing, Thomas Westby of Burn and others had 
‘christened their children with popish priests and not 
at their parish church.’ ® Mass was said, it is probable, 
at Burn and Mains and other houses in the district, 
but the first public church, that of St. John the 
Evangelist, Breck, was not built till 181335 it 
represents the old mission at Singleton. 


1901 there were 684 inhabitants. It had three 
ancient divisions : Great Carleton in the centre, 
Little Carleton to the south and Norcross in the 
north ; as in the case of Poulton the hamlet in 
each case stands on ground rising a |.ttle above the 
general low level. The hamlet of Great Carleton 
has more recently been taken to include Norcross, 
and its area is 1,224 acres; while Little Carleton 
which has three detached portions, one of them 
within Bispham, has 807} acres. 

The principal road is that going north from 
Blackpool to Fleetwood. It passes through each of 
the three hamlets; from Great Carleton a branch 
goes east to Poulton, and to the north a road from 
Bispham to Poulton crosses it at Four Lane Ends. 
The Poulton to Blackpool branch of the Wyre rail- 
Way crosses the southern part of Carleton, going 
south-west ; there is a station named Bispham. 

‘There was formerly a cuck-stool in Great Carleton.? 

The soil is a strong loam, and dairy farming is the 
chief industry. 

The township has a parish council. 

In 1066 CARLETON was assessed 

MANORS as four plough-lands and formed part vi 
the Preston fee of Earl Tostig.? About 

a century afterwards it is found to be a member of 
the Wyresdale lordship of the Lancaster family, of 
whom it was held by the heirs of Richard son of 
Roger, the lord of Woodplumpton.® In 1242 it 
was held in two moieties, culled Little and Great 
Carleton, by Roger Gernet and Robert de Stockport 


CARLETON 


Carlentun, Dom. Bk. ; Karleton, 1241 ; Kariton, 


1258; Carleton, 1294. 


This township has an area of 2,0;14 acres,! and in 


5 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
1, 233. 

* Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjursrs, 139. 

* Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 
427. This writer (1872) states that 
Methodism appeared in Poulton about 
1800, but had not flourished there. The 
first meeting-place was an out-house at 
the back of the ‘ King’s Arms,’ and con- 
siderable persecution had to be endured. 

*> Nightingale, Lancs, Nonconf.i, 122-6. 
The chapel has had to be closed several 
times—in 1816, 1826, 1833 (with slight 
exceptions) to 1850, 1864 to 1866. 

39 Baines, Lancs. Dir. ii, 462. This 
may refer to the meeting at Thornton. 

3%) Visit. presentments at Chester 
Dioc. Reg. For convicted recusants in 
the parish c. 1670 see Adisc. (Cath. Rec. 
Soc.), v, 169, 182-3, 197-8. Im 1717 
the number of ‘Parists’ in the para 
was returned to the Bishop of Chester as 
67, in 176> as 1643 Trams. Hist, Soc 
(new ser.), xviii, 218. 

31 Hewitson, op. cit. 403-6. The 
Caivinistic Evangelicals of a century ago 
regarded this district as ‘the most dark and 
miserable part of the county.... A few 
attem;ts from time to time were made 
to diffuse throughout it the light of the 
Gospel ; but a very large proportion of 
the inhabitants being Catholics it will be 
easily conceived that peculiar difficulties 
attended every exertion to spread the 
truth ... [ina tract] so awfully obscured 
with the mists of Pepish ignorance, error 
and superstition’; Nightingale, op. cit. 


respectively,® but, as will be seen below, the subse- 
quent history cannot be traced clearly.’ 
A considerable portion was granted in alms to 


different religious houses. 


Four oxgangs of land 


were granted to Lytham Priory by its founder.’ The 


i, 126, from the report of the Lancashire 
Congregational Union, 1808. 

1 The Census Rep. 1901 gives 2,013 
acres, including § of inland water. The 
diminution in area is accounted for by 
the transfer of the detached part of Little 
Carleton (Horseman's Hill), lying within 
Bispham, to the latter township in 1877 ; 
Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 6910. 

2 Thornber, Blackpool, 281. 

8 7.C.H. Lancs. i, 2884. The later 
assessment seems to have been three 
plough-lands only ; perhaps one was added 
to Poulton. 

VIS:d. 959; ns 135 

5 Avice daughter of Richard son of 
Roger granted 3 oxgangs of land to 
Richard son of Robert de Carlzton at a 
rent of gs. ; Lytham D. at Durham, 3, 
2ae,4ae,Ebor.no. 7. See also 4a, 2 ae, 
4.ae, Ebor. no. 6. 

6 Lincs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 154. Quenilda 
widow of Roger Gernet died in 1252 
holding one plough-land in Carleton of 
the heir of Sir William de Lancaster by 
knight’s service. She received nothing 
but 14. farm at Michaelmas ; ibid. 190. 

7 See the account of Little Carleton. 

5 Richard son of Roger, with the consent 
of his wife Margaret and his heirs, gave 
half a plough-land of his demesne in 
Carleton in alms ; Lytham D. at Durham, 
2a, 4.ae, Ebor. no. 3. Some of the deeds 
are in Kuerden MSS. iii, C 1. 

Richard Prior of Durham and the 
convent gave Henry de Whittington 4 
oxgangs of land in Carleton which they 


228 


same amount was given to Cockersand Abbey,” and 


had had from Richard son of Roger, at a 
rent of half a mark yearly payable to 
Lytham Priory ; Dods. MSS. culii, fol. 67. 
Henry’s acknowledgement of liability is 
at Durham ; Lytham D, Mise. no. 477. 

Henry son of William son of Swain 
gave his son Michael 4 oxgangs of 
land in Carleton which he had received 
from the Prior of Lytham; Add. MS. 
32106, no. 797. Henry's parentage is 
thus shown. The same Henry had had 
a grant of the water in the marsh between 
Poulton and Little Carleton from John 
son of Waldeve of Poulton for the rent 
of a pair of white gloves (or 1d.) payable 
at Lancaster fair; Dods. MSS. cxlii, 
fol. 75. William de Carleton and Thomas 
his brother were witnesses. 

° William son of Swain gave 4 ox- 
gangs of his land in Carleton in free 
alms, reserving the 4 oxgangs he held in 
demesne and another 4 in Norcross; 
Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 143. 
This was confirmed by Waite: his brother 
and heir, who added a further piece of 
land to endow a lizht during masses for 
the faithful at Cockersand ; ibid. 144. 

Thomas de Norcross gave an acre in 
Norcross near Restinyiaw, and he 
brother, William de Carlet-n, added haif 
an oxgang in the same fart of the 
township. This gift was confirmed by 
Walter son and heir of Sir William, and 
was occupied about 1270 by Henry de 
Haydock for a rent of 12d.; ibid. 
144-6. In 1271 the canons made ap 
exchange with Walter de Carleton, giving 
eleven ‘falls’ on the Hull (north of 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


augmented by 1 or 2 oxgangs.'° To the Hospital 
of St, John Baptist outside the North Gate, Chester, 
an oxgang and a half of land was given" ; a meadow 
and a small piece of land were granted to Stanlaw 
Abbey.” 

GREAT CARLETON was held by William son of 
Swain about 1200.% He was succeeded by his 
brother Walter,’ whose son William became a 
knight.® In 1246 this William de Carleton called 
upon Robert de Stockport as mesne tenant to acquit 
him of the services demanded by William de Lan- 
caster, including suit to the three weeks court at 
Garstang."® He had to renew his plea ten years later, 
when Agnes de Lancaster revived the claim, and then 


POULTON-LE- 
FYLDE 


William was succeeded by a son Walter,'® living in 
1281," but from that time little seems to be known 
of the family.” Their estate appears to be the 
‘manor of Carleton,’ afterwards held by the 
Lawrences of Ashton near Lancaster,” and after the 
partition among their heirs lands in Carleton are 
found in the possession of Rigmaiden,” Butler,” 
Skillicorne,* and Molyneux.” There seems to have 
been a partition,” Richard Skillicorne receiving 
Carleton, no doubt the ‘manor of Great Carleton’ 
which was in 1608 in the hands of Lawrence Livesey 
and Elizabeth his wife.” The Livesey estate was 
in that year purchased by Richard Shireburne of 
Stonyhurst.” A second fourth part was acquired by 
Evan Haughton, so that he had a moiety, which 


Robert agreed to acquit him accordingly.” Sir 


Walter's house) for eleven on the Smithy 
flat ; ibid. 150. 

The half oxgang in Norcross was in 
1322 held by Richard Boteler of Marton 
by a rent of 12d. ; Ing. p.m. 16 Edw, II, 
no. 59. 

For the rentals 
Chartul. iii, 1266-7. 

The Cockersand lands were in 1560 
granted by the Crown to Giles Parker, &c., 
to be held of the manor of East Green- 
wich in socage ; Pat. 2 Eliz. pt. iv. 

10 Richard son of Roger gave an oxgang 
of land in alms; Cockersand Chartul. i, 
143. William de Millum and Avice his 
wife, daughter of Richard son of Roger, 
gave an oxgang of land in Little Carleton, 
with toft and croft, and with the toft of a 
second oxgang lying towards a messuage 
formerly the Prior of Lytham’s, and they 
gave also a piece of land in Hayholme in 
Little Carleton, viz. as much as pertained 
to 9$ oxgangs of land ; ibid. i, 141-2, 326. 

Isoud daughter of Henry de Whitting- 
ton gave 8 acres and 6 acres of her land, 
lying together on Langfield in Hay- 
holme, adjoining the other Cockersand 
land and abutting towards Bispham 
Church; ibid. 145-6. Henry (de 
Carleton) son of Henry de Whittington 
also gave an acre, extending from 
Milanesmur west to the road from Great 
Carleton; ibid. 147. He also made 
other gifts, from which it appears that his 
part (Little Carleton) was nominally two 
plough-lands, for the sixteenth part of 
Ellercarr meadow pertained to the oxgang 
of land given by Richard son of Roger, 
and a sixteenth part of the waste ; ibid. 
147-50. Afterwards, as will be seen, it 
was considered to be a plough-land and a 
half. A number of place-names occur in 
the charters. 

The Abbot of Cockersand made claims 
against various persons in Little Carleton 
in 1297 ; De Banco R. 151, m. 159d. 

| Roger the prior and the brethren of 
the hospital gave Henry de Whittington 
the said oxgang and a half, with the sons 
of Maud de Carleton, lately the tenant, 
at arent of 12d. payable at Chester fair. 
Should any dispute occur Henry and his 
heirs were to maintain the title by 
warrant of the charter which the hospital 
had had from Hugh de Moreton and 
Margaret his wife, daughter of Richard 
son of Roger; Dods. MSS. cxlii, fol. 736. 
Henry de Walton and Richard de Meath 
were among the witnesses, so that the 
date was about 1230. 

” Henry de Whitt:ngton gave 3 acres 
on the south side of Little Carleton, 
while Henry son of Henry de Carleton 
gave a meadow called Ellercarr in Little 
Carleton, The bounds of this meadow 


1451 to 1537 see 


began at the ditch of Cecily de Layton, 
where it went down to Staining ditch, 
and extended east to Blacklache and west 
to Stockenbridge; Henry reserved the 
watercourse for the use of his mill, The 
former grant was confirmed by Robert de 
Stockport ; /halley Couch. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 444-6. 

About 1540 ‘Whitbent’ was occupied 
by William Carleton at a rent of 1s. 6d. ; 
ibid. iv, 1244. 

13 See the Cockersand grants above 
quoted for the pedigree. From them it 
appears that this part was assessed as 
12 oxgangs of land. William son of 
Swain in 1194-5 paid roos. for the royal 
pardon after the rebellion of John Count 
of Mortain ; Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 90. 

M4 Walter son of Swain in 1202-3 
owed 1 mark for licence to withdraw a 
plea; ibid. 170. In 1212 he held land 
in Great Eccleston ; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents, i, 3. 

15 William de Carleton appears to have 
succeeded before 1226, when he obtained 
the wardship of his brother Michael’s 
heir ; Excerpta e Rot. Fin. (Rec. Com.), i, 
136. He was collector of a subsidy in 
1235 and a juror in 12443 Lancs. Ing. 
and Extents, i, 142, 160. As shown in 
the text he was living in 1256. He is 
frequently styled ‘knight,’ e.g. Whalley 
Couch. ii, 44.4. 16 Assize R. 404, m. 5. 

W Final Conc, (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 120. : 

18 He is mentioned in 1256 ; ibid. i, 
128. He was a juror in 1257 3 Lancs. 
Ing. and Extents, i, 210. 

19 He was in that year called to 
warrant by John de Shireburne; De 
Banco R. 41, m. 21d. His possessions 
seem to have extended over a wide 
area, for about 1280 as Walter son of Sir 
William de Carleton he gave his son 
William the homage and service of Sir 
Richard le Boteler for lands in Inskip and 
Eccleston, Adam Laumwale in Norbreck, 
Richard (son of Sir Richard) le Boteler and 
John de Thornton in Marton and Lohonis, 
Roger de Warton in Warton, Hugh de 
Formby in Formby, Alan le Norreys and 
John son of William son of Edwin in 
Ravenmeols ; Dods. MSS. cxlii, fol. 83. 

20 Margery widow of William de 
Carleton claimed dower in land in 
Carleton in 1298 against Walter son of 
John de Shireburne and the Abbot of 
Cockersand ; De Banco R, 122, m, 103. 

The lords in 1317 appear to have been 

ohn de Shireburne and Eva his wife and 
Randle le Gentyl, for they claimed the 
marriage of Richard son of Richard Boteler 
(of Marton) as a tenant by knight’s ser- 
vice ; De Banco R. 218, m, 176. 

An oxgang of land in Carleton was in 


229 


1340 included in a settlement by Robert 
de Washington the elder and Agnes his 
wife ; Final Conc. ii, 113. Agnes was 
daughter and heir of Randle le Gentyl 
(note 40). See also Dep. Keeper's Rep. 
xxxii, App. 362. 

21 Robert Lawrence in 1450 held a 
moiety of the manor of Carleton of the 
king as of his duchy of Lancaster in 
socage by 1d. rent; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Chet. Soc.), ii, 56. The rent is the same 
as that formerly received by Quenilda 
Gernet, but her estate appears to have 
been Little Carleton, Sir James Law- 
rence, son of Robert, held similarly ; 
ibid. 132. 

22 Thomas Rigmaiden of Wedacre in 
1520 held his lands in Carleton and 
Sowerby of the king by the tenth part of 
a knight’s fee; Duchy of Lanc, Ing. 
p-m. v, no. 65. 

?3 The Carleton lands of John Butler 
of Rawcliffe were in 1534 said to be held 
of the king in socage; ibid. vii, no. 4. 
His daughter Eleanor inherited, but in 
1557 her lands were found to have been 
held by knight’s service ; ibid. x, no. 19. 

% Richard Skillicorne died in 1534 
holding eight messuages, &c., in Carleton 
of the king as of his duchy by rd. rent. 
His heirs were four daughters—Joan, 
who married Thomas  Chaddock ; 
Elizabeth, George Livesey; Anne, 
Henry Marsh ; and Ellen, Evan Halgh- 
ton or Haughton ; Duchy of Lance. Ing. 
pm. x, no. 25. 

Evan Haughton and Joan his wife, 
in conjunction with Joan, Elizabeth and 
Anne, daughters and co-heirs of Richard 
Skillicorne, granted land in Carleton in 
1550 to Henry Halsall of Prescot and 
Isabel his wife ; Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 
2625. 

28 Carleton is named among the Clifton 
lands held by Sir William Molyneux and 
Elizabeth his wife in 1532; Pal. of Lanc. 
Plea R. 155, m. 8d. 

26 Ibid. 163, m. 20, where the descent 
of the heirs of Lawrence is set forth. 

31 Lawrence Livesey of Sutton in 
Prescot was son of George and Elizabeth ; 
Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 189. 

In 1563 (1573) Elizabeth, as widow of 
George Livesey, made a feoffment of the 
Skillicorne lands; after her death they 
were to descend to her son Lawrence ; 
Towneley MS. HH, no. 1540. A fourth 
part of the estate was in 1569 held by 
Thomas Foxe and Elizabeth his wife ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 31, m. 160. 

28 Shireburne Abstract Bk. at Leagram, 

George Hull and eight others appear 
to have purchased a number of messuages, 
&c., in Great Carleton in 1608 ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 73, no. 62. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


in 1614 was held by Richard Haughton and 
Margaret his wife.® Later it likewise was called 
the ‘manor of Great Carleton,’™2 and was sold 
to Edward Moore of Bank Hall,” and probably 
sold by his heir to the Shireburnes, for their ‘ manor’ 
was the only one known in later times.” In 1572 
Sir Richard Shireburne had purchased the fourth 
part of an estate—no ‘manor’ is named—in Great 
Carleton, &c., from Lancelot Bold and Grace his 
wife.” The whole descended to Edward Joseph 
Weld of Lulworth, who about 1866 sold his interest 
to a number of small proprietors.” 

NORCROSS in Great Carleton was at an early 
time held by a Norcross family, but by 1281 had 
come into the hands of John de Shireburne and Eva 
his wife, being probably her inheritance. It 
descended with the other Shireburne estates, but 
no doubt became merged in the manor of Great 


LITTLE CARLETON was held by Henry de 
Whittington, who was a son of William son of Swain, 
about 1230.” He was succe-ded by a son Henry 
surnamed de Carleton.” The descent cannot be 
traced clearly. In 1347 among the tenants of 
William de Coucy’s lordship of Wyresdale was 
Henry de Carleton holding a plough-land and a halt 
in that town by knight’s service. “Ihomas Carleton," 
who died in 1499, held similarly of the king, Margaret 
Countess of Richmond and John Rigmaiden as of 
their manor of Wyresdale. Hisson George Carleton, 
then twenty-two years of age, diel in 1513 holding 
of the king and Thomas Rigmaiden, and leaving as 
heir a son William, aged eleven. William’s son 
Lawrence, who died in 1558, was the last of the 
male line. He held a capital messuage in Little 
Carleton called the Hall of Carleton, and serious 
messuages, &c., in both parts of the township, of the 


Carleton. 


% Evan Haughton purchased from 
Thomas Chaddock and Joan his wife 
their fourth part of the manor in 1566; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 28, m. gg. 
Evan Haughton of Pennington died in 
1508 holding a moiety of eight mes- 
suazes, &c., in Carleton of the king ty 
ad, rent; Larct. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i,125. His son and 
heir was the Richard named in the text, 
who with his wife enfeoffed Edward, 
James and William Stanley of the manor 
of Great Carleton, with lands there and 
in Warton, Lancaster, &c.; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 85, no. 16. 

3a Richard Haughton died in 1630 
holding the manor of Great Carleton, 
with various lands, of the heirs of George 
Carleton by fealty only. The heir was 
a son Evan, aged forty. By an indenture 
of 1614 the remainders were to Dorothy 
and Francis Haughton; Towneley MS. 
C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 523. 

8° He purchased it from Mrs, Dorothy 
Shelvock, ‘daughter to that Mr. Haugh- 
ton which lived in Wavertree Lane’ ; 
Irvine, Liverpool in time of Chas. I, 
68-9. Among the Moore D. at Liver- 
pool are leases of houses, &c., at Great 
Carleton by Richard Haughton of 
Wavertree and Margaret his wife ; no. 
765-6. Alexander Rigby of Burgh 
seems to have been tenant in 1644, leasing 
Carleton Hall and the demesne -anis to 
Everill widow of Edmund Fleetwood ; 
ibid. no, 767. 

Sir Cleave Moore and Margaret Moore 
spinster held the moiety of the manor of 
Great Carleton in 1691; Pal. of Lane. 
Feet of F. bdle. 226, m. 22: 

From the Shireburme abstract b-ck it 
appears that Sir N. Shireburne purchased 
in 17o1—2 some at least of Sir Cleave 
Moore’s cstate; the ‘manor’ !s not name:. 

31 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1836), iv, $39- 
40. The manor of Carleton or Greui 
Carleton was regularly entered among 
the family estates in the 1Sth century ; 
e.g. Pal. of Lance. Plea R. 452, m. 7 
(rego, Carleton); 544, m. 13 (1737. 
Great Carleton); 625, m. 10 d./16. 

$2 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 34, 
m. 56. 

S Baines, Laces. (ed. 1872) ii, § 19. 

SM From the Cockersani charters 
already quoted it appears that Thomas 
de Norcross was a son of Walter de 
Caricton, son of Swain, and that Nor- 
cross was rated as halt a picugh-land. 

© In the year named Christiana widow 


The manor courts were held at Norcross.” 


of Thomas de Norcross claimed dower in 
a messuage and 24 oxzings of land in 
Norcro:s against John and Eva; De 
Banco R. 43, m. 3. A later note shows 
the origin of another part of the Shire- 
eume e:tite in Great Carleton (1348). 

% Rocert Shireburne died in 1492 
holding lands in Carleton and Norernss 
of Georze Carleton in socage; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. ili, no. g2. His son 
Sir Richard in 1513 was said to hold 
in Careton of the heirs of George 
Carleton and in Norcross of the Abbot 
of Dieulacres; ibid. iv, no. 46. This 
statement is rereated later. In 1594 
Norcross wis called a manor, but the 
tenure was not recorded ; ibid. xvi, no. 3. 

A ‘manor of Carleton ' was said to be 
held by Sir Richard Shireburne of Stony- 
burst in 1579 (Feet of F.) and 1594 and 
by his son Richard in 1628 The 
tenure «a: unknown. 

Y Fishwick, op. cit. 193 he states 
that ‘the manorial rights were sold with 
Norero:s Farm.” 

3% See the notes on the Lytham and 
Cockersand holding above ; as Walter 
was the brother and heir of William, 
Hesry must have been illegitimate. 
Henry de Whittingt< 2 occurs in 1222-6 ; 
Lanes. Ing. ard Extents, i, 131, 134. He 
was rector of Whittington—hence his 
surname—and is calleda clerk ; Lytham 
D. at Durham, 4a, 2 ae, 4a¢, Ebor. 
no. 2. 

3 Henry de Carictun—probably there 
were two of the nime in succession— 
occurs from 1258 to 1297 3 Lancs. Ing. 
and Extents, i, 211, 207, &. Henry de 
Carietoa the elder and Amabil his wife 
in 1283 leased to Henry le Boteler of 
Rawcliffe fir seven years an oxgang of 
land with hous: formerly tenanted by 
Reger the Carpenter, another oxgang 
(without a house) occupied by Richard 
de Kendal, a third (with house) formerly 
held by Robert the man cf Gervase, 
and other lands, with easements appur- 
tenant in Little Carleton ; Dods. MSS. 
cxlii, fol. 82a. Waiter de Carleton was 
a witness. 

40 Inj. p.m. 2c Edw. II (2nd nos), 
no. 63. 

Henry de Carleton at that time held 
land in Great Carleton alss, and in 1343 
he and his wife Margery complained of 
disseisin there by Alice widow of Sir 
Rebert de Shireburne, Agnes widow of 
Robert ce Wash’ on, William de Edres- 
ford, Adam Any:n and John Beaver. As 


: 
235 


duchy by knight’s service. 


His heir was a sister 


to one moiety Alice replied, saying sh. 
held by gift of the Abbot of Cockersand 
and of John de Shireburne ; as to the 
other moiety Agnes said she entered as 
heir of her father Randle le Gentyl. The 
jurors said that Henry and Ma:gery were 
lords of a moiety of the vill, and had 
been disseised by the defendants, except 
as to the portion held of the Abbot of 
Cockersand ; Dods. MSS. cxlii, fol. 81a ; 
Assize R. 1444, m.7. It appears that 
Alice and Agnes were sisters. 

The name of Henry de Carleton occurs 
1387 to 1408; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soc.) i, 26, 91. One John Carleton and 
Alice his wife made a settlement of lands 
in Lancashire, &c., in 1408; Shireburne 
Abstract Bk. Fle is probably the John 
sun of Henry Carleton of another deed ; 
ibid. In 1420 the king ordered all pro- 
ceedings to be suspended against the sure- 
ties of Henry de Carleton the clder, 
Henry the younger, Thomas de Carlcton, 
and William de Carleton of Norcross, 
bastard, who were absent in the king's 
service in the parts of Aquitaine ; Dep. 
Keeper's Rep, xxxiii, App. 18. It appears 
that Henry de Carleton had been out- 
lawed for debt ; ibid. 

One Thomas son of Nicholas of Little 
Carleton occurs in 1352; Raines MSS. 
(Chet. Lib.), xxxviii, 103. 

41 Thomas Carleton of Little Carleton 
in 1476 granted to feoffees a tene- 
ment in Little Carleton, another in 
Hayholme in Great Carleton, and a 
meadow called Cardales in Norcross ; 
Add. MS. 32106, no. 791. In 1492 an 
agreement was made that George son and 
heir-apparent of Thomas Carleton should 
marry Elizabeth daughter of Robert Clit- 
ton deceased ; ibid. no. 800. 

A deed of about the same time (1491 ?) 
represents J:hn Carleton as holding the 
manor of Little Carleton and providing 
for the wardship and marriage of his son 
and heir George; Anct. D. (P.R.O.), 
C 2978. 

® Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. iii, no. 


“Ibid. iv, no. 71. Joan widow of 
Thomas Carleton was still living, as wae 
E.izabeth wite of George. 

Deeds of William Carleton, includ.» 
a settlement in 1548 on his eon Law- 
rence’s marriage with Margaret daughter 
of George Singleton of Staining, with 
remainder to Margery sister of Lawrence, 
are recited in Fishwick’s Pou.n, 174, 
from the Shireburne D, 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Margery, thirty years of age, then wife of Thomas 
She sold in 1561 to James Massey,'® who 


Almond.“ 
recorded a pedigree as ‘of 


king’s service in the Civil War.* 
Edward, educated abroad and ordained priest, was 


POULTON-LE- 
FYLDE 


Another son, 


sent on the English mission ; after being imprisoned 


Carleton’ in 1567*°; but the 
manor was claimed by the 
Singletons of Staining,” in 
which family it descended for 


some time,® and is then lost 
to sight. ‘The hall went to 
decay. 

Of the minor owners but 
few occur in the records.” 
The chief family seems to 
have been that of Bamber of 
the Moor.*' The tenure of 
James Bamber’s land in Poul- 
ton in 1617 was a curious 


one—viz. of the heirs and assigns of William Oudlawe 
William, his son and heir, was eight 
years old. Richard Bamber, perhaps brother of James, 
paid £10 in 1631, having declined knighthood.® 
The family adhered to Roman Catholicism, and one 
of the sons, John, was captain of a company in the 


by $d. rent.” 


4 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. x, no. 15. 
He had arranged that William Singleton 
(who died before Lawrence) and James 
Massey should succeed him for fifteen 
years, with remainder to William son of 
Hugh Singleton. 

In 1557 a settlement of the manor 
was made by Lawrence Carleton, Thomas 
Anion and Margery his wife; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 17, m. 45. It 
thus appears that Anion and Almond 
were the same. 

*® Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 23, 
m. gt. 

46 Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 56. He was son 
of John Massey of Rixton. His estates 
descended to Veale of Whinney Heys. 

47 Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 233, m. 16d. 
From the pedigree given it appears that 
William son of Hugh Singleton died 
without heirs, on which the estate should 
go (according to Lawrence Carleton’s 
disposition) to his cousin Thomas son of 
William Singleton (brother of Hugh) and 
then to John Singleton, brother of 
Thomas, the plaintiff in 1573. See also 
Fishwick, op. cit. 175. 

John Singleton in 1582 purchased four- 
teen messuages, &c., in Little Carleton, 
Poulton and Norcross from Roger Pendle- 
bury and Anne his wife ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 44, m. 65, 

The Masseys retained part of the es- 
tate, including a windmill ; Lancs. Ing. 
pom. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), ii, 
117-19, 

48 John Singleton of Staining died in 
1589 holding the manor of Carleton by 
knight’s service, except 4 oxgangs of land, 
which were held of Thomas Holcroft ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xv, no. 47. 
The 4 oxgangs would be the share of 
Lytham Priory, its estates having been 
purchased by Sir Thomas Holcroft. 

The manors of Staining and Carleton 
continued to be held in conjunction as 
late as 1689; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 224, m. 150. A considerable estate 
in the two townships was in 1781 acquired 
by John Hankinson ; ibid. 405, m. 167. 
What became of the manor of Little 
Carleton does not appear, but as many of 
the Carleton family deeds came into the 
hands of the Shireburnes they may have 
acquired it about 1690; Shireburne 
Abstract book, 


Massey of Carleton, 
Quarterly — gules 
argent, in the 
quarter a mullet sable. 


and 


second 


more than once he was captured in Lancashire, and 
after three years’ imprisonment executed as a traitor 
at Lancaster 7 August 1646. The family removed 
to Aughton, near Ormskirk, but retained their estate 
in Carleton till 1737.° 

An oratory was allowed to Henry de Whittington 
in Little Carleton about 1240,” but it does not seem 
to have continued.” 


THORNTON 


Torentun, Dom. Bk. ; Torrenton, 1226; Thorin- 
ton, 1258 ; Thornton, 1297. 


Steinol, 1176; Stanhol, 1200 ; Stainhol, 1226'; 


Staynolf, 1346. 


 Thornber, writing in 1837, says: 
‘This hall was situated in the field oppo- 
site the farm-house called the Gezzerts, 
and its ruins are remembered by the 
present generation’; Blackpool, 281. 

50 Robert Clerk of Poulton in 1599 had 
a messuage in Carleton also ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvii, no. 44. 

Land in Carr meadow in Great Carleton 
was in 1557-8 claimed by Alice widow 
of William Hull, who afterwards married 
Thomas Pateson; Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. 
Com.), i, 298 ; ii, 231. Hull family deeds 
at Agecroft show that Richard Hull of 
Carleton, whose will was dated 1703, had 
land called Highfalong from his father- 
in-law Richard Rossall, whose family 
resided there in the 17th century. The 
family and their relatives the Bucks ac- 
quired a considerable estate in the district. 
John Hull, vicar of Poulton 1835-64, 
was son of Dr. John Hull, the botanist, 
who was son of John Hull of Carleton 
and Poulton, apothecary ; Fishwick, op. 
cit. 85. 

*1 William Bamber, perhaps of this 
family, purchased a messuage, &c., at 
Norcross and Great Carleton in 1565 
from William Butler; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F. bile. 27, m. 15. 

5? Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 74. 
James Bamber was of the Moor in Carle- 
ton, as appears by the registers, but his 
lands were in Poulton and Great Bisp- 
ham. 

53 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 221. Richard’s will was proved in 
1636, his estate descending to his eldest 
son Thomas; Fishwick, op. cit. 180. 
There is, however, an inquisition after 
the death of one Richard Bamber of 
Layton and Carleton, in which he is 
stated to have died in 1639. The tenure 
of his estate in Carleton was not known. 
The heir was a son Thomas, aged thirty- 
six ; Towneley MS.C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 

8. 
? 5$ War in Lancs. (Chet. Soc.), 19, 25. 
John Bamber’s estate—he is called ‘of 
Layton ’—was in 1652 ordered for sale 
by the Parliament; Index of Royalists 
(Index Soc.), 42. He had died in the 
Isle of Man in 1651, and his son Richard 
in 1653 petitioned for the discharge of 
the Lower Moor, in which his father, ‘a 
Papist and delinquent,’ had had a life 


231 


Brune, Dom. Bk. ; Brunne, 1204; Brone, 1262. 
Rushale, Dom. Bk. ; Rossall, 1212; Roshale, 1228. 
This township forms a peninsula between the 
Irish Sea and the Wyre estuary. At the northern 
end is the modern town of Fleetwood, built on an 


interest in accordance with the settlement 
by Richard Bamber the grandfather in 
1636; Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 120-4. 

Captain Roger Bamber of the Moor 
was in 1650 guardian of Edward Bamber, 
aged about ten, his kinsman, whom he 
was bringing up in the Protestant religion, 
the father’s estate being sequestered for 
recusancy and delinquency ; ibid. 124. 
Edward was probably a younger son of 
John, but in Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 2644, 
he is call.d son of Edward. 

55 Challoner, Mussionary Priests, no. 
184; Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. i, 
120-2. The cause of his beatification 
was allowed to be introduced at Rome in 
1886 ; Pollen, Acts of Martyrs, 382. 
The story is inaccurately given by 
Challoner, if this be the Edward Bamber 
alias Leonard Helmzs who was arrested 
at Plymouth in 1626 on a ship bound to 
Newhaven. He had studied at St. Omers 
and Seville, and had been ordained priest ; 
Cal. S. P. Dom. 1625-6, p. 487. Hecon- 
formed and was pardoned ; ibid. 1627-8, 
p- 84. A little later an Edward Bamber 
was labouring in Lancashire ; Misc. (Cath. 
Rec. Soc.), i, 15. é 

°6 John Bamber as a ‘ Papist’ registered 
his estate in 17173; Estcourt and Payne, 
Engl. Cath, Nonjurors, 112. His son 
Thomas left his estates to his nephew 
Thomas, son of Robert Brownbill of 
Liverpool, who became a bankrupt ; 
Gillow, op. cit. i, 122; Piccope MSS. 
(Chet. Lib.), iii, 272, from R. 18 of 
Geo. IT at Preston, &c. 

57 Lance. Ch. ii, 428-30. Henry might 
maintain a priest at his own expense, but 
no injury to the tithes or other rights of 
the parish church was to be caused. As 
a guarantee he gave a rent-charge of 35. 
on his water-mill in Carleton to the Prior 
and monks of Lancaster. Henry his son 
made a further agreement with the monks ; 
ibid. 433. 

58 Robert the Chaplain occurs in 1332 ; 
Exch. Lay Subs. (Rec. Soc. Lance. and 
Ches.), 64. 

\ Two places of the same original name, 
now distinguished as Stanah and Staynall, 
lie on the west and east sides of the Wyre. 
It is not always possible to determine 
which of the two is intended in the 
mediaeval references. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


ancient rablit warren and now formed into a separate 
township, which includes Rossall on the western side 
with its famous public school, founded in 1844. 
The history of this school has been narrated else- 
where in the present work.'* In the remaining part 
of Thornton the original village occupies the south- 
cast portion on slightly elevated ground overlooking the 
Wyre. On the north-west slope of the same ground 
is Stanah. Trunnah, the Ho'mes and Pool Foot are 
in the centre of the township and have Burn Hall to 
the north and to the west a little seaside resort called 
Cleveleys. This last name has in common usage 
superseded the ancient Ritherham or Ritherholme. 
Burnt Naze or Bourne Naze lies on the Wyre on the 
border of Fleetwood. The surface is low-lying and 
flat, the ancient hamlets named occupying the more 
elevated portions, 

_In more recent times there have been three 
divisions : Thornton, in the centre, with 2,112 
acres ; Stanah, in which is Thornton Hall, 1,427 
acres, and Fleetwood, 2,8484 acres; in all 6,3874 
acres, including tidal water.’ The population in 1901 
was 3,108 in Thornton proper and 12,082 in 
Fleetwood, or 15,190 in all. 

The principal road is that from Blackpool to Flect- 
wood, going north through the eastern side of the 
township. It is joined by another road between the 
same places going along the seacoast. From it other 
toads branch out ; one goes west to Cleveleys, another 
east to Thornton Church and then south to Poulton. 
The Preston and Wyre railway goes north to Flect- 
wood, at which is the terminus; there is a small 
station called Cleveleys—a misleading designation— 
to the south of Trunnah. On the western road 
between Blackpool and Fleetwood an electric tram- 
way runs. 

A ‘submerged forest’ has tokens near Rossall and 
along the coast to Blackpool. 

A special commission was in 1637 directed to 
inquire into the possibility of gaining land from the 
sea at Thornton Holmes or Poulton.” 

Thornton Marsh was in losed in 1800.8 One 
result of the making of the railway to Fleetwood has 
been that about 400 acres of marsh land at the 
mouth of the Wyre west of the line have been 
reclaimed.* 

From various allusions to saltcotes it seems that 
salt-making is an ancient industry of the place. A 


‘salt-weller’ of Thornton was buried at Poulton in 
1676. There are modern salt and alkali works at 
Burnt Naze. 

The soil is various, with clay subsoil ; oats and 
Potatoes are grown. 

A school board was formed in 1877. 

Fleetwood became an independent township in 
1894.° The remaining portion, the existing town- 
ship of Thornton, is governed by an urban district 
council of twelve members elected by four wards. 

Two newspapers are issued at Fleetwood, the 
Chronicle and the Express; each appears twice a 
week, 

In 1066 there were three manors in this 

MANORS township, all members of Earl Tostig’s 

Preston lordship, viz. Thornton, assessed 

as six plough-lands, Burn and Rossall, as two each— 

ten in all.” They retained their individuality later, 
but Thornton became still further subdivided. 

In 1212 it was found that THORNTON proper, 
as five plough-lands, was held in thegnage by William 
son of Robert de Winwick, who rendered 205, a 
year. The other plough-land, lying in STANAH, 
was held in drengage by Adam son of Eilsi and Alan 
son of Hagemund, who rendered 5s. yearly.* Robert 
de Winwick had granted one of his plough-lands to 
Uctred son of Huck," the ancestor of the Singleton 
family, who by marriage acquired a further share of 
Thornton and probably a moiety of the drengage 
plough-land in Stanah. Thus in 1324 Adam son 
of William Banastre held a moiety of Thornton, pay- 
ing 8s., and a moiety of Stanah, paying 45. 6d. ; 
while the other moieties were held by Lawrence son 
of Robert de Thornton and John son of John de 
Staynolf respectively, paying corresponding rents, 
viz. 8s. and 4s. 6d."' The assessment of the whole 
appears to have been reduced by one-half, and thus 
in 1346 Thomas Bunastre held one plough-lanJ and 
John son of Lawrence de Thornton another in 
Thornton and Stanah, formerly Robert de Winwick’s, 
while the third plough-land in Stanah was held as to 
one moiety by Johnde Staynolf and as to the oth: 
by a number oftenants.” In 1378 Thomas Banastre 
and John de Thornton held the manor™ and in 
1445~6 Richard Balderston and the heir of John 
son of Lawrence Thornton held a_ plough-land 
each as before, but Stanah is omitted in the 
record." 


la D.C.H. Laces. ti, 614-15. A coat 
of arms was granted in 1892. 

? The Census Rep. 1901 gives: Thorn- 
ton, 2,996 acres, including 19 of inland 
water; Fleetwood, 2,510 and 46. ‘To 
these must be added 73 acres of tidal 
water and 657 of foreshore in Thornton 
and 134 and 2,778 respectively in Ficet- 
wood, 

3a Duchy 
no. 1167. 

3 Porter, Fylde, 271. The Act was 
passed in 1799. The final award seems 
to have been in 1806 ; Lancs. and Ches. 
Rec. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 56. 
in 1739 the king leased to John Wilkin- 
son the marshes called Thornton Marsh, 
Holme Marsh, Stanah Marsh, Trunnah 
Marsh and Haddle Moss for thirty-one 
years ; Duchy of Lanc, Misc. Bks. xxvii, 
178. ; 

+ Porier, op. cit. 227. 

* Lond. Gaz. 27 Nov. 1877. 


of Lanc. Special Com. 


® Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 31813. 

7U°.C.H. Lanes. i, 2884. Thornton 
proper seems to have contained four 
plough-lands and Stanah two, afterwards 
reduced (as stated in the text) to two and 
one. Burn also was considered one 
plough-land at a later time. 

8 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 46. The 20s. rent 
is named again in 1226 and 1297 ; ibid. 
139, 289. ' 

9 Ibid. 51. The second plough-land in 
Stanah was included in William de Win- 
wick's Thornton estate. : 

It appears to be this ‘Stanhol’ which 
is mentioned in the P.pe Rolls, &c., as 
contributing to aids and similar taxvs; 
Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 35, 130 (where 
the tenants are called Uctred and Gilbert) ; 
Lancs. Ing. and Extent, i, 135, 176, 

10 From the later history it seems that 
this plough-land was half in Thornton and 
half in Stanah. This may account for an 


232 


error in 1226, when Robert de Winwick's 
estate was called five plough-lands in’ 
Thornton and half a plough-land in 
Stanah. 

11 Dods, MSS. cxxxi, fol. 40d, The 
Stanah rent seems to be made up in each 
case of a thegnage rent of 2. for the 
moiety of a carucate pertaining to the 
Winwick estate and 2s. 6d. for the moiety 
pertaining to the drengage land. Thus 
Thornton (with half Stanah) paid 201. as 
in 1212, and the other half of Stanah 5. 
as before. The tenants did suit to county 
and wapentake. 

12 Survey of 1346 (Chet. Soc, §6. 
The minor tenants in Stanth cieary 
represent the Singleton or Bana‘re 
portion ; the Thorntons do not seem to 
have retained any part of it. 

13 Dods. M35. -xrxi, fo’. Stl, 

M Duchy of Lanz. Krizhte’ 
bdle. 2, no. 20, 


F ea, 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Of the two moieties of Thornton proper one, as 
indicated, descended with the Singleton estates to 
Banastre® and Balderston,’® and on the partition in 
1564 was allotted to Gilbert Gerard,'? who died 
possessed of it in 1593, the tenure not being recorded." 
It appears to have been purchased by the Fleetwoods 
of Rossall, whose ‘manor’ of Thornton was the only 
one recognized in later times.’ 

The other moiety was held by a family using the 
local surname, descendants, like the Singletons, of 
Robert de Winwick, the earliest immediate lord of 
the undivided manor of whom there is record. His 
son William, the tenant in 1212, gave 10 marks 
and two palfreys in 1201 for 30 acres of land in 
Thornton, of which Theobald Walter had disseised 
him, and for relief of his land.” He died before 
1215, when Alan de Singleton gave the king 20 marks 
that he might have Alice his daughter and co-heir.*! 
The other daughter Margaret or Margery married 
Michael de Carleton, who had to pay 10 marks for 


POULTON-LE- 
FYLDE 


pardon in marrying without licence one who was in 
the king’s gift.” Margery de Winwick died in or 
before 1258 holding two plough-lands in Thornton 
of the king in chief by the yearly service of 25., owing 
suit to county and wapentake. Her son and heir 
Richard de Thornton was of full age.* The other 
two plough-lands had become part of the Singletons’ 
estate.™ 

Of the Thornton family there is little to record.” 
The Lawrence above-named left two sons, John, who 
died in 1396, and William.” Another William seems 
to have succeeded ; he died in 1429,” when the 
heir of John was found to be Thomas Travers son of 
Roger Travers by Alice daughter of John Thornton. 
The daughters of William Thornton shared the 
estate in spite of that finding.* ‘The story is obscure. 
In 1601 James Worthington purchased a sixth part 
of the manor from Hugh Adlington and Sibyl his 
wife.” A minor family of the name appears in later 
times holding land in the Holmes,®° 


% William Banastre in 1323 held a 
moiety of Thornton (except the half of 
§ oxgangs of land) by a rent of 8s. and 
suit of court. It was worth £10 13s. 4d. 
ayear; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, ii, 160. 

Thornton and the Holmes by Thornton 
were among the lands of Sir Thomas 
Banastre of Bretherton in 1379; Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 15. 

6 Richard Balderston in 1456 held a 
moiety of the manor of Thornton and the 
Holmes, of the king as of his duchy, in 
thegnage by a rent of 8s.; ibid. ii, 63. 
The Stanah portion was probably omitted 
because the tenants paid their small rents 
direct to the duchy receiver. The manors 
of Thornton and Holmes were in dispute 
in 1508 ; Final Conc. iii, 164. 

As in other cases, the 16th-century 
inquisitions show that the Balderston 
estate here was held by Edmund Dudley, 
Thomas Radcliffe of Winmarleigh and his 
successors, Alexander Osbaldeston and the 
Earl of Derby. 

WV In right of his wife Anne ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R, 216, m. 10. 

18 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xvi, no. 2. 

19 The manor of Thornton was included 
in a settlement of the Rossall estate in 
1695 ; Pal. sf Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 235, 
m. 75. It occurs later in a similar way. 

90 Fine R. (Rec, Com.), 1163 Farrer, 
Lancs. Pipe R. 130. In 1205-6 he paid 
2 marks to a scutage ; ibid. 205. 

41 Tbid. 252. William de Winwick had 
given the canons of Cockersand 3 acres 
in Thornton, and afterwards Alan de 
Singleton and his heirs were in posses- 
sion, paying a rent of 4s. to the abbey; 
Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 160. 
William married one Maud daughter of 
Robert, who had lands in Whittingham ; 
ibid. i, 231-2. As Maud de Thornton 
she was unmarried and in the king’s gift 
in 1222~6 3 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 128. 

® Baldwin le Blund in 1215 offered 20 
marks for permission to marry Margaret, 
but before 1221 she had married Michael 
de Carleton ; Rot. Lit, Claus. (Rec. Com.), 
1,190; Excerpta e Rot. Fin. (Rec. Com.), 
i, 60, Michael was dead in 1226, when 
his brother William purchased the ward- 
ship of his heir; ibid. 136. _ 

3 Lanes, Ing. and Extenis,i, 211. Richard 
de Thornton—probably there were two 
or more of the name—occurs as juror, 
&c., from 1244 to 1297; ibid. 160, 289. 
He consented in 1246 to an agreement 
between the Abbot of Cockersand and 


7 


Alice de Thornton as to the Whittingham 
lands of his grandmother Maud ; Final 
Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 103. 
He gave the monks of Lancaster a site 
for their tithe barn in Thornton ; Lance. 
Ch. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 424. 

24 Alice widow of Alan de Singleton in 
1245 arranged with William the son of 
Alan as to the succession of two plough- 
lands in Thornton, she acknowledging 
William’s right and receiving it for life, 
together with a third part of the fishery 
at Singleton. If Alice should not be able 
to grind in her mill of Thornton she 
might use that of Singleton free of mul- 
ture. She released to William all her 
dower right and he gave her £10 ; Final 
Conc. i, 92. 

25 From the text it appears that 
Lawrence son of Richard de Thornton 
was in possession in 1324 and John son 
of Lawrence in 1346. John was defen- 
dant ten years later; Duchy of Lane. 
Assize R. 4, m. 1d.3 5, m. 25d. 

A pleading of 1302 calls Richard de 
Thornton the son and heir of Clarice 
daughter of Robert Wath ; Abbrev. Plac. 
(Rec. Com.), 246, Another of 1356 gives 
a different descent, stating that John de 
Thornton was son of Lawrence son of 
John (and Clarice) de Thornton, living in 
the time of Edward I; Duchy of Lanc. 
Assize R. 5,m. 25d. A step (Richard) 
may have been omitted after Lawrence. 

Amery and Thomas de Thornton con- 
tributed to the subsidy in 133235 Exch. 
Lay Subs. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
7o. Richard son of Amery (fem.) de 
Thornton was accused of taking a horse 
from Henry de Carleton in 1331; De Banco 
R. 286,m.24d. John son of Richard de 
Thornton occurs in 1352-53 Duchy of 
Lanc. Assize R. 2, m. xjd. 3 4, m. td. 

In 1412 John son of John de Thornton 
received land in Little Poulton from 
William de Poulton; Kuerden MSS. ii, 
fol. 24.55. 

26 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 24. 
He held the moiety of the manor of John 
Duke of Lancaster in socage by a rent of 
85.3; it was worth £10. His heir in 
1429 was Thomas Travers, aged forty, 
son of Alice daughter of John de Thorn- 
ton by Margery his wife, daughter of 
John de Bradkirk. John appears to have 
had two sons named John, and they with 
their uncle William had held possession 
of the estate from 1396 onwards. 

27Tt does not appear who was 


233 


father of William, who left four young 
daughters, Agnes (aged ten), Katherine, 
Elizabeth and Joan ; ibid. ii, 26. William 
held the moiety of the manor as before. 

A writ of Amoveas manus in favour of 
the daughters was issued in 1432 3; Dep. 
Keeper's Rep. xxxiii, App. 33. 

8 In 14.50 William Tarleton, Katherine 
his wife, Robert Adlington, Elizabeth his 
wife, Christopher Worthington and Joan 
his wife claimed three-fourths of the 
moiety of the manor against Thomas 
Travers, Lawrence Travers and Richard 
his brother, William Travers, and William 
Harebotell and Agnes his wife, and their 
claim was allowed ; Final Conc. iii, 117. 
The four daughters of William Thornton 
are here named as married, but one of 
them probably died without issue, this 
moiety being afterwards held in thirds. 

Very little is known about these frag- 
ments. In 1487 a praecipe was issued 
to William Heth and Agnes his wife 
(daughter and one of the heirs of William 
Thornton) to maintain with Christopher 
Worthington a convention as to two mes- 
suages, 50 acres of land, &c., in Thornton; 
Pal. of Lanc. Writs Proton. file 1 & 2 
Hen. VII. From a writ of 1513 it 
appears that Katherine widow of Robert 
Adlington (who must therefore have 
married twice) became the wife of Giles 
Lever, and had an interest in the family 
estates in Adlington, Thornton, &c. ; 
ibid. 4 Hen. VIII. 

Hugh Adlington of Adlington died in 
1525 holding four messuages, two salt- 
cotes, a fishery, &c., in Thornton of the 
king as of his duchy by a rent of 25.5 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. vi, no. 73. 
The rent is a fourth part of the old one. 
His grandson Hugh Adlington died in 
1556 holding similarly ; ibid. x, no. 34. 

Joan Worthington died in 1501 holding 
messuages and land in Thornton and the 
Holmes of the king in socage by a rent 
of 2s. 8d.; ibid. iii, no. 108. The rent 
is a third part of the old one. The family 
was seated at Crawshaw in Adlington. 

29 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 63, 
no. 86. Thomas Worthington died in 
1627 holding six messuages, lands, &c., 
in Thornton of the king ; Towneley MS. 
C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 1292. 

80 Richard Thornton died in 1555 
holding a messuage, &c., in Holmes in 
Poulton of the Earl of Derby ; Hugh, 
his son and heir, was forty-four years 
old ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq, p.m. x, no. 42. 


30 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


This family probably descended from one of the 
numerous tenants recorded in Stanah in 1346." 
Principal of them, John de Staynolf, who took his 
name from the place, has no further record,® but his 
e tate may have been that held later by Banastre of 
Bank.* The estate of Lawrence of Ribbleton,™ 
Travers of Nateby* and Norcross® can be traced 
for some time, and the later landowners occurring in 
the inquisitions may have inherited or purchased 


31 Survey of 1346, p. 563 they were 
John de Staynolf, 4 oxgangs of land, 
paying 4s. 6d. ; Roger de Northcross and 
Thomas son of Robert de Staynolf, each 
an oxgang, paying 74$d.; William Law- 
rence, Thomas Travers and John Boteler, 
each the fourth part of an oxgang and 
paying 16d., 16d. and nil (?); Adam the 
Knight, 5 acres, 44. ; Richard Doggeson, 
§ acres, 6d. There was one plough-land 
in all, rendering 5s. drengage rent. The 
rents, as here stated, amount to more 
than the old 5s. and 4s. yet there has 
probably been some omission. 

Another version, preserved by Dods- 
worth (Ixxxvii, fol. 664), records John 
Boteler as holding a third part of the 
manor bya rentof 20d. From the rents 
it may be conjectured that Lawrence, 
Travers and Boteler held the Thornton 
part of this moiety of Stanah (under 
Banastre), and that Norcross and the 
others (with Boteler in part) held the 
drengage moiety. 

52 John de Steynhole died about 1264-5 
holding a plough-land in Stanah of the 
king by drengage and 5s. rent ; half was 
in demesne and half in service. His scn 
Roger was of full age; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents, i, 234. 

Roger de Staynolf gave a messuage and 
land in Thornton to William de Marton, 
who married his daughter Margery. Their 
son Richard had a daughter and heir 
Margery, who in 1346 claimed them 
against Thomas del Mere; De Banco 
R. 349, M. 2435 354, m. 381d. 

Margaret mother cf Richard de Staynolf 
of Preston and wife of William Hudson 
in 1396 held in her own riz: certain 
lands in Little Staynoll (? Stanah), Holmes 
and Thornton ; Richard was an outlawin 
1408; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), 
i, 89; Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxvii, App. 
1735 x, 932. 

In 1500 Robert Staynoll made a settle- 
ment of ands in Thoratoa, Stanah and 
Ho ime, with remainder to W:.am his 
son and heir ; Brockho.es of Claughton D. 

3 Henry Banastre purchased in 1515 
from Gilber: Charnock and Emma his 
wife, it being Emma’s prozerty; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feec of F. bdie. 11, m. 231. 
Richard Banastre in or before 1548 held 
messuages, &<. in Thorton; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. ix, no, 23. His :2 
William held in 1555 of the Earl of 
Derby by 2s.rent; ibid. x, no. 3-. The 
estate cescenied to Henry Banastre m 
1641; ibid. xxix, no. 15. In 1617 the 
rent was given as 6d. only; Lows. Iz. 
fe. (Rec. Soc, Lanes, an: Ches.), :, 77. 

SM Fins) Cone. Brg (1354) 5 Lens. 
Inj. po. (Chet. Soe. )e-t SSS 
particulars are given. Robert 
in 1524 held his lands of the heirs of 
William $i n; Duchy of Lane. Izg. 

om. Vv, ao. Henry Browne held ‘and 


e8 


ix Thornton in rSc1 3; ibid. xvii, no. 23. 


Here as elsewhere Lawrence aad 
Travers were no doubt the heirs of the 
Hardeck family, who about 1262-1505 
had messuages and land in Ther.ton and 


The 


Great Carleton ; Assize R. 408, m. 61 d.; 
De Banco R. 149, m. 109; 156, m. 75d. 

3 William Travers in 1524 held his 
lands in Turnoll (Trunnah) of W.!liam 
Kirkby by the service of a red rose; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. vy, no. 62. 
The same tenure is recorded in later 
inquisitions. Trunnah was regarded as 
part of Holmes. In 1635 this estate 
was held by Thomas Hull, who left a son 
and heir John, aged sixteen ; Towneley 
MS. C8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 509. Another 
of the family, Richard Hull of the Tum- 
yate, in 1638 held his land of the king, 
and left as heir a son Thomas, aged 
thirteen ; ibid. 497. This Richard was 
no doubt the son of Thomas Hull, who 
died in 1614 holding messuages, &c., 
in Thornton of the king as duke in 
socage and in Stanah by the hundredth 
part of a knight’s fee; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc.), ii, 8. 

% In 1360-2 William son of Roger 
(son of William) de Norcross claimed a 
messuage and § acresof land in Thornton 
against John the Knight of Holmes and 
Ellen his wife ; Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 8, 
m. 12d. ; De Banco R. 408, m. 110d. 

David (son of William) Norcross died 
in 1593 holding a messuage, &c., in 
Stanah of the queen as of her castle and 
honour of Lancaster ty the two-hundredth 
part of a knight’s fee and 8¢. rent. His 
witow Agnes afterwards married John 
Nelson. His heir was a daughter Mary, 
aged six months; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. 
p-m. xvi, 00. 9g. 

¥ Rotert Finch in 1610 held mes- 
suages, &c.. in Tiornton and Holmes, 
Stanah, Trunnah, &c., of the king in 
socage ; Lancs. Inz. ¢.m.(Rec. Soc.), i, 156. 
Richard Finch, his cousin and heir, died 
in 1629 holding messuages, &c., in 
Holmes in Thornton of the king as of 
his man‘r of P:x:e‘ract, also a salt marsh 
of the king as cuke; Towneley MS. 
C 8, 13, pp. 425-6. His heirs were the 
sons of an e.der brother, Christopher 
Finch of Mawdesley. 

35 Christopher Albin died in 1638 hold- 
ing a messuage, saltco:e, &c., in Thornton 
of the king by a rent of 28s. 44. ; his 
son and heir Robert was fourteen years 
of age ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13, p. 1. 

3 Richard Brickell died in 1621 hold- 
ing a messuage in Holmes of the king ; 
Richard, his son ani heir, was twenty- 
eight vears of age (perhaps ‘n 1630 when 
the inquiry was made) ; ibis. p. 55. 

# Robert Hodgson died in 1613 holding 
a messuage and 14 acres of the king in 
socage; his son and heir John was 
fourteen years old; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc.), i, 258. John Hodgson 
died leaving an only child, Ellen, in 1652 
the wife cf Robert Hoole (or Hull) of 
Carlezon, and was succeeded by a brother, 
Richard Hodzson of P::1 Foot, and he, 
being a recus:=:, had two-thirds of his 
estate sequestered. A younger brother, 
Woliam, had ‘lived in Ire!ani till the 
bloody insurrection bezan and then was 
enforced to fly into Engiani fer the 


234 


other of the shares. 
Worthington,” Albin,® Brickell” and Hodgson.# 
Some others are recorded." 

BURN was among the possessions of Roger de 
Heaton’s heir in 1212." 
from him by Theobald Walter, but recovered it in 
1199-1200, after John became king.“ 
scended in the Heaton family * till the 15th cen- 
tury, when it passed on partition to Westby of 


These include 


Finch of 


Roger had had it taken 


It de- 


safety of the lives of himself, his wife and 
children, leaving their livelihood and all 
their fortunes behind them save only some 
principal goods,’ which he kept ‘twelve 
miles beyond Preston,’ till the Parlia- 
ment’s forces took Lancaster and other 
places there, and then ‘our party’ took 
away those goods, not knowing that 
William was in the Parliament's service in 
London and had ‘found a man to go 
forth with the Earl of Essex.’ He had 
also sent his own son ‘to sea in the 
Adventure frigate against the Dutch, and 
he continued there till peace was made 
and since came home very sick’ and 
chargeable. William, having had no 
compensation for these losses, desired a 
lease of his brother Richard's sequestered 
estate ; Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), iti, 233-6. 

Thomas Hodgson in 1629 held land 
in Thornton of the king ; his heir was 
his son Richard, aged eleven ; Towneley 
MS. C 8, 13, p. 509. 

41 Beatrice de Marton and Margery 
her sister claimed a messuage and half 
an oxgang of land in Thornton against 
Richard son of Jordan de la Mere; 
De Banco R. 257, m. 252. 

The estate of Thomas Fleetwood of 
Rossall in 1576 extended into Stanah, 
Trunnah, Holmesand Ritherham; Duchy 
of Lane. Ing. p.m. xii, no. 2. 

George Duddell in 1589 had land in 
Holmes in Thornton ; ibid. xv, no. 43. 
Thomas Eccleston in 1592 held four 
messuages, &c.. in Thornton ; ibid. xvi, 
no. 38. The tenures are not stated. 

John Allen's estate in 1593 was said to 
be held of the Earl of Derby in socage ; 
Lanes, Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), i, 197—9- 

George Crane (of Skippool) died in 1636 
holding a messuage, &c., of the king as 
duke. His heirs were four daughters— 
Margaret, aged fourteen, Anne, Janet and 
Agnes; Towneley MS. C 8,13, p. 249- 

Elizabeth Woodhouse, widow, died in 
1637 holding a messuage, &c., of the 
king in socaze; the next of kin and 
heir was Peter Wvodhouse, aged fifteen ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxx, no. 68. 
Peter son of Peter Woodhouse of Thorn- 
ton was baptized at Poulton 17 Apr. 
1622 ; Reg. 

3 Lancs. Ing. and Extenty, i, 48. 

“ Farrer, Lancs, Pipe R.115. Sabina, 
widow of Roger, sought dower there in 
1203-43; ibid. 181. 

45 Roger de Heaton in 1262 held 
8 oxgangs of land of the king in chief by 
arent of 105.3 Lancs. Inj. and Extent, i, 
231. About 1284 there was a dispute 
as to the succession; As:ize R. 1277, 
m. 31d. . 

In 1324 Adam Banastre was said to 
hold Burn ty a rent of 10s. (Dods. MSS. 
exxxi, fol 404), but it was perhaps as 
trustee ; for in 1346 William de Heaton 
held in Thornton in the place which was 
called Burn one picugh-land in socage, 

rendering 10s. a year, also relief, and suit 
to county and wapentake; <="tg of 
4246, Pp» 54. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Mowbreck.4® This family retained it for over 300 
years,“7 frequently residing there,*® and then it passed 
by marriage to the Rev. J. Benison, who married 
Anne daughter and co-heir of John Westby.” After- 
wards it was sold to Fleetwood and later to Horrocks 
of Preston.®° 

ROSSALL after the Conquest does not seem to 
have been accounted a manor. It became a pasture 
ground from which the lords of the honour derived a 
profit of about {5 a year.*! In 1216 King John at 
the request of the Earl of Chester bestowed it on the 
abbey of Dieulacres in Staffordshire,®? and twelve 
years later Henry III confirmed the gift.53 The 
monks obtained surrenders of rights from most or all 
of the previous landowners there,®4 and received also 
a number of gifts in other parts of Thornton and in 
Bispham. In 1291 the goods of the abbot in 
Rossall were taxed at £61 tos. a year, but after the 
Scottish invasion of 1322 at £16 135. 4d. only.56 
In 1498 the abbot was summoned to prove his right 
to wreck of the sea at Rossall.°7 After the Dissolu- 
tion the Rossall estate remained in the Crown for 
some years,°®> but was in 1553 sold to Thomas 
Fleetwood, who was to hold it by the twentieth part 


— 


POULTON-LE- 
FYLDE 


of a knight’s fee.59 A year later he obtained a 
further grant of monastic lands in Marton, Bispham 
and Layton, together with the advowson of Poulton 
vicarage.? He died in 1576 holding Rossall Grange, 
with wide lands in the parishes of Poulton and 
Bispham and elsewhere; his heir was his son 
Edmund, aged twenty-eight.®! 

Edmund Fleetwood, who recorded a pedigree in 


1613, died in 1622 holding 
Rossall Grange, with Rither- € 


ham and other lands in 
Thornton, and the manors of 
Norbreck and Little Bispham 
of the king by the twentieth 
part of a knight’s fee, and 
various other estates.° His 
son Paul, afterwards knight,“ 
was forty-six years old. Sir 
Paul died about 1657, in- 
volved in debt. His eldest 
son Edward had died about 
1644 without male issue, and 
a younger son Richard suc- 
ceeded ; he recorded a pedigree in 1664, being then 


oR 


Freetwoop of Ros- 
sall. Per pale nebuly 
azure and or, six martlets 
counterchanged, a canton 
argent. 


46 In 1445-6 Ellen Westby held one 
plough-land in Burn in Thornton in 
socage, paying Ios, rent, as before ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, no. 20. 

47 See the account of Mowbreck in 
Kirkham. William Westby in 1557 held 
three messuages, &c., in Burn in Thorn- 
ton of the king and queen as of the 
duchy of Lancaster in socage by tos. 
rent; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. x, no. 17. 
Thomas Westby died at Burn in 1638 
holding six messuages, a windmill, &c., 
there ; ibid. xxviii, no. 42. 

48 They were sometimes described as 
Sof Burn.’ There is a short notice of 
the hall, which had a domestic chapel in 
their time; Thornber, Blackpool, 312. 
Burn Hall, originally of the 15th century 
but altered at a later date, is now divided 
into two tenements occupied by farmers. 
Over the porch is the date 1786 with 
the initials of Bold Fleetwood Hesketh. 
One of the rooms has a good 18th-cen- 
tury ceiling and a mantelpiece with the 
Hesketh arms. In Whitaker's Rich- 
mondshire (1823), ii, 444, it is said: ‘At 
Burn Hall are the remains of a domestic 
chapel with an oak wainscot richly carved 
with small statues, shields and foliage, and 
bearing on a projecting portal the appro- 
priate passage “Elegi abjectus esse in 
domo Dei mei, magis quam habitare in 
tabernaculis peccatorum.”’ 

49 Thornber, loc. cit.; Mr. Benison 
‘ruined his property in an attempt to culti- 
vate it on the plan laid down by Virgil in 
his Georgics.’ An Act of 1731 per- 
mitted the sale of the manor of Burn 
and land there, but it does not seem to 
have been acted upon ; 4 Geo. II, cap. 29. 

% Fishwick, Poulton (Chet. Soc.), 169. 

5\ This sum is recorded in the Pipe 
Roll of 5 Hen. III, 4d. In 1212 Rossall 
with its stock was in the king’s hands, 
the sheriff answering ; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents, i, 52. 

® Rot, Lit. Claus, (Rec. Com.), i, 284. 
This was a grant ‘in bail’ or during the 
king’s pleasure. Henry III ordered an 
Inquiry as to value in 1221 ; ibid. 474. 

The boundary between the hey of 
Rossall and Roger de Heaton’s land of 
oe was defined in 1222 ; ibid. 518, 

*The king resumed possession in 


12263 Rot. Lit. Claus. (Rec. Com.), ii, 
160. Two years later he ordered the 
sheriff not to interfere with the abbot’s 
sheep and other animals in the pasture 
of Rossall, and on 14 July 1228 he 
granted Rossall in alms for ever; Cal. 
Closey 1227-31, pp. 35, 623 Cal. Pat. 
1225-32, p. 125 ; Cal. Chart. R. 1226-57, 
p- 78. This grant was perhaps revoked, 
but on 28 July 1247 a definitive charter 
was passed, granting Rossall in free alms 5 
ibid. 325 5 Dieulacres Chartul. (Wm. Salt 
Soc.), 341. 

Thomas de Rigmaiden, Adam son of 
Agnes de Middleton and Adam son of 
Alan de Middleton in 1290 claimed the 
manor of Rossall from the abbot, who 
alleged the charter of King Henry ; De 
Banco R. 83, m. 40d. 

In 1292 the abbey’s right was called 
in question by the king, and the jury 
found that Rossall had been held in bail 
of King John for seven years, being then 
worth £20 a year, which was also its 
value for the first twenty-four years of 
Henry III, but in the following six years 
it was worth 4o marks yearly ; the abbot 
was liable for the arrears—{£780 in all; 
Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 374-5. 

54 Dieulacres Chartul. 346. Theobald 
Walter, as heir of the lord of Amounder- 
ness in the time of Richard I, about 1230 
released to the abbey all his title in 
Rossall. William de Tatham in 1228 
gave a similar release in return for 200 
marks ; he had claimed three plough-lands 
there ; Final Conc. i, 55. Of the three 
plough-lands one may have formerly 
belonged to Burn. William de Clifton 
released his right for g marks. For 
Clifton see also Close 44,17 Hen. III, m. 
gd., 10d. Roger de Heaton about 1235 
released his claim between Saltholmpool 
and Stodfoldpool according to the boundary 
between Rossall and Burn fixed in the 
time of Theobald Walter. 

55 Roger son of Alan de Singleton gave 
land in Stanah, excepting right in the 
field called Tranehole (Trunnah), and 
made several other grants and exchanges 
in the same part of the township ; 
Dieulacres Chartul. 347-8. Henestebreck 
and the Gald Rene are place-names. 

William son of Alan de Staynole 


235 


(Stanah) gave a ‘land’ at Foxholes upon 
Trunnah, &c. ; ibid. 348-9. Roger son 
of John de Stanah, William de Thornton 
and Richard de Thornton gave shares of 
the Crook in Stanah ; ibid. 34.9, 351. Some 
‘natives’ also were given; ibid. 352-3. 

56 Pope Nich. Tax. (Rec. Com.), 329- 

57 Pal. of Lanc. Writs Proton. 15 
Hen. VII. 

58 About 1540 the farm of the Grange 
amounted to £13 6s. 8d.; Dugdale, Mon. 
Angl. v, 630. 

59 Pat. 7 Edw. VI, pt. ix. The grant 
included lands in Little Poulton, Bispham, 
Norbreck, Ritherham and Thornton. 

60 Pat. 2 Mary. 

61 Duchy of Lanc, Ing. p.m. xii, no. 2. 
John Fleetwood of Penwortham was his 
brother. Rossall Grange with its appurte- 
nances was held, according to the patent, 
by the twentieth part of a knight’s fee. 
In addition to this and the lands in Layton 
and Marton he had scattered estates in 
other parts of the county, including the 
Peel in Hulton, Lostock Hall in Walton- 
le-Dale, the manors of Eccleston and 
Heskin, &c. 

Thomas Fleetwood was also lord of the 
Vache in Buckinghamshire, treasurer of 
the Mint, sometime knight of the shire 
and Sheriff of Buckinghamshire and Bed- 
fordshire. He was buried in Chalfont St. 
Giles Church, where there is a monument. 

There is an account of the family in 
Fishwick’s Poulton, 157-67. The late J. P. 
Earwaker made collections for a history of 
them. The place from which their sur- 
name is taken does not seem to be known. 

62 Visit, (Chet. Soc.), 89. He was 
Sheriff of Lancashire in 1606 (P.R.O. List, 
73), and seems to have lived at Rossall. 

68 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and 
Ches.), iii, 315-16. 

64 At Greenwich, 2 June 1623; Met- 
calfe, Bk. of Knights, 181. He purchased 
the manors of Preesall and Hackinsall. 
See Exch. Dep. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), 22, 24. 

Robert Fleetwood of Rossall, younger 
brother of Paul, compounded in 1631 on 
refusing knighthood; Misc, (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 221. 

6 Fishwick, op. cit. 161-2. The family 
estates were much reduced. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Se he lara He had three sons, but 
; nephew Richard,‘7 son of his 
brother Francis. This younger Richard had a son 
Edward Fleetwood, whose daughter Margaret in 
1733 married Roger Hesketh of North Meols, and 
carried the estates into that family.° Their great- 
grandson Sir Peter Hesketh Fleetwood, bart.®? (1801— 
66), was the founder of the town of Fleetwood. He 
sold Rossall Hall to the founders of the public school 
there. 

Also connected with Rossall, as lessees from Dieu- 
lacres Abbey, was the family of Allen, which had a 
considerable scattered estate in the district. In 1534 
the Abbot of Dieulacres granted the grange of Rossall 
to John Allen and George his son for their lives 7 ; 
the abbot afterwards in 1538—g gave a seventy years 
lease of the rest of the abbey lands, including Rither- 
ham, a windmill in Norbreck, &c., and this seems to 
have been confirmed about the same time for fifty 
years by Nicholas Whitney of Walden, a rent of 
£13 65. 8d being payable to the king and {10 to 
Whitney. John Allen’s will, dated 1569 and 
proved 1570, was formerly among the Worthington 
of Blainscough deeds. His son George had the 
queen’s licence in 1574 to go with his wife to the 
Spain Germany. He died in August 1579 holding 
messuages and lands in Poulton, Thornton, Norbreck, 
Great Bispham, Marton and many other places ; 
part at least of his Thornton lands was held of the 
Earl of Derby in socage.”? John, his son and heir, 
was fourteen years of age, and Elizabeth, the widow, 
sister of John Westby of Mowbreck, took charge of 
the estates. She was a zealous Roman Catholic, 
and in 1582 was indicted for not going to church. 
This was the beginning of more serious trouble, 
for at the end of the following year (1583), 
Sir Edmund Trafford becoming sheriff, it was deter- 
mined to arrest her, partly perhaps out of hostility to 
her brother-in-law, Dr. William Allen, partly, too, it 
is supposed, at the instigation of Edmund Fleetwood, 
who had had disputes with her. On trial the widow 
was outlawed and her property confiscated, she then 


retiring to Rheims, where she could enjoy freedom 
of conscience.’® John Allen died in 1593 without 
issue, holding messuages and lands in Thornton and 
other places as before ; his heir was his sister Mary 
who in 1612 was the wife of Thomas Worthington 
of Blainscough in the parish of Standish,’ 

The glory of a family otherwise obscure, and one 


of the gr-atest men the county has prod i 
above-named William Allen, ° ete 


brother of George.”5 He was 
born about 1532, and edu- 
cated at Oxford, where he 
became Fellow of Oriel and 
principal of St. Mary’s Hall; 
he was a canon of York in 
1558. A zealous and resolute 
adherent of Roman Catholi- 
cism,’® he lost his preferments 
soon after the accession of 
Elizabeth, but stayed on in 
Oxford as long as it was safe 
to do so, flying to Louvain in 
1561. His health suffering 
he returned to his family near 
Poulton, and though sought for 
by the government he lived in 
England from 1562 to 1565. 
He returned abroad, was ordained priest, and at Rome 
in 1567 broached his plan for the foundation of an 
English college both for general education and the 
training of learned priests ; the sending of missionary 
priests to England was an afterthought. The fol- 
lowing year the seminary at Douay was established,’? 
several Oxford exiles assisting Allen, who was created 
D.D. in 1571. The plan succeeded and there were 
120 students in 1576.8 The college, however, 
owing to popular excitement against the English, had 
to be removed to Rheims in 1578, staying there tll 
1593. In 1584 Allen published what is considered 
one of the most valuable of his books—the True, 
Sincere and Modest Defence of English Catholics, in reply 
to Lord Burghley’s apology for the executions of 


Carpinat ALLEN is 
said to have borne sable 


a cross potent quarter 
pierced or charged with 
four gouttes gules, in chief 
two lions’ heads erased of 
the second, all within a 
bordure engrailed er- 


minots. 


66 Dugdale, Visit, (Chet. Soc.), 111. 

67 Ibid, ; aged eleven in 1664. He gave 
£10 yeareach to the churches of Poulton 
and Bispham, of which he was patron } 
Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 
398, 456. He died at Rossall in 1709 
and his son Edward in 1737- 

Settlements of the Rossall Grange 
estate, including the manors of Thornton, 
Layton, Bispham and Marton, with lands, 
mills, malting houses, advowsons, &C., 
were made by Richard Fleetwood and 
Margaret his wife in 1695 and by Edward 
Fleetwood in 17333 Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F. bdles. 235, m. 75 5 312, ™- 46. 

There were recoveries of the manors 
of Rossall Grange, &c., in 1736 (Edward 
Fleetwood and Roger Hesketh, vouchees) 
and 1759 (Fleetwood Hesketh, vouchee) 5 
Pal. of Lane. Plea R. §42, m. 1035 59% 


m. 9. 

8 See the account of North Meola. 

69 He took the surname of Fleetwood 
in 1831 by royal licence, and was created 
baronet in 1838. He represented Preston 
in Parliament from 1832 to 1847. There 
is a notice of him in Dict. Nat. Biog. 

70 This and other particulars of the 
family deeds are from an old abstract of 
the deeds of Worthington of Blainscough 
in the possession of W. Farrere 


The father of John Allen was George 
Allen of Rossall, whose will of 1530 is 
printed by Fishwick op. cit. 126-7. 
George was perhaps the son of John 
Allen who occurs at Norbreck in 1490 ; 
Final Conc. iii, 142. 

Isabel widow of George Allen in 1556 
purchased lands in Thornton and Holmes 
from Hugh Thornton and Dulcia his wife 5 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F.bdle. 17, m. 146. 

71 Whitney, who was servant to Lord 
Chancellor Audley, had a pension out of 
Dieulacres ; L. and P, Hen. VIII, xiv (2), 
P- 735 XVi, pe 35%. It may be noted that 
Thomas Fleetwood, afterwards purchaser 
of Rossall, had at thesame time an annuity 
out of Sheen ; ibid. 

72 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 80. 
For his will see Fishwick, op. cit. 129. 

73 A long account of the business from 
Bridgewater's Concertatio is printed by 
Fishwick op. cit. 136-57. The value 
of the goods, &c., seized by the sheriff at 
Rossall and Todderstaffe early in 1 584 
was £926 IIs. 4d. Another inquiry 
reported the value as £589 175 10d. 5 
Duchy of Lanc. Special Com. 256. At 
the trial in Manchester the he of 
the jury was Edmund Fleetwood. 

an the pedigree of the family (Fish- 
wick, op. cit. 156) it appears that two of 


236 


Mrs. Allen’s daughters became nuns at 
Louvain. 

74 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), iy 197-9 
The Worthingtons sold their cetate in 
Thornton in 1729 ; Piccope MSS. (Chet. 
Lib.), iii, 240, from R. 2 of Geo. II at 
Preston. 

75 This sketch of Cardinal Allen’s career 
is from the Dict. Nat. Biog. and Gillow, 
Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Catholics, i, 14-24 (with 
full account of his works), See also the 
introduction to Allen's Letters (ed. T. F. 
Knox) ; Misc. (Cath. Rec. Soc.), vii. 

76 He was in trouble even in the time 
of Edward VI; Fishwick, op. cit. 131, 
citing Privy Council records. There is 
a portrait of him in Green, Hist, of Engl. 
People (illustr. ed.), ii, 817. ; 

71 The story is given in detail in the 
introduction to the Douay Diaries, edited 
by T. F. Knox. 

78 ‘The first priests were sent to England 
in 1574, and by 1580 over a hundred had 
been dispatched ; ibid. ici, In this year 
the first Jesuits went. The rely of the 
English government was an Act making 
it high treason ‘to withdraw any of the 
queen’s subjects from the religion now 
by her highness’s authority established 
within her highness’s dominions to the 
Romish religion,’ and high treatoa also 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


missionary priests, Seminarists and Jesuits. He 
went to Rome in 1585, and lived there till his 
death. About 1576 he began to take part in the 
politics of the time, which were inextricably mixed 
up with the religious struggle, and became an advo- 
cate of the plans of Philip II, which resulted in 
the Armada of 1588.79 In 1587, in anticipation of 
this expedition, he was made cardinal by the title of 
St. Silvester and St. Martin in Montidbus. He spent 
the rest of his lifein the ordinary duties of a cardinal,8° 
and dying 16 October 1594 was buried in Trinity 
Church in the English College at Rome,®! which he 
had assisted to found in 1576—-8.8 While his 
political schemes failed, the college at Douay to some 
extent fulfilled the objects of its founder, defeating 
Elizabeth’s anticipation that Roman Catholicism in 
England would die out quietly—of starvation—by 
supplying a long succession of missionary priests to 
labour in England at the peril of their lives. After 
more peaceful times came round at home the French 
Revolution drove the college from its old seat, but it 
is still represented by St. Cuthbert’s, Ushaw, and 
St. Edmund’s, Ware. 

There are several places of worship in Thornton 
proper. In connexion with the Church of England 
Christ Church was opened in 1835, and a separate 
parish was assigned to it in 1862. The patronage is 
vested in trustees.88 There is a mission church at 
Burnt Naze and another at Cleveleys. 

The Wesleyans built a chapel as early as 1812.54 
There is also a Primitive Methodist chapel, and at 
Thornton Marsh a meeting-place of the Society of 
Friends. There is a Congregational mission room 
at Cleveleys. ; 

The Roman Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart, 
near Burn, was opened in 1899. 

As already stated, the modern town of FLEET- 
WOOD owes its origin as also its name to the enter- 
prise of Sir Peter Hesketh Fleetwood, who judged 
that the mouth of the Wyre would form an excellent 
site for a port. He procured the construction of a 
railway line from Preston in 1835—-40,* the building 
of the town proceeding at the same time.8* He ob- 
tained an Act of Parliament in 1842 vesting the 


POULTON-LE- 
FYLDE 


government of the place in a board of commissioners.®? 
The town was very popular for many years as a sea- 
side holiday resort, and when it declined some- 
what in this respect the place improved as a seaport. 
Queen Victoria and the royal family, travelling from 
Scotland to London, landed at Fleetwood 20 Septem- 
ber 1847. There is a considerable fishing industry, 
it being the port for a large fleet of steam trawlers 
which operate from the Portuguese coast to Arch- 
angel. A dock was opened by the Lancashire and 
Yorkshire Railway Company in 1877. In 1875 the 
manorial rights, with lands, buildings, &c., were pur- 
chased by a limited liability company for £120,000. 
The railway company built a grain elevator in 1882, 
and made provision for the fish trade by an ice 
factory and cold storage ; it also maintains steamboat 
services to Belfast and (in the summer) to the Isle of 
Man. The government has a barracks and rifle range. 
There is a ferry from Fleetwood to Knott End across 
the Wyre.®8 A coat of arms is used. 

The town is now governed by an urban district 
council of eighteen members,8® which meets in the 
town hall close to the railway station.2° The 
council possesses the market rights, and a market 
was built in 1892. Friday is the market day. The 
other public buildings include library, seamen’s in- 
stitute and cottage hospital. Water is supplied by 
the Fylde Water Board and gas by a private com- 
pany. 

There are a number of places of worship. In 
connexion with the Church of England St. Peter’s 
was built in 1841, and a separate parish was assigned 
to it. ‘The patronage is vested in the devisees of the 
late Mrs. Meynell-Ingram. There is a mission 
church of St. Margaret, built in 1893. The 
cemetery is outside the town. 

A Wesleyan church was opened in 1847,%! and 
the present one was built on the old site in 1899. 
The Primitive Methodists also have a church. The 
Congregationalist church was built in 1848.9 The 
Plymouth Brethren, the Society of Friends and 
the Salvationists also conduct services. 

Mass has been said since 1841 %3; the present 
church of St. Mary was opened in 1867. 


to be withdrawn or reconciled ; 23 Eliz. 
cap. 1. Eighty Douay priests are said to 
have suffered death under this and other 
penal statutes. 

79 In this year wasprinted his Admonition 
to the English people to assist the in- 
vaders on account of the various crimes 
of the queen. 

® To support his dignity he had the 
revenues of an abbot in Calabria and the 
archbishopric of Palermo from the pope. 
Philip II nominated him to Malines, but 
he did not obtain that see. 

8 The epitaph placed over him by his 
brother Gabriel Allen and his nephew 
Thomas Hesketh is in Fishwick, op. cit. 
133. ‘To the parish church of Poulton 
where he was born, when the people there 
became Catholics,’ he left certain vest- 
ments, which meantime were to be kept 
in the English college at Rome ; ibid. 134. 

® This college was intended for secular 
Priests, but in consequence of dissensions 
was in 1579 given to the care of the 
Jesuits, who retained it till 1773; the 
students were seculars. Its Diary is (im- 
perfectly) printed by Foley, Rec. S. J. vi. 

8 Porter, Fylde, 271-2, 


#4 Thid. 273. 

85 The original terminus was on the 
south-east side of the town, near the 
present dock. The line was continued 
northward to the present terminus at 
Wyre mouth, opened in 1883, to provide 
facilities for the seagoing passenger traffic. 
There is a passenger station also at the 
docks. 

86 The streets were made to radiate 
from an eminence called the Mount on 
the north side, by the Irish Sea. On 
the sea side is a promenade over a mile in 
length. To the east, at the mouth of the 
Wyre, is a small ornamental green ; then 
turning south the ferry to Knott End and 
the railway terminus are seen. The docks 
are on the south-west of the town, in a 
bend of the river. The Pharos light- 
house, built about 1840, stands between 
the Mount and the station ; in conjunc- 
tion with the Lower lighthouse on the 
shore it assists in navigating the Wyre. 
A third lighthouse, 2 miles north of 
the town, marks the entrance to the 
channel. 

87 5 & 6 Vict. cap. 49. The area was 
extended in 1882. The port of Fleet- 


237 


wood under the Customs Act of 1846 
extends from Blackpool to the mouth of 
the Wyre and thence to Broadfleet River, 
both streams being included. 

88 These particulars are from the 
guide issued by the council. There is 
a detailed account ofthe town in Porter’s 
Fylde, 218-67, and Mr. Frederick W. 
Woods, clerk to the council, has afforded 
information as to recent progress. 

89 The council is the board of improve- 
ment commissioners extended. In 1905 
the district was divided into wards— 
Central, East and West—and the number 
of councillors increased from twelve to 
eighteen, six being elected by each ward. 

90 It was originally the custom house, 
and then a private residence. It has 
been used as the town hall since 1887. 

51 Porter, op. cit. 234. 

92 Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. i, 
174-80. Preaching began in 1838, the 
minister at Preesall officiating. A church 
was formed in 1840, and a schoolroom 
was built in the following year. 

9 The first St. Mary’s in Walmsley 
Street, 1841, was afterwards turned 
into cottages ; Porter, op. cit. 224. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


HARDHORN-WITH-NEWTON 


Hordorn, 1332. Nuton, 1332. 

Staininghe, Dom. Bk.; Steyininges, 1292 ; Stayn- 
yng, 1297 ; Steyninge, 1302. 

This township is bounded on the south and east 
by the brook running from Marton Mere to join the 
Wyre. The surface is in general low and level, but 
there are elevated portions rising to 50 ft. above sea 
level in the centre, south and east. On the central one 
stands the hamlet of Hardhorn ; to the south-west is 
Newton and to the south Staining ; while near the 
south-eastern boundary is Todderstaffe Hall. The 
area is 2,651 acres and the population in 1901 
numbered 597. 

A road leads north-west through Staining and 
Newton and then north to Poulton, with branches 
west to Blackpool and north and east to Hardhorn 
and Singleton. The Preston and Wyre railway runs 
near the eastern boundary, with a station at Todder- 
staffe called Singleton. 

Agriculture is the only industry, chiefly as dairy 
farms. ‘The soil is variable, with subsoil clay. 

The township is governed by a parish council. 

Richard Davie or Davies of Newton raised a 
company for the Parliament’s service in the Civil 
War, but was killed with most of his men at the 
capture of Bolton in 1644.” 

In 1066 STAINING, assessed as six 

MANOR plough-lands, was part of Earl Tostig’s 
lordship of Preston.* Afterwards it was 

held by the Constable of Chester, for about 1134 
William Fitz Nigel, lord of Halton, granted three 
plough-lands in Staining to his newly-founded priory 
of Runcorn, while his son William recovered them 


granted two-thirds of the demesne tithes to the 
canons. His successor, John de Lacy, 1211-40, 
gave the whole in free alms to Stanlaw Abbey.* 
Later the monks were said to hold it by the service 
of half a knight’s fee and a castle-ward rent of 
gs.°2 The grange of Staining seems to have been 
the abbey’s manor-house for all their estates in the 

Fylde. 

In 1348 the monks obtained a charter for a market 
on Thursdays at their vill of Hardhorn and a fair 
on the eve, day and morrow of St. Denis (8-10 
October) ; in the following year by another charter 
the weekly market was assigned to Monday.* 

_ The manor remained in possession of the monks 
till the confiscation of the Whalley estates after the 
rebellion of the north in 1537, and was sold by the 
Crown to Thomas Holt,’ who sold to George Single- 
ton. The family had probably been tenants under 
the abbey for some time,’ and they continued in 
possession until the beginning of the 18th century. 
George Singleton, the pur- 
chaser of Staining, died in 
1551 holding the manor with 
messuages, lands, &c., of the 
king by the third part of a 
knight’s fee." His successor 
was his son William, of full 
age, who died in or about 
1556 holding the ‘manor or 
grange’ of Staining as before 
and leaving a numerous family, 
the heir being a son Thomas, 
seven years old.’ Thomas 
died in 1563, still a minor, 
and a younger brother, John, 


Stncteton of Stain- 
ing. Argent three cheve- 
ronels gules between as 
many martlets sable. 


when he transferred the house to Norton, but 


1 The Census Rep. 1901 gives 2,653 
acres, including 13 of inland water. 

2 War in Lancs. (Chet. Soc.), 42, 50. 

8 V7.C.H. Lancs. i, 2884. 

4 Ormerod, Ches. (ed. Helsby), i, 691 5 
Dugdale, Mon. Angl. vi, 314. 

5 Whalley Couck. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 419- 
The benefactor also released the whole 
farm of Staining. William the Monk 
and Thomas de Beaumont his heir had 
given to John Constable of Chester, 

. probably the grandfather of John de Lacy, 
the whole vill of Staining for 15 marks 
paid and 30s, rent; ibid. 420. This 
grant was attested by Henry the prior 
(of Norton), and throws some light on the 
intermediate history of the place. In 
1208 Philip brother of Geoffrey de 
Valoines of Farleton had some estate in 
it ; Rot. de Oblatis et Fin. (Rec. Com.), 


baer de Layton allowed the monks a 
moiety of the marsh between Marton Mere 
and Little Carleton, and William and 
Richard le Boteler also made concessions 
as to the marsh, which divided Staining 
from Layton. Theobald Walter, butler 
of Ireland, allowed them to draw water 
from Marton Mere for their mill, but they 
were not to take any fish ; ibid. 421-45 
Cal. Pat. 1225-32, P+ 71+ The other 
charters in the Coucher refer to agree- 
ments as to tithes made with the monks 
of Sées and Lancaster as rectors of 
Poulton ; see also Lanc. Ch. (Chet. Soc.), 
i, 703 ii, 527+ 

? The Aes of Whalley in 1469 claimed 
common of pasture in Staining and Weeton 
against John Skillicorne ; Pal. of Lanc. 


succeeded.” 


Plea R, 36, m. 1g. There were later 
disputes ; Ducatus Lanc, (Rec. Com.), i, 
10; il, 19, 31. 

5a The Abbot of Whalley paid 4s.a year 

to the Earl of Lancaster in 1297, and in 
1302 held by half a knight's fee ; Lancs. 
Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 289, 316. The service for 
Staining with Hardhorn and Newton was 
that of half a knight’s fee and 5s. for 
castle ward in 13243; Dods. MSS. cxxxl, 
fol. 40. Similarly in 1346 the abbot held 
five plough-lands in Hardhorn or Newton 
or Staining for half a knight’s fee, and paid 
gs. for castle ward ; Survey of 134.6 (Chet. 
Soc.), §4. The five (not six) plough-lands 
appear again in 1445-6 ; Duchy of Lance. 
Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, no. 20. 

The tenant about 1540 is not named, 
but 6s. was paid for Staining Grange 
itself. The principal tenants at that time 
were Lawrence Rigson, house and wind- 
mill, paying £2 3 Constance Singleton, 
widow, house and 30 acres arable, 335-5 
Lawrence Archer, similar tenement, 
30s. 4d.; and Thomas Wilkinson, a mes- 
suage and 20 acres, £13 Whalley Couch. 
iv, 1242-3. 

6 Chart. R. 143 (22 Edw. III), m. 9, 
no. 93 144 (23 Edw. III), m. 8, no. 7. 
Nothing further seems to be known of 
them, but the Monday market of Poulton 
may have been derived from the second 
charter. 

7 Pat. 35 Hen. VIII, pt. iv. 

8 This is stated in the pedigree of 1664. 

9 Cf, Constance Singleton above. In 
a writ of 1474 there are named John 
Singleton of Woodplumpton and Margaret 


238 


He died in 1589 holding the manors 


his wife, George Singleton of Staining 
and Richard his son; Pal, of Lanc. Writs 
Proton. 13 Edw. IV. 

10 Duchy of Lane. Inq. p.m. ix, no. 17. 
He had granted certain messuages, &c, 
to George Browne and hie heirs and 
others to trustees for the use of Alice 
wife of his son William Singleton, He 
had also land in Woodplumpton. 

A few deeds of the family are preserved 
in Dods. MSS. cliii, fol. 73. 

1 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. x, no. 30+ 
the estate included two windmills, The 
inquisition names his mother Margaret, 
his grandmother Eleanor, late wife of 
George Westby, his sons Richard, John 
and George. His great - grandfather 
Award Singleton in 1501 had settled a 
burgage in Preston and a close in Wood- 
plumpton called ‘ Mykelleghe’ on Eleanor 
wife of Lawrence Singleton son of Award, 
The descent thus appears: Award -#. 

Lawrence ~s. George ~4 William. 
Daughters Helen and Margaret are named 
in the next inquisition, It appears that 
Lawrence Singleton diedin or about 151 8; 
Fishwick, Poulson (Chet. Soc.), 69. 

An annuity was granted by the Crown 
(as guardian) to Alice widow of William 
Singleton, together with the custody and 
marriage of Thomas the heir, in 15575 
Duchy of Lanc. Mise. Bk. xasii, 146d 

2 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. x:, 00.43: 
Margaret wi!ow of George Singleton :.24 
married William Ambrose and was eull 
living ; Eleanor Westby had dicd. John, 
the brother and heir, was aged thirteen. 
Alice the widow of William Singleton 
is named as if living at Staining, but her 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


of Staining and Carleton. He left two daughters ® ; 
but the manors went to a brother George, who died 
in 1598, and was followed by his son Thomas, aged 


six. The religious history of the family is not 
known. Thomas was no doubt a Protestant, for he 


was a justice of the peace,'® but his son Thomas was 
a Roman Catholic '*; he raised a troop for Charles I 
at the outbreak of the Civil War" and was killed at 
the battle of Newbury in 1643.8 His children were 
very young, as appears by the pedigree recorded in 
1664."°; four of them succeeded—John, Thomas, 
George and Anne.” ‘The last-named died in 1719, 
and Staining went to John Mayfield, son of her sister 
Mary. The history then becomes obscure.” The 
manor in 1810 was purchased by Edward Birley, by 
whose daughter it passed to her husband, William 
Henry Hornby of Blackburn.” He was succeeded 
by his son Sir William Henry Hornby, bart. 
Thornber states that the hall had its ‘ boggart,’ the 
wandering ghost of a Scotchman murdered near a 
tree which has since recorded the deed by perfuming 
the ground near it with the odour of thyme.™ 
TODDERSTAFFE ™ was another estate of import- 
ance in former times,” but of Hardhorn and Newton, 
which givea name to the township,” practically nothing 


POULTON-LE- 
FYLDE 


can be stated, though from the former was derived a 
surname varying between Hardern and Hordern. 
The Abbot of Stanlaw obtained leave to have an 
oratory at the manor of Staining,” but this does not 
seem to have led to a permanent chapel. 
A barn in Hardhorn was in 1689 licensed as a 
meeting-place for Presbyterians,” 


MARTON 


Meretun, Dom. Bk. ; Merton, 1176; Mereton, 
Merton, 1212 ; Marton, 1297. 

The hamlets of Great Marton and Little Marton 
stand on slight elevations, to west and east respectively, 
near the northern boundary of the township. 
Marton Mere lies on the boundary itself. The 
two-thirds of the area to the south of the hamlets 
named is a level and comparatively dreary district, 
largely sand-covered and moss land extending west to 
the sea ; but in the extreme south-east corner is the 
ancient homestead called Peel on ground about 40 ft. 
above sea level. Revoe adjoins Blackpool. The town- 
ship contains 4,7074 acres,! of which Great Marton 
has 1,973 and Little Marton 2,7344. In 1901 
the population was 1,603 for the reduced township.” 


will, dated 1558, is said to have been 
proved at Richmond in this year ; Fish- 
wick, op. cit. 183. 

A grant by the father to James Massey 
of Layton and Richard Houghton of 
Kirkham, comprising a windmill at 
Hardhorn and lands at Staining, was the 
subject of dispute soon after Thomas 
Singleton’s death ; Ducatus Lanc. ii, 296. 

1 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xv, no. 47. 
In addition to the manors the estate com- 
prised sixty messuages, three windmills, 
&c, in Staining, Hardhorn, Newton, 
Plumpton, Great and Little Carleton and 
Poulton ; also a free fishery in Marton 
Mere. In 1583 he had settled the manors, 
&c., on his wife Thomasine for life, with 
remainder to his brother George, making 
provision also for his daughters Alice and 
Elizabeth, who at their father’s death 
were aged ten and five years respectively. 
The tenure of Staining was recorded as 
before, by the third part of a knight’s fee. 
John Singleton’s will (1589) is printed in 
Wills (Chet. Soc. new ser.), i, 106. 

In 1592 Thomasine was wife of 
Thomas Dutton, and in possession of 
part of the estate; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F, bdle. 54, m. 142. 

M Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvii, 
no. 26. George Singleton had married 
Margaret Houghton, who survived him. 
A family dispute led to the death of 
Thomas Hoghton of Lea in 1590; see 
the account of Lea in Preston. 

The estates were in 1604 in the hands 
of Henry Birkheved the younger and 
Alice his wife ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 65, no. 41. Alice was one of the 
daughters of John Singleton ; Ormerod, 
Ches. ii, 368. 

15 Fishwick, op. cit. 188 (pedigree). 
He had a dispute about tithes in 1616; 
Exch. Dep. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and 
Ches.), 18. 

6 Thomas Singleton in 1632 com- 
pounded with the Crown for the two- 
thirds of his estates liable to be seques- 
tered for his recusancy by an annual fine 
of £20 3 Trans. Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xxiv, 
176, ; 

Al Lancs. War (Chet. Soc.), 19, 25. 

8 Pedigree of 1664, The estate does 


not appear to have been sequestered by 
the Parliament. 

19 Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 274 3 
John the eldest son of Captain Thomas 
was twenty-nine years old in 1664. He 
married Jane Fleetwood and died in 1668, 
after which his widow married Thomas 
Cole (Fishwick), from whom Thomas 
Singleton, brother and heir of John, 
recovered the manors of Staining and 
Singleton in 1681 ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F, bdle. 187, m. 29. 

A settlement of the manors was made 
by George Singleton, Christopher Ander- 
ton, Alexander Butler, Dorothy (Single- 
ton) his wife and Anne Singleton in 1686 
(ibid. bdle. 216, m. 18); yet Thomas 
Cole and Jane his wife were deforciants in 
a fine of 1689; ibid. bdle. 224, m. 150. 

20 As a ‘Papist’ she registered her 
estate in Little Carleton and Newton in 
17173; the value was £75 5s. 10d. a 
year; Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurors, 133. She also had a house 
at Crank in Rainford. 

In 1722 Christopher Gradwell, trustee, 
conveyed to new trustees the capital 
messuage of Staining, late the inheritance 
of George Singleton; Piccope MSS. 
(Chet. Lib.), iii, 212, from R. § (2) of 
Geo. I at Preston. 

21 The story is given in Fishwick, op. 
cit, 187-8: Mary Singleton, widow of 
John Mayfield, was buried at Poulton, 
1694; her son John died without issue, 
the estate going to a nephew, William 
Blackburn of Great Eccleston, whose son 
James, dead in 1784, left as heir a sister 
Anne wife of John Fielding. Their son 
Gabriel, who married an actress, left the 
neighbourhood. 

John Mayfield, ¢ Papist,’ was heir in 
17223; Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. ii, 458. 
A deed of 1734 recites that Anne 
Singleton, late of Singleton, spinster, had 
by her will of 1719 directed lands in 
Carleton, Staining and elsewhere to be 
sold. John Mayfield and Mary his wife had 
Staining Hall, with remainder to Mary, 
and then to John eldest son of William 
Blackburn of Singleton, &c.; Piccope 
MSS. iii, 248, from R. 5 (1) of Geo, II. 
See ibid. 336, from R. 9 of Geo. II. 


239 


By fine in 1781 John Hankinson ob- 
tained from John Fielding, Anne his wife, 
James Law and Mary his wife various 
messuages, lands, &c., in Staining, Hard- 
horn with Newton, Poulton and Carleton ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 405, m. 
167. 

#2 Fishwick, loc. cit. William Henry 
Hornby, 1805-84, married Margaret 
Susannah daughter and heir of Edward 
Birley of Kirkham, and had issue ; Burke, 
Landed Gentry. 

*3 Hist. of Blackpool (written 1837), 38. 
He also mentions a tradition that John, 


when Count of Mortain, sometimes 
visited the place. 

24 Taldrestath, 1332. 

2 Fishwick, op. cit. 168. It became 


part of the Singleton estate of Mr. T. H. 
Miller. 

Todderstaffe was at one time tenanted 
by the Allens of Rossall, for in 1543 it 
was given by George Singleton of Mithop 
to Elizabeth widow of George Allen; 
Worthington of Blainscough abstract. 
Afterwards it reverted to the Singletons 
and was part of the Staining estate given 
to Dorothy wife of Alexander Butler ; 
she had a daughter and heir Elizabeth, who 
married Robert Worswick; Gillow in 
Misc. (Cath. Rec. Soc.), iv, 173. See 
also N. and Q. (Ser. 10), v, 468, 517. In 
Urswick Church there is a monument 
to Dorothy daughter of Alexander and 
Dorothy Butler of Todderstaffe, dated 
1687 ; North Lons. Mag. ii, 160. 

By the will of Richard Worswick of 
Preston in 1746 land in Great Singleton 
and the capital messuage of Todderstaffe 
were ordered for sale ; Piccope MSS. iii, 
350, from R. 20 of Geo, II at Preston. 

26 So called in 13323 Exch. Lay Subs. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 59. 

27 Whalley Couch. ii, 428-9. 

°8 Hist. MSS. Com, Rep. xiv, App. iv, 
232. ; 

1 The Census Rep. of 1901 gives the 
portion outside Blackpool as follows: 
3503 acres, including 10 of inland water. 

2 To these should be added 7,659 in 
Blackpool and 31 in St. Anne’s, making 
a total population for the old township of 


9293+ 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


There are various roads through the township 
connecting Lytham and Blackpool, with cross roads. 
The branch railway line forming the direct route 
between Kirkham and Blackpool crosses Marton from 
east to west, but there is no station. 

Marton ‘Mere* was formerly very extensive and 
liable in time of floods to spread further over the 
country around. An agreement as to clearing the 
watercourse leading from it was made in 1731.! 
‘ During the work of draining large quantities of the 
trunks of oak and yew trees were found imbedded in 
the soil, all of which were in a slanting position 
towards the sea and some of them bore evidence of 
having at some far-distant time been cut down.’ 

The soil is peaty, sand and clay ; wheat and potatoes 
are grown, but much of the land is in pasture. 

Thomas Fleetwood in 1700 procured a charter allow- 
ing three fairs to be held at Marton Mere, viz. 23-4 
April, 22-3 June and 27-8 September each year." 

In 1894 Great Marton was added to Blackpool 
and part of Little Marton to St. Anne’s-on-the-Sea? ; 
the remainder, the existing township of Marton, is 
governed by a parish council. 


Before the Conquest MARTON, as- 
MANORS | sessed as six plough-lands, was a member 
of Earl Tostig's Preston fee.* Some time 
afterwards, probably carly in the 12th century, it 
formed part of the honour of Peverel, furfeited in 
1153. The Pipe Rolls record the receipts from 
Marton ® till the honour: of Lancaster and Peverel 
were in 118g given to John Count of Mortain. 
Before this time probably it had been divided, one 
moiety being held immediately by a family bearing 
the local surname and the other by Hervey Walter, 
lord of the adjacent Weeton. 

GREAT MARTON was about 1200 held by 
Adam son of Matthew de Marton, a benefactor of 
Stanlaw Abbey.” Adam died in 1242 and was 
succeeded by his son William," a benefactor of 
Cockersand ? and Lancaster,'3 as well as of Stanlaw." 
From the later descent of the manor it appears that 
William de Marton and Richard his son and heir" 
conveyed the manor about 1260 to William le 
Boteler of Warrington and his brother Richard le 
Boteler of Rawcliffe,"* and in these fimilies—the 
latter having a branch, Boteler of Marton ’—it 


8 For map see Lancs. and Ches. Rec. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 24. 

4 Fishwick, Poulton (Chet. Soc.), 25-7. 

5 Ibid. 

® Pat. 12 Will III, pt. iv, fol. 532, 
no. 6. 

* Both changes were effected by Loc. 
Govt. Bd. Order 31813. 

5 V.C.H. Lanes. i, 2884. 

8In 1175-6 Randle de Glanville 
rendered account of 7s. of the farm of 
Marton, escheat of the honour of Peverel ; 
Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 31. Similar re- 
ceipts occur until 1188-9, when the 
sheriff accounted for 6s. of the farm of 
Marton and 4. of Clifzon received before 
the Count of Mortain had them from 
the king ; ibid. 72. 

In 1216-22 the Earl of Ferrers was in 
possession 5 Lanes. Inz. and Extents (Rec. 
Soc. Lanes. and Che:.), i, 121. 

Great Marton rendered 5s. a year to 
the Earl of Lancaster in 1297 and Little 
Marton tos. ; ibid. i, 289. 

Part may at one time have been held 
by Bussel of Penwortham ; see Penworthar: 
Priory (Chet. Soc.), 3. 

le Whalley Couch. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 443. 
He confirmed the right to draw water 
from the Great Mere which had been 
allowed the monks by Theobald le 
Boteler, but reserved the right to build 
a mill himself. 

Matthew de Marton attested the grant 
of half an oxgang of land in the vil 
made by William son of Richard to 
Adam his brother; Lytham D. at Dur- 
ham, 2 a, 2 ae, 4.ae, Ebor. no. 30. 

Adam de Marton held three plough- 
lands in 1212 by knight's service ; Lancs. 
Inz. om. i, 37. In 1236 he held the 
fourth part and the twentieth part of a 
knight's fee in Marton ‘of ancient 
feottment’; ibid. i, 144. Thus ten 
plough-lands there made a knight’s fee. 

11 William paid 3 marks as relief in 
Mar 1242, on succeeding; Fine R. 
26 Hen. III, m. 9; Close R. 53, pt. 
m.2. Inthe same year he was found to 
hold the tenth part ani the twentieth 
part of a knight's tee of the king in 
chief; Lancs. Img. snd Extent, i, 153. 
This was a moiety of h's father’s tene- 
ment. 

12 As William son of Adam de Marton 


he gave an acre in Landirg open-furlong 
between land of Amery de Thomt:n and 
M:schael de Marton, also liberty to get 
turf in the great moss of Marton; 
Cockersand Chartul, (Chet. Soc.), i, 153. 

13 He gave a toft, &c., next that of his 
brother Michael ; Lanc. Ch. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 439. For Michael see Assize R. 
1265, m. 4. 

14 As William de Murton, son of Adam 
son of Matthew, he granted half a selion 
extending from the Prior uf Lancaster's 
bam to Recurr; Whalley Couch. ii, 446. 
As ‘lord of Marton‘ he granted half an 
oxgang of land in Great Marton, with 
2 acres on the east side of Suterdale, 
in the Hall Stude and in Ketelsworth 
towards Layton, and common of pasture, 
also a house and garden; ibid. 447-8. 
Margery widow of William in 1271 
teleased to the monks her right in these 
gifts; ibid. 449. She had married 
William de Kirkby. 

'S Richard son of William de Marton 
about 1270 contrmed his father’s grant 
to Stanlaw ; Whalley Couch. ii, 450. 

Gilbert the clerk of Lancaster and 
John son of Robert de Shireburne had 
granted certain oxgangs of land, &c., in 
Marton to Cockersand Abbey and 
Richard son of William de Marton con- 
firmed the gifts; Cockersand Chartul. i, 
154-53. Gilbert de Lancaster, just 
named, held half an oxgang of the monks 
of Stanlaw for li‘, paying them 4s. rent 
and promising his assistance in their 
business in the county ; Whalley Couch. ii, 
451 

16 A number of the charters are in 
Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xxviii, 89, &c., 
389. From these it appears that William 
de Mart:n (son of Adam son of Matthew) 
gave half an oxgang of land in Great 
Marton to Sir Richard le Boteler, 
together with the homage and service of 
Amery de Thornton and a fishery in the 
Great Mere ; ibid. 93. He made another 
grant and his eldest sn Richard con- 
firmed his father's charter ; ibid. 91, 89. 
Alice the widow of Richard de Marton 
gave a release in 1206; ibid. 99. 

Richard son of W liam de Marton 
gave land in Scoutlonglands and Redcarr 
to Richard son of Richard le Boteler 
and other land to Walter de Wilton and 


240 


William brother of Hugh de Marton ; 
ibid. g1, 93. In the latter the grantor’s 
mother Margaret is named and it is 
attested by Sir William le Boteler and 
Sir Richard his brother. Amery son of 
Simon de Thorton gave land in Great 
Marton to Richard son of Sir Richard 
le Boteler ; ibid. Henry de Haydock 
gave half an oxgang of land in Norcross 
to Richard son of Sir Richard le Boteler 
and Ellen his wife, Henry’s daughter. 
The grantor had had it in free marriage 
with Alice his wife ; ibid. 383. To the 
same Richard, described as ‘my nephew’ 
(nepos), Walter de Carleton son of Sir 
William granted land in Great Marton 
which he had received from his brother 
William ; ibid. 107. This charter is 
attested by Sir William le Boteler, Henry 
his son, William his brother, William de 
Sineleton and Alan his son. Studholme, 
Hallstead, Faethewra and Crooklands 
are other places in Marton named in 
these charters. 

William le Boteler of Warrington 
granted an oxgang of land in Marton, at 
6d. rent, to Thomas son of William de 
Bispham ; Add. MS. 32104, fol. 1006. 

Richard le Boteler (about 1277) granted 
to Richard his son all his lands in Marton 
received from Wi'liam de Marton and 
Richard his son ; Raines MSS. xxxviii, 89. 

Isabel widow of Henry le Boteler in 
1294 complained that she had teen scized 
at Marton and imprisoned and that her 
corn there had been reaped ; but William 
le Boteler of Warrington stated in reply 
that she had sold him the growing corn 
for 6 marks; De Banco R. 103, m. 72, 
66d. ; 105, m. 60. 

Tsatel le Boteler, widow, in 1304 
directed her tenant John de Staynall to 
pay 71. to Father Humphrey, monk of 
Whalley ; Whalley Couch. ii, 452. 

YW Richard Boteler of Marton died in 
1323 holding a capital messuage, lands 
and the fourth part of a fishery in Marton 
Mere of Nicholas son and heir of William 
le Boteler of Rawclitfe by kniczht's service ; 
other messuages, horse mil, &c., of 
Wiliam le Boteler «f Warrington by 
knight’s service ; and a windmill of the 
heirs of Richard Russell by an arrow 
rent. His son ang heir Richard was four 
years old; Lancs. Ing. and Ex:rnt, ii 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


descended! until the middle of the 16th century, when 
it was acquired by Thomas Fleetwood.!® It was given 
to a younger son William, who in 1596 conveyed it 
From that time it de- 
scended in the same way as Rossall until 184.1, when Sir 
Peter Hesketh Fleetwood sold it to Thomas Clifton.2! 

The estate of the Botelers of Marton descended by 
marriage to the Crofts of Dalton and Leghs of Lyme.” 
There were a few minor holders of land in Marton 


to his brother Edmund.”° 


145-7. The son became a ward of Sir 
William le Boteler of Warrington, who 
in 1323-4 granted the lands to Cecily 
widow of Richard le Boteler; Raines 
MSS, xxxviii, 103. A description of 
house (with chapel), &c., is given. 

John gon of Richard Boteler of Marton 
appears in 1357, 1358 and 1361; Raines 
MSS. xxxvili, 105; Duchy of Lanc. 
Assize R. 6, m. 4d.3 Assize R. 441, 
m.2. John Boteler of Marton granted to 
feoffees in 1362 all his lands, with the 
reversion of those in Little Layton held 
by Agnes widow of Nicholas Boteler, and 
in 1367 the feoffees regranted them to 
John Boteler and Margaret his wife ; 
Raines MSS. xxxviii, 107. The seal to 
the former charter shows a cheveron with 
three fleurs de lis between three covered 
cups. In 1369 Agatha daughter of John 
Boteler gave a quitclaim to her father 
and Margaret his wife ; ibid. 389. 

John Boteler of Marton was living in 
1385 ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 22. 
John the elder had a protection on going 
to Ireland in 13863 Cal. Pat. 1385-9, 
p 189. ‘ 

18 The Botelers of Warrington were 
usually regarded as the chief lords of 
Marton. Thus William Boteler and 
Edmund Boteler in 1302 held half a fee 
and the tenth part of a fee in Great (and 
Little) Marton ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, 
i, 316. In 1324 William Boteler held 
the manor with Layton, &c. ; Dods. MSS. 
cxxxi, fol. 4.0. 

In 1346 William Boteler held two- 
thirds and Nicholas Boteler one-third of 
the third part of a knight’s fee in Great 
Marton, paying yearly 5s. for castle ward; 
Survey of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 58. 

Sir William Boteler in 1355 answered 
for the tenth and twentieth parts of a 
knight’s fee formerly held by William de 
Marton ; Feud. Aids, iii, go. 

Sir William Ferrers of Groby was said 
to hold by knight’s service in Marton in 
tight of his wife Elizabeth in 1431 ; ibid. 
95. She was the widow of Sir William 
Boteler. 

Both lordships were recognized in 
1445-6, when John Boteler (under age) 
and Nicholas Croft held the third part of 
a knight’s fee in Great Marton in the 
Proportions of two to one; Duchy of 
Lanc, Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, no. 20. 

Great Marton is named in 1416 among 
the manors of Sir William Boteler of 
Warrington ; it was held by knight’s 
service ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), iy 
113. Similarly it occurs in 1472 (ibid. 
ii, 82) and later; Duchy of Lanc, Inq. 
P-m. ¥, no. 13. 

John Boteler of Rawcliffe in 1488 
held messuages and lands in Great 
Marton of Boteler of Warrington by 
the third part of a knight’s fee, and 
his great-grandson, James Boteler, died 
im 1504 holding lands in Great Marton 
of Sir Thomas Boteler (of Warrington) 
by knight’s service ; Duchy of Lane, Ing. 
P-M, ill, No. 43, 109. 


7 


centuries. 


Thomas Fleetwood in 1565 purchased 
the Great Marton estate of Richard and 
Henry Butler (of Rawcliffe); Pal. of 
Lance. Feet of F. bdle. 27, m. rg1. 

19 It was sold by Sir Thomas Butler 
of Warrington together with Layton to 
Browne; Thornber, Blackpool, 325. In 
1550 the estate was sold by John Browne 
to Thomas Fleetwood; Pal. of Lance. 
Feet of F. bdle. 14, m. 276. See also 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xii, no. 2; 
held by Thomas Fleetwood by knight's 
service in 1576. 

20 Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 279, m. 7d. 

1 Fishwick, op. cit. 23. Marton is 
named in fines, recoveries, &c., among 
the Fleetwood manors. 

22Tn 1383-4 an agreement was made 
for the marriage of Ellen daughter of 
John Boteler of Marton with Nicholas 
son and heir of John Croft; Raines 
MSS. xxxviii, 583. She had in 1378 
been married to Edward son of Sir 
Thomas de Lathom the younger, lands 
in Layton being settled on them in that 
year with remainders to John Boteler of 
Kirkland, Thomas son of John Boteler 
of Marton and John son of Nicholas 
Boteler; ibid. tog. See Lancs. Ing. 
p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 20, 141, and the 
account of Dalton in Lonsdale. Nicholas 
Croft was in possession in 14173 Dep. 
Keeper’s Rep. xxxiii, App. 14. 

23 To Stanlaw Abbey Richard son of 
Henry de Marton, with the consent of 
Margery his wife, gave half a selion in 
Marton fields, lying between land of 
William de Marton and Amery son of 
Simon de Thornton in Kettlesholme- 
wathwra; Whalley Couch. ii, 450. 

Hugh son of Richard le Rous of Marton 
had an oxgang of land tenanted by Henry 
de Whittington at a rent of 2d. He gave 
his whole right there to the canons of 
Cockersand about 1240, and made other 
grants; Cockersand Chartul. i, 151-3. 
Henry de Whittington son of William 
son of Swain appears also in Carleton. 

William le Boteler of Warrington 
granted to Thomas son of William de 
Bispham an oxgang of land in Marton 
for his homage and 24 oxgangs for 6d. 
rent ; Brockholes of Claughton D. 

Adam son of Hugh de Marton in 1283 
claimed lands in the township against 
Stephen and Paul sons of Henry de 
Marton ; De Banco R. 48, m. 56. 

The above-named Amery de Thornton 
appears more prominently at Thornton 
in Sefton. In 1282 Amy widow of John 
de Warton claimed dower in a messuage 
and oxgang of land in Marton against 
Amery de Thornton; ibid. 44, m. 32. 
In 1344 Alice widow of Amery de Thorn- 
ton claimed dower in a messuage, &c., in 
Great Marton and Great Layton against 
John de Bradkirk ; ibid. 337, m. 33. 

Joan widow of Richard de Thornton 
in’ 1292 complained that William le 
Boteler of Warrington had disseised her 
of common of pasture in Great Marton, 
but the jury found that the 6 acres of 


241 


POULTON-LE- 
FYLDE 


whose names occur in charters and pleadings,?> as 
also in the later inquisitions.?4 

LITTLE MARTON descended like Weeton,” 
the Earl of Derby holding it in the 1sth and 16th 
The manor was in 1522 farmed out to 
William Lache, William and Robert Whiteside and 
Thomas Gaulter for £9 65. 8d. a year.?6 
wards (about 1600) acquired by Molyneux of Sefton 
and sold in 1606 to Cuthbert Clifton, together with 


It was after- 


marsh referred to were in Layton ; Assize 
R. 408, m. 70d. 

“4 From a charter cited it appears that 
the Shireburnes held land in Great Marton 
in the 13th century. In 1492 Robert 
Shireburne held there of the Earl of 
Derby in socage ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
p-m. iii, no, 92. 

George Allen of Rossall in 1579 held 
two messuages, &c., in Marton of William 
Fleetwood in socage by 20d. yearly ; ibid. 
xiv, no. 80, They were held of Sir 
William Fleetwood in 1593; Lanes. Ing. 
p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 
197-9. 

In some cases the tenure is not stated, 
but the following held of the king by 
knight’s service : John Hulton of Darleys, 
1606; Robert Bamber, 1607, by the 
two-hundredth part of a knight’s fee— 
son and heir John, aged fifteen ; Anthony 
Veale, 1609 ; William Greenbank, 1610 
—cousin and heir Lawrence Greenbank, 
aged fifty; John Massey, 1618, by the 
two-hundredth part of a knight’s fee ; 
ibid. 68, 77, 163, 1773 ii, 117. 

John Butcher died in 1623 holding 
land in Great Marton, and leaving a son 
and heir John, aged thirty-four; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvi, no. 6. Thomas 
Butcher (grandson of Robert) died in 
1632 holding a messuage and lands in 
the same place; his heir was his brother 
William, aged nineteen; ibid. xxvii, 
no. 6. 

William Moore in 1632 held a mes- 
suage, &c., of Sir Paul Fleetwood ; Hugh 
his son and heir was two years old; 
Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 
861. 

25 The heir of Theobald Walter held 
three plough-lands in 1212 ; Lancs. Ing. 
ond Extents, i, 37. Sir Theobald le 
Boteler in 1249 had three plough-lands 
in Marton with Lynholme, worth £8 to 
£11 yearly ; ibid. 172, 173. Again in 
1285 it was found that Theobald le 
Boteler had had 24 oxgangs of land in 
Marton, each worth ros. in the hands of 
free farmers, with land in Lynholme 
worth 26s. 8d.; ibid. 265. 

Edmund Boteler held in 13023 ibid. 
316. John son of Edmund in 1324; 
Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 40. The Earl of 
Ormonde in 1346 held three plough-lands 
in Little Marton, and paid ros, rent (or a 
sor goshawk) for the fishery called Marton 
Mere ; Survey of 1346, p- 54. 

In 1355 Eleanor Countess of Ormonde 
leased to John Boteler the hamlet of 
Little Marton for ten years at a rent of 
10 marks, with right of turbary there ; 
Dods. MSS. xxxiii, fol. 425; liii, fol. 
86. 

In 1445-6 Sir Thomas Stanley held the 
three plough-lands and fishery, paying for 
the latter 20s. a year or a sor goshawk ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, 
no. 20, fol. 8. 

26 Derby Rental at Lathom. For the 
fishery in Marton Mere 10s. was paid to 
the king as formerly. 


31 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


the adjoining manor of Lytham.” It has since 
descended with the Clifton estates.” 

The PEEL in Little Marton was held by the 
Cliftons from the Earls of Derby long before they 
acquired the lordship ; thus in 1522 William Clifton 
paid £2 of old rent and {2 of increment.” 

In addition to the religious houses at Cockersand,” 
Whalley *' and Lancaster, Lytham Priory had pasture 
rights in Marton.” 

William Russell of Marton had a priest taken in 
his house in 1604, and a number of other residents 
were presented tothe Bishop of Chester as ‘suspected 
of relieving seminary priests and Jesuits.’ * 

Nicholas Sanderson of Great Marton and John his 
son registered smal] estates in 1717 as ‘ Papists.’ “ 


A house at Moss Side in Little Marton was 
licensed for Nonconformist worship in 1762 and it 
continued in use till the rise of Blackpool.* 

Services in connexion with the Church of England 
were held in the schoolroom, built about 1717, from 
1748 at latest, for in that year James Fisher was 
nominated to the ‘chapel of Marton’ by the vicar of 
Poulton. The church of St. Paul was built in 
1800 and consecrated in 1804; it has been 
considerably enlarged from time to time. A separate 
parish was assigned to it in 1892. The vicars are 
nominated by the vicars of Poulton.” A mission 
room is connected with it. 

There is a Wesleyan chapel at Moss Side, built in 
1872. 


BISPHAM 


BISPHAM WITH NORBRECK 


This small parish, definitely separated from Poulton 
in the 17th century, has become distinguished by 
the growth of Blackpool into a leading place among 
seaside pleasure resorts. The area is 3,983 acres, 
and the population in 1901 numbered 40,674, of 
whom all but a thousand were within the borough 
of Blackpool. 


LAYTON WITH WARBRECK 


in 17th-century documents! ; it was a peaty-coloured 
pool of water, discharging by a little stream which 
ran into the sea south of Fox Hall,’ a mansion of 
the Tyldesleys of Myerscough erected about 1660° 
and still standing in part. About 1730 the place 
began to be a local sea-bathing resort in the summer 
time,’ but William Hutton’s description of his visit 
to it in 1788 made it known through a much larger 


The Pool or the Blackpool in Layton often occurs 


Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 70, 
no. 60, 40; Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), 
iii, 50. 

5 See Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 80, 
no. 24, and the accounts of Lytham and 
Clifton. Sir Cuthbert Clifton in 1634 was 
stated to hold the manor of Little Marton 
and lands there (in reversion after the death 
of Alice Dowager Countess of Der!y) of 
the king as of his duchy by knigit’s 
service ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvii, 
no. 43. He held two messuages, &c. in 
the Peel as part of the same. 

™ Derby Rental at Lathom. William 
Clifton in his will (1537) desired his 
trustees to obtain a grant of the Peel for 
the benefit of his son Thomas; Mills 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 71. 

% The rentals 1451-1537 for Marton, 
Poolhouse, Hayholm in Bispham and 
Thornton are printed in the Cockersand 
Chartul. iii, 1266-7. 

31 The Whalley lands were acquired by 
Thomas Fleetwood in 1554 ; Pat. 2 Mary. 

33 William son of Adam de Marton 
gave the monks of Lytham entry for their 
cattle, &c., in the whole moss pertaining 
to the vill of Great Marton ; Lytham D. 
at Durham, 2 a, 2 ae, 4 ae, Ebor. no. 32. 
Richard son of Widiam, as lord of 
Marton, renounced all claim to common 
in Lithcarr lying between Marton and 
Lytham ; ibid. no. 35. Henry de Clifton 
gave a quitclaim on his part ; ibid. no. 36. 

SS Visit. P. at Chester Dioc. Reg. 

SM Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. Non- 
JUFITS) Q3y 107. 

S Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf.i, 152-9, 
with view. The house of Matthew 
Hoole (Hull) of Marton was licensed for 
Presbyterian worship in 1689; Hist. 
MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 232. This 
may have been the original seat, for 
Matthew son of Robert Hull of Little 
Marton Moss Side was baptized at 
Poulton in 1658; Regs. 


% Mr. Fisher was the schoolmaster of 
Thornton and was a native of Kendal ; 
Ch. P. at Chester Dioc. Reg. 

3% In 1804 George Hall was nominated 
by Bold Fleetweod Hesketh and others; 
Ch. P. For list of ministers see Fish- 
wick, op. cit. 60-2, In 18go there was 
a dispute as to the patronage. 

'It seems to be the Pool named in 
Cockersand charters c. 1250, and among 
the possessions of Sir William Boteler in 
14153; Lancs. Inz. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 
113. If so, it was called a ‘manor’ in 
1539 and later; see the account of 
Layton. Inthe Bispham registers of 1602 
are entries of Bamber of Pool and Cowban 
of Blackpool. Richard Bamber of Carle- 
ton about 1630 had a tenement ‘in le 
Pool commonly called Blackpool’ ; 
Riyalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 122. 

An account by Mr. C, Roeder is printed 
in Trans. Hist. Soc. (new ter.), xviii, 1, 
with map and views. 

2 It now forms the main sewer. The 
Pool proper was on the east side of the 
hall, about half a mile from the sea. 
It was gradually reclaimed, and had been 
turned into meadow land by 1788. 
*Pool,’ however, is often used for the 
mouth of a stream. 

The map of 1751 (by E. Bowen) in 
Mr. Roeder’s essay shows Marton Mere 
drained by the Pool, which is impossib:e. 

3 For an account of it see Fishwick, 
Bispham (Chet. Soc.), 195-14. After the 
Revolution it is said to have been used 
by its owners and other Jacobites as a 
rendezvous, being then in a lonely spot on 
the coast. There are many references to 
it in the Tyldesley Diary, with a view. 

Agatha Tyldesley of Blackpool, widow 
of Thomas Tyldesley, registered her estate 
as a ‘Papiet’ in 1717. She had an 
annuity of £20 out of the estate of her 
son Edward and a freehold house called 


a49 


Fox Hall; Estcourt and Payne, Engl. 
Cath, Nonjurors, 109. 

‘Hutton thought it ‘in ruins’ in 
1788. There is a description of its con- 
dition about 1837 in Thornber, op. cit. 
71-2. It was then divided into two 
dwellings, and part wae used for a beer- 
shop. The surviving part is used as a 
public-house. 

5 The old cottages in Blackpool ‘were 
formed of clay, plastered upon wattles, 
the roof and the whole fabric being sup- 
ported by crooks, and the intcrior open 
to the thatch, which was generally of 
rush in the place of straw; and they 
contained a large capacious chimney, 
above which was crected what was termed 
a sout loft, the depository of lum!cr, form- 
ing a canopy over the family hearth, 
Near the door, to keep out the cold air, 
was a “specre,’’ better known by the name 
of ‘God speed stoop,” perforated with a 
small light, to guard the door. These 
buildings fronted the south, a position so 
usual that, whatever views another aspect 
might command, this general custom was 
never broken’; ibid. 196. The turf 
stack and the dunghill stood before the 
door ; ibid. 201. 

The same writer (p. 199) states that 
the first habitation fitted up for visitors 
was a long thatched building owned by 
Ethart a Whiteside, c. 1750. Having 
married a Welsh woman «ho proved to 
be ‘the only cook in the place,’ he 
ventured to cater for the public and 
prospered for half a century. Every- 
thing had then to be brought from 
Poulton, there being no market or shop 
at Blackpool. 

In 1754 Pococke noted: ‘At Black- 
pool, near the sea, are accommodati:ne 
for people who come to bathe’; Travels 
through England (Camd. Soc.), ii, 6. 

An early inn sign is printed in Lancs, 
and Ches, Hist. and Gen. Notes, ii, 183. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


part of the country.® At that time about fifty houses 
were scattered along a mile of the sea bank from Fox 
Hall northward, and the visitors numbered about 4.00 
in the height of the season. ‘They were largely from 
Manchester. ‘The attractions were then as now the 
beach, the breeze and the bathing. Amusements were 
provided by strolling players who gave performances 
in a barn.” The development of the place was 
hindered by the selfish policy of house-owners who 
objected to the building of new dwellings lest their 
existing houses should suffer for lack of visitors,’ and 
by defective communication, the only approach being 
from Preston by roads unfit for vehicles.° 

A ‘commodious public room,’ furnished with 
books, magazines and papers, was erected about 1800." 
A free school was built in 1817" and a chapel of 
ease to Bispham in 1821.7 About 1825 there were 
three coaches to Preston daily and a daily postal 
delivery." An outbreak of cholera in 1832 raised 
the reputation of Blackpool, which was quite free 
from the plague.'* The Preston and Wyre railway 
brought passengers to Poulton in 1840, and six 
years later a branch line was formed to Blackpool 
itself ; a second and more direct line through Lytham 
was opened in 1861, and a third, through Marton, 
in 1903 for the summer traffic. 

These facilities have brought a continuously in- 
creasing number of visitors, and improvements in the 
town itself have kept pace with the requirements of 
the times. In 1847 water was supplied by the 
Fylde Waterworks Company—since 1898 taken over 
by a public board—and in 1853 gas was introduced 
by the local board. The electric light is now used in 
the principal streets. An electric tramway was 
opened in 1885. The Parade or Promenade along 
the sea front, one of the original features of the place, 
was extended and improved in 1870, when a formal 
opening took place. More recently it has been 
further extended and greatly increased in width, 
and now has a length of over 3 miles. The North 


BISPHAM 


Pier was opened in 1863, the Central Pier in 1868 
and Victoria Pier, South Shore, in 1893." The 
tower, which was formed in 1891 and rises about 
500 ft. from the ground, and the great wheel, about 
200 ft, in diameter, 1896, are other popular attrac- 
tions. Raikes Hall, first built about 1760," and the 
residence of the Hornbys from 1834 to 1860, was 
for that time the principal mansion. It was after- 
wards used in various ways, the grounds becoming 
pleasure gardens. Claremont Park was formed in 
1862. There are theatres and opera houses, winter 
gardens and other places of amusement ; also markets, 
hospitals, technical school and free libraries. ‘The 
cemetery, north-east of the town, was opened in 
1873. 

South Shore, formerly a separate village to the 
south of Blackpool,” has shared in the growth of the 
latter, and now forms one town with it. 

The Territorial force is represented by part of a 
battery of the 2nd West Lancashire Brigade of the 
Royal Field Artillery. 

Blackpool gives a name to one of the parlia- 
mentary divisions of the county. 

The agricultural land remaining in the parish is 
thus occupied  :— 


Arable Permanent Woods and 
land grass plantations 
ac. ac. ac. 
Bispham and 
Norbreck . 2004 946 I 
Blackpool . 315 1,465 4% 
515% 2,411 53 


The county lay fixed in 1624 provided that 
Bispham and Norbreck should pay £2 35. 4¢. and 
Layton with Warbreck {£2 6s. 64¢. when {100 
was levied upon Amounderness.” ‘The more ancient 
fifteenth required {1 55. 4d. and £1 75. 244. 
respectively, showing the same relative valuation.” 


® There were three editions : London, 
1804 ; Kirkham, c. 1805 ; Preston, 1817; 
Fishwick, Lancs. Lib. It was a small 
pamphlet of some fifty pages. He says: 
‘When I intended to visit it, with my 
family, I neither knew, nor could learn, 
any particulars respecting its appearance 
or accommodations,’ and desired to make 
its merits better known. He states that 
there was ‘neither hedge nor tree in the 
whole neighbourhood.’ 

7 These particulars are from Hutton. 
He ‘frequently visited the adjacent 
farmers for intelligence and found the 
people extremely civil and very com- 
municative.’ He was not impressed by 
the ‘Lancashire Witches.’ 

8 Thornber, op. cit. 216. 

® Hutton considered the roads good, 
‘safe and easy for the traveller,’ but they 
lacked milestones, so that owners of post 
chaises were able to overcharge. Thornber, 
on the other hand, referring to a little 
earlier time, says: ‘The highway to 
Preston was unpaved—in winter and in 
arainy summer it was next to impass- 
able; in fact, about sixty years ago 
[from 1837] the pack horse was the 
only mode of conveyance for grain or 
passengers from this quarter, and “¢ Darby 
and Joan” trotted to market and church 
beguiling the way in family chat on a 
sociable pillion’ ; op. cit. 208. In another 
Place (p. 293) he states that on account 


of the bad roads ‘carriages were not then 
in use ; in fact, carts in winter were laid 
aside about home. Miss Bold, on her 
way to Rossall Hall after her nuptials 
with Fleetwood Hesketh, esq. [1759], 
travelled attended by her bridesmaids on a 
palfrey covered with silver net trappings, 
a coach even at that period being too 
cumbersome for the soft nature of the 
highways, which were neither paved nor 
coated on the surface with gravel.’ 


A Manchester and Blackpool coach 


was advertised in 1783 ; Roeder. 
10 Preface to Hutton, Descr. of Black- 
pool (ed. 2)3 Baines, Lancs. Dir. ii, 


528. 
11 Thornber, op. cit. 230. 
12 Tbid. 231-3. Am attempt had been 


made as early as 1789 to provide a church 
building, but had failed ; ibid. 209. The 
morals of the people were low; ibid. 
203-4. Some illustrative anecdotes are 
given, ibid. 74, 77-9- Smuggling was 
carried on 3 pp. 205-6. 

13 Baines, Dir. ii, 528 ; in winter the 
post came every other day. ‘ Mr. Cooke, 
an American loyalist who was driven 
from his home during the revolutionary 
wars to labour for a livelihood at Black- 
pool, was the originator of this post, 
which commenced by travelling to Kirk- 
ham three times each week during the 
season. .. . Mr. Cooke was for many 
yeare the Beau Nash of Blackpool ; he 


243 


died in 1820 and was buried at Bispham’ ; 
Thornber, op. cit. 237. 

14 [bid. 225. A description of the 
place about 1830 is given in Whittle’s 
Marina, with a view. 

15 Steamers sail in the season not only 
for short pleasure trips but for the Isle of 
Man, Barrow and other places. 

16 Tradition relates ‘how a Mr. Butcher 
of Blackpool suddenly sprang into conse- 
quence from comparative poverty and 
commenced the building of Raikes Hall 
to the astonishment of his neighbours, 
who, ignorant whence the necessary 
funds were obtained, conceived with some 
probability that his constant visits to 
the sea shore had been rewarded by the 
discovery of the wealth of three sisters 
lost in a vessel which was wrecked about 
the time upon the coast... . His son, 
a wretched hypochondriac, as if conscious 
that he had no title to the wealth he in- 
herited, shunned the light of day and was 
tormented with the horrible fancy that 
an industrious cordwainer had taken up 
his abode and laboured at his daily task 
within his body, which (in his depraved 
imagination) he supposed to be of glass’ ; 
Thornber, op. cit. 259. 

7 The first house was built there in 
1819 ; Thornber, op. cit. 344. 

Wa Statistics from Bd. of Agric. (1905). 

18 Gregson, Fragments (ed. Harland), 
23. 19 Ibid. 19. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


The early history of the church ot 
CHURCH ALL HALLOWS™ ne It appears 
to have been a parish church reduced to 
the condition of a chapel after its grant to Lancaster 
Priory.” A chapelry it remained until the 17th 
century, being so described in the Church Survey of 
1650.” Both before and afterwards Bispham is 
found more or less clearly recognized as an independent 
parish,” and one Richard Higginson, citizen of 
London, ‘out of a pious sense of the great blindness 
of the parishioners,’ having rebuilt the church, offered 
in 1658 to provide a free school and to settle £L4oa 
year ‘towards the maintenance of such godly and 
painful preacher of the Gospel as shall be from time 
to time settled there.’ The church appears to have 
been but irregularly served, either then or after the 
Restoration, when it again became a chapel under 
Poulton, being so described at the bishop’s visitation 
in 1677. Ten years later, however, it was called 
‘the parish church of Bispham.’* No Act of 
Parliament seems to have been obtained. 

That the patron of Poulton concurred in, or more 
probably obtained the separation which gave him an 
additional piece of patronage, is shown by the gifts 
of Richard Fleetwood, which in 1717 constituted 
the greater part of the endowment. The certified 
income at that time was only £8 a year.” The 
present income is said to be £200 year.” Mr. C. H. 
Fleetwood-Hesketh is the patron. 

The church stands at the north end of the village, 
and is a stone building erected in 1883 on the founda- 
tions * of an older structure. It consists of chancel, 
with organ chamber on the north and vestry on the 
south side, wide aisleless nave, south porch and west 
tower. The building is of a rather plain Gothic 
style with rough stone facings and blue slated roof, and 
the tower, which is 61 ft. high, has angle pinnacles. 
No authentic record has been preserved of the old 
church, but that a structure of some importance 
stood here in the 12th century is evident from the 
Norman doorway which still remains within the 
south porch. The church as rebuilt by Richard 
Higginson is said to have consisted of a chancel,” 
nave, south porch and a low but strong west tower and 


to have been constructed of red sandstone from Furness, 
It had a double gabled roof supported at the junction 
of the gables by a row of black oak crooks, or piers 
down the centre,” and the east window was of tines 
narrow lights. The pews were of black oak, and there 
was a gallery at the west end. This building, how- 
ever, was unroofed and gutted in 1773, practically only 
the tower and the Norman arch being left untouched 

and a new wide aisleless nave erected. The chancel 
seems at the same time to have been either curtailed 
or pulled down altogether. The 18th-century church 
finally gave place in 1883 to the Present building. 
No sufficient evidence exists to enable us to trace 
the development of the old plan, but the position of 
the tower, which is considerably to the south of the 
centre line of the nave, suggests that the mediaeval 
building was a narrow aisleless church, occupying 
approximately the south half of the present nave, its 
south wall being in the same position. The position 
of the Norman door further suggests that the mediaeval 
church was largely a rebuilding of the 12th-century 
one, a tower being added on the west end, and in later 
times the structure being enlarged northward by a 
widening of the nave. During the demolition of 
1883 the head of a three-light window, apparently 
belonging to the 17th-century building, was found 
in one of the walls, and it is now built into the 
north wall of the porch. The Norman arch appears 
to have stood untouched till 1883, when it was 

pulled down, the stones numbered, and rebuilt again 

in its original position, It had been long covered 

with whitewash, and when this was removed it was 

discovered that the stones forming the middle order 

had carved upon them the signs of the Zodiac." 

The crab, the bull, the virgin could be easily 

recognized, the scales and the scorpion were less 

distinct, and the rest were almost defaced. The 

arch consists of three orders, the inner one being 

quite plain and the outer carved with the cheveron 

ornament. The two outer orders spring from circular 

shafts with cushion capitals and moulded bases, Un- 

fortunately in the rebuilding the whole of the stone- 

work was rechiselled and the Zodiacal carving was 

entirely recut.” 


were granted by private benefactors and 


20 This dedication is witnessed in 1530 
by the will of George Allen of Rossall ; 
Fishwick, Poulton (Chet. Soc.), 126. 

21In the charters it is sometimes 
called the ‘church’ and sometimes the 
‘chapel’ of Bispham; e.g. Lanc. Ch. 
i, 117, 124. It was the former in 1196 ; 
Final Conc. i, 6. In a grant by William 
le Boteler apparently early in the reign 
of Henry III. Bispham is distinctly 
called the mother church of Layton; 
Lance. Ch. ii, 436. 

23 Commonw. Ch. Surv. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), 151. It was then 
considered to have been a parish church 
in former times, with two townships, and 
the inhabitants desired that they might 
again be made a parish and have a 
competent maintenance allowed, the 
minister at that time having only the 
Easter dues, worth about £5. 

% For example, in 1646 ‘the rectory of 
All Hallows in the Chapelry of Bispham’ ; 
Plund. Mins. Accts. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and 
Ches.), i, 28. 24 Thid. ii, 221. 

25 In the record of the gift of £10 a 
year by Richard Fleetwood ; Ch. Papers 


at Chester. 2 
In 1686 a return of ‘the minister and 


churchwardens of the parish of Bispham’ 
to the bishop’s articles of inquiry gives 
some interesting particulars, The fabric 
of the church was ‘in good repair and 
decency’; there were a stone font, with 
cover, a communion table, with carpet 
and linen cloth, two cups and a flagon, 
and a fair eurplice. There was neither 
vicarage house nor glebe land. The 
minister resided and was of sober life, 
bidding and observing holy days and fasts. 
The schoolmaster instructed his scholars 
in the catechism of the Church of 
England. The parish clerk was ‘chosen 
by the minister and approved by the 
parish.’ Similar replies were made in 
later years. In 1725 Mr. Albin ad- 
ministered the sacrament five times a year. 

% Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 398 ; land given by Richard Fleetwood 
was worth {£5 a year, Easter dues £3, 
and in 1687 a rent-charge of £10 had 
been given by the patron. There were 
four churchwardens, two chosen by the 
minister and two by the parish. It is 
noteworthy that Gastrell says nothing as 
to the former dependence of Bispham on 
Poulton or as to the patronage. ‘ 

2% Manck. Dioc. Dir. Augmentations 


244 


Queen Anne’s Bounty, invested in the 
purchase of Layton tithes; Fishwick, 
Bispham, 27. 

8 With an extension eastward. 

29 Mr. Fleetwood’s own chancel’ is 
mentioned in 1705. 

8 Fishwick, Hist. of Bispham, 28. 
Thornber, however, in his Hist, of Black- 
pool, 320, states that ‘a row of semi- 
circular arches supported on three plain 
round pillars ran from the chancel to the 
font,’ and says his description of the 
church is based on the authority of two 
parishioners who had worshipped in the 
old building. But there may be some 
confusion here with Whitaker's account 
of Poulton Church (Richmondshire, ii, 
441-2). Thornber further states, however, 
that the new roof in 1773 was formed ‘by 
raising the walls with the materials of 
the displaced pillars.’ 

31 There are fourteen stones, the two 
springers being carved with a cheveron 
ornament. : 

32 The carvings are very good specimens 
of modern sculpture, but the lose of the 
original 12th-century work is greatly to 
be deplored. 


BispHam Cuurcu: Norman Doorway (RE-ERECTED) 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


An ancient stoup of roughly hewn stone, which for 
many years lay in the churchyard, has been built into 
the north wall of the tower in the interior, and on 
the north wall of the nave are four 18th-century 
brasses to members of the Veale family of Whinney 
Heys, and a chest in the vestry has the initials of the 
four churchwardens, together with the figure 12, 
probably for 1712.3 

There is one bell cast from two older ones by 
Mears & Stainbank in 1883. 

The plate consists of a chalice of 1608, in- 
scribed ‘The gift of Ann, daughter to John 
Bamber, to ye churche of All Hallows in Bispham. 
Delivered by John Corrit 1704’; a. silver-gilt 
chalice of Sheffield make, 1908, and a plated paten 
and flagon. 

The register of baptisms begins in 1599, but 
after 1603 nearly thirty years are missing, after 
which the entries continue till 1652, and are then 

“wanting till 1661. They are also missing between 
October 1670 and June 1672. There is no register 
of marriages till 1632, and between 1645 and 1697 
only one marriage is recorded. The burials begin 
in 1632, but are missing between 1651 and 1678.34 
The first five volumes (1599-1754) have been 
printed. 

The churchyard has been twice enlarged, on the 
north-west in 1888 and on the south-west in 1902. 
On the south side is a sundial on a stone shaft, which 
is probably a portion of the old churchyard cross. It 
stands on two steps, the lower one of which is circular 
and the second octagonal on plan. The plate bears 
the date 1704, together with the motto ‘Die dies 
Truditur,’ and the name of John Hull and that of 
the maker, Jo" Heblethwaite. John Hull was probably 
the donor of the dial, the initials I.H. being carved 
on the north side of the stone shaft. On the west 
side, nearer the bottom, are the initials R.B. roughly 
cut in an upright position.*¢ 


BISPHAM 


The following have been curates 37 and vicars or 
rectors :— 
oc. 1598 Michael Rigmaiden 38 
oc. 1610 — Walkden 
oc. 1614 Robert Brodbelt *° 
oc. 1634-44 Robert Freckleton 4 
oc. 1646 John Sumpner *? 
oc. 1648 John Fisher 48 
oc. 1651-4 John Berkeley 44 


?1674 Robert Wayte * 

1690 Thomas Riley 48 

1692 Thomas Sollom 47 

1693 Jonathan Hayton ‘8 

21725 Christopher Albin, B.A.49 (Brasenose 

Coll., Oxf.) 

1753 Roger Freckleton, M.A.5 (Emmanuel 
Coll., Camb.) 

1760 Ashton Werden, LL.B.*! (T.C.D.) 

1767 John Armetriding, B.A. (Trinity Coll., 
Camb.) 

1791 William Elston, B.A.52 (Brasenose Coll., 
Oxf.) 

1831 Charles Hesketh, M.A.® (Trinity Coll., 
Oxf.) 

1837 Bennett Williams, B.A.°4 (Queen’s Coll., 
Oxf.) 

1850 Henry Powell © 

1857 William Abraham Mocatta, M.A.5é 
(T.C.D.) 

1861 James Leighton 5” 

1874 Charles Stead Hope, M.A.58 (Sidney 
Sussex Coll., Camb.) 

1876 Francis John Dickson, M.A.5® (Trinity 
Coll., Camb.) 

1885 George Leighton, M.A. (Dur.) 


The school above named, which was not the 
first,°° was founded in 1659.5! Provided by a 
Puritan, it is noteworthy that it was in 1689 
licensed as a meeting-place for Presbyterians. They 


33 The inscription reads; RB | TB | 
IB | AG| CW. 12, The chest appears 
to be of 18th-century date. 

84 Fishwick, op. cit. 71. 

35 Lancs. Parish Reg. Soc. Publ. xxxiii 
(1908). Transcribed by W. E. Robinson. 

86 These are said to be the initials of 
Robert Brodbelt, parish clerk 1678-1715, 
cut by him in hours of leisure while 
testing on the steps. He was what is 
known as a ‘character.’ 

57 Some of the earlier names are taken 
from Fishwick, op. cit. 37-66, where 
biographical notices will be found. He 
also gives William Silcock, curate in 1530, 
and William Corwyn, 1552, attesting the 
scanty list of church goods (ibid. 25). 
From the visitation lists at Chester 
—— Souters appears to have been there 
in 1554 and Thomas Hankinson in 1562. 

88 Visit. List at Chester Dioc. Reg. 

39 Hist, MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 9 3 
he was ‘no preacher,’ In 1604 there 
was communion only once a year—at 
Easter ; Visit. Papers at Chester. In 1605 
the curate was presented to the bishop 
for nonconformity, but he said that he 
observed the Book of Common Prayer 
and would do so ; ibid. 

4° He served Lytham also at one time ; 
Mise. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), i, 
124. He died in 1674, being described 
as ‘minister of Bispham.’ The ministers 
recorded down to 1674 may have been 
acting for him. 


41 See the account of Poulton Church. 

42 In the Commonwealth period an in- 
come of {50 a year was given to the 
minister of Bispham out of the sequestered 
estates of Royalists, Sumpner being there 
in 1646 3 Plund, Mins. Accts. i, 13. 

43 He signed the Agreement of the 
People as pastor, but had gone before 
1650. 

44 Appointed in 16513; Plund. Mins. 
Acts. i, 104, 142. 

45 In the visitation list of 1674 he is 
called Robert Wayte alias Ward, curate ; 
and in 1677 he showed letters of orders— 
deacon 1668 and priest 1674—but no 
licence. He died in 1689. 

46 No curate occurs in the lists of 1689 
and 1691, so that Riley’s tenure was very 
brief. 

47 From this time the nominations of 
the curates have been preserved in the 
diocesan registry at Chester, Richard 
Fleetwood and his successors being patrons, 

48 He was resident and held no other 
benefice, according to replies to articles 
of inquiry 1703-12. He died in 1728. 

49 Pedigree in Fishwick, op. cit. 55. 
This incumbent, who was acting (perhaps 
as curate) in 1723 and as ‘ minister’ in 
1725, is commemorated by a brass plate 
in Bispham Church and a tombstone in 
Poulton Church. He died in 1753. 

50 He had been curate of Maghull. 

51 In 1762 he resided at Poulton ; he 
had no other benefice. 


245 


52 Nominated by his father, Thomas 
Elston of Blackpool. For an anecdote of 
him see Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. 
i, 125. 

53 Also vicar of Poulton ; afterwards 
rector of North Meols. 

54 Had licence of non-residence in 
1847. Became rector of Bramshall. 

55 He had been a missionary in India, 
and in 1857 became vicar of Bolton-le- 
Moors, &c. 

56 Afterwards vicar of St. Thomas’, 
St. Helens. 

57 Formerly a missionary in India ; 
rector of Harpurhey 1884. 

68 Vicar of Holy Trinity, Southport, 
1876-1909. 

59 Vicar of Ribchester 1885. 

60 Fishwick, op. cit. 67. 

61 End. Char. Rep. for Bispham. The 
founder charged £30 for maintenance on 
lands, &c., which had belonged to the 
Dean and Chapter of St. Paul’s, so that 
the endowment failed at the Restoration. 
His widow Elizabeth (who married John 
Amherst) gave £200 for the school, so 
that all might not be lost, and land was 
purchased in Layton. This became very 
valuable owing to the growth of Black- 
pool, and the £200 is represented by 
nearly £10,000 in consols, yielding £250 
a year. 

68 Hist, MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 
232. : 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


probably obtained another building, the existence of 
which was remembered in 1837.° 

The Wesleyans and the Congregationalists™ now 
have churches within the township of Bispham. 

Apart from educational and re- 
ligious benefactions the only charities * 
endowed are the Foxton Dispensary 
and the Victoria Hospital, both of recent foundation 
in Blackpool. The former is due to a bequest of 
£6,000 in 1878 by Mrs. Catherine Dauntesey 
Foxton of Agecroft Hall; the dispensary in Clifton 
Street, Blackpool, is for the benefit of the poor of the 
borough and of the parish of Poulton. The endow- 
ment fund of the hospital amounted to £5,422 in 
1898. 


CHARITIES 


BISPHAM-WITH-NORBRECK 


Biscopham, Dom. Bk. ; Byspham, 1326. 

Norbrec, 1195. 

This composite township stretches along the coast 
for about 3 miles, and has an area of 1,624 acres,' 
including 1,1194 acres in Bispham and 504} in 
Norbreck. The church lies close to the eastern 
boundary, about the centre of the township, with the 
village of Bispham a little to the south of it. A small 
detached part of Bispham lay at the south end of 
Layton ; it was called Bispham Hawes, and was 
added to Layton in 1883.7 Of the three hamlets, 
Little Bispham is inland to the north of the church,* 
with Norbreck to the west of it on the coast ; Great 
Bispham occupies the southern part of the township. 
Angersholme is a farm in Norbreck. The population 
of the present township was 985 in 1901. 

The coast-line is protected by hillocks about 50 ft. 
high, the inland portion being much lower. The 
principal road is that from Blackpool to Clevelevs, 
passing inland through the village and by the church. 
There 1s a road from the village to the shore, also 
one from Little Bispham to Norbreck. Formerly 
the principal ruad seems to have gone north along 
the coast, but it was undermined or washed away by 
the sea.* At present the electric tramway from 
Blackpool to Fleetwood passes along near the shore. 

The soil is variable, with subsoil of clay. The 
people are mostly employed in agriculture, but there 
was formerly some hand-loom weaving. 


8 Thornber, Blactp:ol, 322. Some 


Bd. Order 6910) and the loss of Bispham 


Most of the dwellers in Great and Little Bispham 
seem to have signed the Protestation of 1641.° 

By the churchyard there was a spring known as 
the Holy Well, now filled up.’ A crus. stood at 
Leys near Knowl, but has long disappeared.’ 

The township is governed by an urban district 
council of nine members. 

Earl Tostig in 1066 held Bispham 
and Layton as parts of his lordship of 
Preston or Amounderness. The former 
manor was assessed as eight plough-lands.* Afterwards 
it was divided; one moiety 
was given to the abbey of 
Shrewsbury and the other to 
the lord of Warrington. 

The former moiety, 
LITTLE BISPHAM and 
NORBRECK, was given to the 
monks by Roger of Poitou.? 
Between 1129 and 11 33 
Henry I ordered Stephen 
Count of Mortain to allow 
them to hold the moiety of 
Bispham free and quit of all 
customs, pleas and suits of the 
hundred court,'® and a few 
years later David, King of 
Scots, confirmed the moiety, to be held as freely as 
in the time of any of his predecessors.'' About 
1270 the Abbot and convent of Shrewsbury granted 
their vills of Norbreck and Little Bispham to the 
Abbot and convent of Dieulacres, who already held 
the adjacent Rossall, in fee farm at a rent of 8 marks." 
It thus became merged in the Rossall estate, and 
after the Dissolution was with it granted in 1553 to 
Thomas Fleetwood,'* and descended in the same 
way. A manor of Chornet named in the inquisition 
after his death as part of the Rossall estate does not 
occur again." 

The other moiety, GREAT BISPHAM, was a 
member of the lordship of Layton and descended 
with it."® It was purchased in 1539 by John Browne 
and sold by him in 1550 to Thomas Fleetwood,” 
who, as just stated, soon afterwards purchased the 
rest of Bispham as appurtenant to Rossall. 

Of the local families there is little on record. By 
a grant which may be dated about 1160 Robert 


MANORS 


Smrewssury Aasry. 
Assure a crowier in bend 
surmounted by a lion 
rampant or, all within a 
bordure of the second. 


5 Dugdale, Mon. iii, 519. Godfrey the 


account of the congregation, which seems 
to have died out about the end of the 
18th century, will be found in Nightingale, 
Lancs. Noncanf. i, 116, The chapel is 
noted by Gastrell, Not:ta, i, 398. About 
1730 the ‘teacher’ was Thomas Coorer. 
There were 126 families in the parish in 
1755, viz. 122 Protestants, 3 Presby- 
terians, and 1 Papist; Return to the 
Bishop of Chester. 

®4 The chapel, called Bethel, was built 
in 1834, after some years’ preaching. 
See Nightinzale, op. cit. i, 11g-21. 
There is a small endowment ; End. Char. 
Rep. 1899, p. 7. 

® An official inquiry was made in 
1898. The report, including a reprint 
of that of 1824, was published in 1899. 

1The Census Rep. 1901 gives only 
1,346 acres, including 5 of inlani water. 
‘There are also 4-3 acres of foresiore. 
The modern area differs from the ancient 
one by the inclusion of about 25 acres 
from Little Carleton in 18-7 (Loc. Govt. 


Hawes to Layton, about 300 acres. 

7 Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 14712. 

3 The houses round this are sometimes 
called Church Town. 

* William Hutton (in his Description of 
Blackpool) in 1788 records something of 
this and tells the story of the Penny 
Stone, then standing half a mile out to 
sea: ‘According to a tradition which was 
allowed by the whole country, a public- 
house some ages back stood by that stone 
upon land as firm and high as that on 
which we were ; and that iron hooks had 
been fixed to the stone to which travellers 
hung their horses while they drank their 
penny pots, from whence the stone 
acquired and still bears the name of Penny 
Stone.’ 

5 The list of names may be seen in 
Fishwick, Bispham (Chet. Soc.), 20-1. A 


township assessment dated 1706 is 
printed ibid. r25—6. 
6 Ibid. 24. 7 Tid. 128, 


5 ELC.H. Lacs: i, 2884. 
246 


Sheriff gave tithes of Bispham to St. 
Martin's Abbey, Sées ; Farrer, Lancs. Pipe 
R. 299. 

10 Tbid. 273. " Ibid, 274. 

' Dugdale, Mon. v, 629. Certain 
tithes in Layton are mentioned. Accord- 
ingly in 1291 the rent of £5 6s. 8d. from 
Norbreck and Bispham was recorded 
among the possessions of the abbey ; Pope 
Nich, Tax. (Rec. Com.), 309. After the 
Dissolution £7 65. 8d. was received from 
Bispham, Norbreck and Thelwall; Dug- 
dale, op. cit. iii, 528. 

Pat. 7 Edw. VI, pt. ix.  Littie 
Bispham and Norbreck were regarded as 
separate manors in 1622 ; Lancs, Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 315. 

' Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xii, no. 2. 

1 William Je Boteler of Warrington 
and Sibyl his wife in 1326 purchased two- 
thirds of an oxgang of land in Great 
Bispham ; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc, Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 64. 

See the account of Layton. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Abbot of Shrewsbury restored to William son of the 
daughter of Aschetil, as to the right heir, one plough- 
land in Bispham which the said Aschetil had held in 
the time of Henry I at a rent of 45. As this deed 
has been preserved among the Shireburne muniments, 
the 5 oxgangs of land purchased by Walter de Shire- 
burne from Roger son of Roger Noel and Maud his 
wife in 1310'* were probably part of the plough. 
land. The free rent of 2s. 6¢. subsequently paid 
agrees with this supposition.” 

Bispham gave a surname to residents. Inthe time 
of Henry III Richard de Bispham granted 2 oxgangs 
of land held of the Abbot of Shrewsbury to a nephew 
Adam, son of his brother Thomas, at a rent of 2d. 
in addition to the 12¢. which was payable to the 
abbot.” In 1411-12 it was found that a former 
Abbot of Dieulacres had purchased a messuage and 
1o acres in Bispham from Amery de Bispham without 
obtaining the royal licence.” 

Norbreck ” also provided a surname for residents,” 
but nothing definite is known of them. The Abbot 
of Shrewsbury and William de Bispham had some 
disputes in 1194 respecting the succession to 6 oxgangs 
of land in Norbreck.* In 1241 Richard de Dutton 
acquired 3 oxgangs of land in ‘ Norhicbiec supposed 
to be Norbreck—from Richard de Freckleton.* To 
the Abbot of Dieulacres were granted several parcels 
of land,” and he was in 1362 found to have acquired 
a messuage and 2 oxgangs of land in Norbreck from 
John de Leckhampton.” John Allen in 1490 claimed 
land, rent, &c., in Norbreck from Henry Pleasington,” 


BISPHAM 


and later the Allens were found to hold land there 
of the Fleetwoods of Rossall.” The same is true of 
other owners in that part of the township,” but in 
consequence of the alienations made by William 
Fleetwood of Layton lands in Great Bispham were 
usually said to be held of the king as of his duchy of 
Lancaster,®! 

In 1323 a complaint was made by William Boteler 
of the invasion of his turbary at Bispham by a number 
of the neighbouring landowners and tenants. These 
disputed the boundaries, stating that there were large 
moors and turbaries in the vills of Thornton, Carleton, 
Norbreck and Little Bispham, in which the plaintiff 
had no right, and when his men would have dug 
turves there Robert de Shireburne and the others 
prevented them.” 

Angotsmoss, where the monks of Dieulacres had 
and gave rights,** is identified with the present 
ANGERSHOLME in Norbreck.* 

In addition to Dieulacres, the priory of Lan- 
caster had land in alms in Norbreck*® and Great 
Bispham.*® 


LAYTON WITH WARBRECK 


Latun, Dom. Bk.; Laton, 1236; Layton, xvi 
cent. Warthebreke, 1279. 

This township includes Blackpool with its suburb 
of South Shore; it has an area of 2,359 acres, but 
was in 1894 extended so as to include the hamlet of 
Great Marton,’ the area of the new township of 


Y Shireburne D. at Leagram Hall. 

18 Final Conc. ii, 9. In 1312 Joan 
widow of Thomas de Singleton claimed 
the performance of an agreement as to 
2% oxgangs of land in Little Bispham 
against Roger Noel and Maud his wife, 
Maud being niece of Adam de Newton ; 
De Banco R. 193, m. 87. See the note 
on Angotsmoss below. 

19 Richard Shireburne of Stonyhurst 
died in 1513 holding lands in Little 
Bispham of the Abbot of Dieulacres by 
2s. 6d. rent; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
iv, no. 46. Thomas Shireburne held 
similarly in 1536 (ibid. viii, no. 33), but 
later the tenure was not recorded. For 
a 4s. rent see note 30 below. 

20 Lytham D. at Durham, 4a, 2 ae, 4ae, 
Ebor. no. 11. An Adam de Bispham 
gave all his landin Bispham and Norbreck 
to Shrewsbury Abbey; Chartul. (copy) 
in possession of W. Farrer, 70. 

*1 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 97- 
Amery occurs in 1354; Duchy of Lanc. 
Assize R. 3, m. 1. 

?2 Theobald son of Walter had 3 oxgangs 
of land in Norbreck and about 1190 
teleased them to the Abbot of Shrews- 
bury ; Chartul. 144. 

%3 They occur among the witnesses to 
local charters ; Dieulacres Chartul. (William 
Salt Soc.), 347, &c. Robert son of 
Thomas de Norbreck released to Shrews- 
bury Abbey all claim in 2 oxgangs of land 
in Norbreck formerly held by his grand- 
father Ellis; Chartul. 147. 

*4 Coram Rege R. 2, m. 13 

5 Final Conc. i, 79. 

% Richard le Boteler about 1260 
granted the monks certain lands which he 
had purchased from William son of 
Alexander de Norbreck in Houkberch, 
the Holme and Faldworthings at 1d. 
tent ; Dieulacres Chartul. 347. 

a Ing. p.m. 36 Edw. III (1st nos.), 


no. 120. The surname Leckhampton is of 
early occurrence in the Fylde district ; 
e.g. Dieulacres Chartul. 348-9. 

28 Final Conc. iii, 142 3; Thomas Allen 
was called to warrant. 

29 George Allen in 1580 held his land, 
&c., in Norbreck of Edmund Fleetwood 
(Rossall) in socage, but that in Great 
Bispham of William Fleetwood (Layton) ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xiv, no. 80. 
Similarly in 1593 ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. 
Soc. Lanes. and Ches.), i, 197-9. 

30 George Newsham of Newsham in 
1585 held six messuages, &c., in Bispham 
and Norbreck of Edmund Fleetwood in 
socage by a rent of 4s.3; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 88. 

In 1608 Thomas Tompson held part 
of a messuage, &c., in Norbreck of 
Edmund Fleetwood as of his manor of 
Norbreck by 18d. rent. Robert his son 
and heir was six years old ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc.), i, 134. 

31 William Bamber died in 1605 hold- 
ing a messuage and land of the king by 
the thousandth part of a knight’s fee. 
His heirs were two daughters, Anne (aged 
twenty-one) and Margaret (eighteen) ; 
ibid. i, 136. Richard Bamber in 1639 
held his messuage, &c., by the two- 
hundredth part of a knight’s fee; John 
his son and heir was thirty-five years of 
age ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xxx, no. 85. 

William Dobson died in 1623 holding 
a messuage and land in Great Bispham by 
the two-hundredth part of a knight’s fee, 
also in Warbreck by a like service ; he 
had common rights in Layton Hawes and 
Marton Moss. His heir was a son 
Richard, aged forty; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc.), iii, 435. : 

John Singleton died in 1623 holding a 
messuage and land by knight’s service ; 
his son and heir John was forty-eight 
years of age; Towneley MS. C8, 13 


247 


(Chet. Lib.), 1071. This family was of 
the Knowl in Great Bispham ; Fishwick, 
Bispham (Chet. Soc.), 115. 

John Salthouse, 1629, held similarly ; 
William his son and heir was thirty years 
old ; C8, 13, p. 1073. 

The tenure is not stated in the case of 
Richard Tinckler of Bispham, who died 
in 1627, leaving as heir a son Christopher, 
aged forty; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
xxvi, no. 15. 

32 Coram Rege R. 254, m. 42. The 
lords of the vills named were Adam son of 
William Banastre, Lawrence de Thornton, 
Randle Gentil, the Abbot of Dieulacres, 
Robert de Shireburne and Henry de 
Carleton. 

33. In 1252 William de Newton, son of 
Richard de Bispham and Hawise widow 
of Richard, allowed the monks free pas- 
sage for their sheep which came to be 
washed in Little Bispham Mere ; Dieu- 
lacres Chartul. 349, 351. A number of 
tenants—Sir William de Carleton and 
others—gave up all opposition to the 
claims of the monks in the common moss 
of Angotsmoss and Little Bispham mere, 
and William le Boteler afterwards gave 
a similar release 5 ibid. 350-1. 

34 Fishwick, Bispham, 127. 

35 Adam son of Robert de Norbreck 
granted all the land in the vill of Norbreck 
formerly held of him by Amery de Leck- 
hampton ; Lanc. Ch. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 435. 

8§ William le Boteler granted an 
oxgang of land formerly held by Adam 
son of James ; ibid. 436. 

1 Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 31813. 

By a further Order (36320) made in 
1896 the township or civil parish of 
Blackpool was extended to include the 
foreshore, 1,334 acres. The detached 
portion of Bispham known as Bispham 
Hawes was added to Layton township 
in 1883; Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 14712. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Blackpool—the name of Layton having been super- 
seded—being 3,601 acres.” The population of Black- 
pool was 47,348 in 1901.% The surface, though 
level, rises somewhat towards the east, and on the 
higher land is placed the village of Layton, just out- 
side Blackpool. Little Layton is about a mile to the 
north of it with Warbreck to the west. Whinney 
Heys is on the extreme eastern border. Layton 
Hawes was at the south end of the township ; horse 
races used to be held there yearly.‘ 

Roads spread out in all directions from the centre 
of the Blackpool shore line. There are three 
approaches to the town by railway: the old line, a 
branch from the Preston and Fleetwood railway 
turning off at Poulton with a terminus at Talbot 
Road, near the North Pier ; a second line, coming 
from the south through Lytham, with a station at 
South Shore and a terminus near the Tower; anda 
more direct line from Kirkham, having the same 
terminus, but a separate station at South Shore. 
Electric tramways run north to Fleetwood and south 
to St. Anne’s and Lytham. 

In 1837 the market house and market field were 
still known, though the chartered market and fair 
had long ceased ; the cross and stocks had also dis- 
appeared.» The cuckstool was still pointed out, and 
‘riding the stang’ had been a custom. The 
‘Layton miser,’ one John Bailey, was remembered.’ 

In 1296a ship from Ireland laden with victuals for 


the king was driven ashore at Layton ; the goods 
were seized by the people and the king’s men were 
ill-treated.*? 
In 1066 LAYTON was in the 
MANORS hands of Earl Tostig as part of his 
Preston lordship.” It was in later times 
a part of the Warrington fee, and in 1236 it was 
recorded that the heirs of Sir Emery le Boteler held 
three knights’ fees in Warrington and Layton ‘of 
ancient feoffment,’'' Layton being one fee.” Thus 
their tenure went back to the time of Henry I. 
Layton was composed of Great and Little Layton, 
Warbreck, the Pool, and Threfeld, and Great Bispham 
was the other member of the fee. These, or most of 
them, are spoken of as separate ‘manors.’ Great 
Marton was later added, though the tenure differed. 
In 1297 William le Boteler held Layton with its 
members (Great Marton not being included) of the 
Earl of Lancaster by knight’s service, rendering 10s. 
yearly."* This payment was for castle ward. The 
manors continued to descend in the same way as 
Warrington™ until 1539-43, when Sir Thomas 
Butler sold his Layton lordship, with Great Marton 
included, to John Browne, citizen and mercer of 
London,’® who in 1550 sold to Thomas Fleetwood," 
the purchaser of Rossall. It was given to his younger 
son William,!” who, however, afterwards transferred 
it in 1596 to his brother Edmund.” It descended 
like Rossall’® till 1841, when Sir Peter Hesketh 


3 Census Rep. 1901. This area in- 
cludes 7 acres of inland water, but not 
the 75 acres of tidal water (sea) and the 
foreshore. 

3 This includes 7,659 in the added 
portion of Marton. 

4 Thornber, Blackpool, 198. 

5 Thid. 270. 

6 Ibid. 2763; perhaps by ‘cuckstool’ 
the pond was meant. 

7 Ibid. 277. 

8-9 Cal, Pat. 1292-1301, p: 216. 

10 V.C.H, Lancs. i, 2884. 

"Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 145. 

12 Tbid. 1515 Layton was held in 
demesne. The fee appears to have been 
one of 10 plough-lands, made up thus— 
Layton 6, Great Bispham 4. 

13 Tbid. 289, 316. 

4 Survey of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 58; at 
that time 16s. 8d. was paid for castle 
ward and 6s, 8d. for sake fee. 

See also Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 40, 1953 ill, 8, 1225 
Lancs, Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i 113 5 ii, 
73, 825 Dep. Keeper's Rep. xl, App. 536 3 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, no. 13. 
The Layton estate appears from these 
to have been regarded as a provision for 
the widows or younger children of the 
lords of Warrington. In 1299 Isabel 
widow of Henry le Boteler claimed a 
messuage and 30 oxgangs of land in 
Layton as dower; De Banco R. 130, 
m, 219d. 

John de Haydock and Joan his wife 
put forward a claim to the manors in 
13573; Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 6, 
m,. 4d. 

15 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 12 
(1539), m. 313 the manors of Pool, 
Warbreck, Great Marton, Bispham and 
Little Layton, &c., are named. The 
remainder of the Layton estate appears 
to have followed in 1543 ; see Beamont, 
quoting Bold D., in Lords of Warrington 
(Chet. Soc.), ii, 454. Apart from their 


being named separately there is nothing 
to show that Pool and Warbreck were 
independent manors, 

16 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 14, 
m. 2763; John Browne and Christina his 
wife were deforciants, and the estate in- 
cluded the manors of Great Layton, 
Great Marton, Pool, Warbreck, Bispham 
and Little Layton, with messuages, lands, 
windmills, water-mills, dovecotes, rents, 
1oo acres of alder, &c., in the places 
named and also in Norcross, Trunnah, 
Holmes, Stalmine, Staynall, Hambleton 
and Rowall. £1,500 is the price named. 

Queen Mary in 1554 gave a confirma- 
tion of his estate to Thomas Fleetwood, 
the reason being that Sir Thomas Butler 
had been indebted to Henry VIII and 
had pledged and sold his manors in 
consequence ; Pat. 1 Mary, pt. ii, printed 
in Porter, Fylde, 306-7. 

Thomas Fleetwood died in 1576 hold- 
ing the manors of Great Layton, &c., of 
the queen as of her duchy by one knight’s 
fee; Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. xii, 
no. 2. 
7 Fishwick, Bispham (Chet. Soc.), 9, 
quoting Duchy of Lance, Plead. Eliz. 
Ixxxix, F 2. 

William Fleetwood in 1574 made a 
feoffment of his manors of Great Layton, 
Marton, Great Bispham, &c.; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 36, m. 181. 

A special commission as to the manor 
was issued in 1588 5 Lancs. and Ches. Rec. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ti, 343. 

18 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 59, 
m. 125. The deforciants were William 
Fleetwood and Jane his wife, and the sale 
included the manors of Great Layton, 
Great Marton and Great Bispham, with 
windmill, water-mill and open lands and 
moor, &c., in Layton and the neighbour- 
hood ; also the advowson of Poulton 
vicarage. 

A large number of messuages, with 
lands, &c., and rights of common, in the 
same hamlets and townships, were at the 


248 


same time sold to John Hulton and John 
Hodgson ; ibid. m. 320. John Hulton 
of Darleya died in 1606 holding lands in 
Great Layton, the Pool, Warbreck, &c., 
of the king in chief by knight's service ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 68. A small part of the same 
appears to have been acquired by John 
Hodgson, who died in 1630 holding a 
messuage in Great Layton and another 
in Little Layton, with common of pasture 
on the Hawea, &c. The tenure is not 
recorded, The heir was a grandson 
Richard (son of Henry son of John), who 
was sixtcen years old; Duchy of Lane. 
Ing. p.m. xxv, no. 1. Robert Hodgson, 
probably a younger son of John, held a 
messuage in a place called the Pool in 
Great Layton (i.e. at Blackpool), and 
died in 1627, leaving a son and heir John, 
aged sixteen, in 1634 ; ibid, xxvii, no. 62 ; 
Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 512. 
Richard Hodgson in 1630 held a messuage 
in Little Layton of Sir Paul Fleetwood 
and another in Great Layton of the king ; 
his heir, a brother William, died in 1631, 
leaving two daughters, Margaret wife of 
Richard Bamber and Jane wife of Thomas 
Elston ; ibid. 514. 

The feet of fines for 1574 and there- 
abouts show that William Fleetwood 
disposed of much of his estate in parcels. 

19 Edmund Fleetwood died in 1622 
holding the manors of Great Bispham, 
Layton and Marton of the king by the 
two-hundredth part of a knight's fee ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m, (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), iii, 315. The manors of Layton 
and Marton were in the hands of his son 
Sir Paul Fleetwood in 1653-4; Pal. of 
Lance. Feet of F. bdle. 153, m. 30, Some 
later references may be added: 1695— 
the manors of Great and Little Layton, 
Warbreck, Great Bispham and Great 
Marton, &c., by William Fleetwood and 
Margaret his wife; ibid. 235, m. 75§- 
1733—Layton with Warbreck, Great 
Marton, &c., by Edward Fleetwood ; 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Fleetwood sold to Thomas Clifton of Lytham,” and 
the late Lady Drummond was lady of the manor. 

Edward Fleetwood of Rossall in 1712 claimed the 
right to keep a court leet and court baron for the 
manor or pretended manor of Layton, but met with 
some opposition.” 

‘In 1835 the sole manorial lord of the parish 
was Peter Hesketh Fleetwood, who held a court leet 
and baron for Layton-with-Warbreck and Great 
Bispham in October at Blackpool, when the usual 
officers were appointed.’ The courts have long 
ceased to be held. 

Layton Hawes, about which the Botelers had 
disputes with the Priors of Lytham,” was inclosed 
under an Act passed in 1767." 

Henry III granted a charter to William le Boteler 
in 1257 for a weekly market at Layton on Wednes- 
day and an annual fair on the eve, day and morrow 
of St. Andrew (29 November-1 December).” Free 
warren in the demesne lands was added by Edward I 
in 1285.%° These rights were called in question in 
1292” and 1498,” but approved. 


BISPHAM 


LAYTON HALL, the old manor-house, appears 
to have been sold by William Fleetwood in 1592 to 
Edward Rigby of Burgh in Duxbury,” who died in 
1627 holding it of the king by knight’s service, 
together with the tithes of grain in Great and Little 
Layton, Warbreck and Blackpool, and various mes- 
suages and lands,** Somewhat later the hall seems to 
have become the chief residence of the Rigbys.™ 
After the sale of their estates in 1720 it was pur- 
chased by William Clayton of Adlington, and he in 
1736 conveyed it to trustees for Thomas Clifton 
of Lytham. It has since remained in this family.” 
Manorial rights remaining, if any, are of no 
value. 

FOX HALL has been mentioned in the account 
of Blackpool above given. 

In Little Layton the Botelers of Marton had an 
estate at one time,** which probably reverted to the 
lords of the manor. The chief estate there in later 
times was WHINNEY HEYS, purchased by James 
Massey (of Carleton) from William Fleetwood in 
1575 “and descending to his heirs the Veale family.” 


ibid. 312, m. 46. 1759—Layton with 
Warbreck, &c., by Fleetwood Hesketh ; 
ibid. ; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 591, m. 9. 

20 Fishwick, op. cit. 18. 

31 Ibid. 16 ; the opponents were free- 
holders of Bispham. 

® Ibid. 5. 

28 From these disputes it appears that 
the Hawes, chiefly within Layton, ex- 
tended into Lytham. 

Quenilda daughter of Richard son of 
Roger gave the monks of Lytham her 
share in the Hawes of Lytham; D. at 
Durham, 2 a,2 ae, 4.ae, Ebor. no.67. The 
boundary must have been uncertain, for 
William le Boteler about 1230 confirmed 
the two-thirds of the pasture within the 
Hawes of Lytham which Maud de Stock- 
port had given with her body and Quenilda 
daughter of Richard son of Roger had 
further given ; ibid. no. 66, The bounds 
were finally settled in 1272; ibid. Misc. 
NO. 5454. 

The fifth part of half a plough-land in 
the Hawes between Layton and Lytham, 
within the fee of William le Boteler, was 
before 1249 granted to Cockersand Abbey 
by Thomas de Beetham and Amiria his 
wife, and the gift was in 1271 confirmed 
by William ; Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 158. 

The Prior of Lytham complained in 
1338 that Sibyl widow of William Boteler 
of Warrington had seized an anchor at 
Kelgrimoll (at Greenskar pot), but she 
asserted that it was taken within Great 
Layton ; De Banco R. 315, m. 287. 

In 1509 (?) the prior complained that 
John Bispham had trespassed, but the 
defendant said he had used the Hawes, 
containing 1,000 acres of land within 
the manor of Layton belonging to Sir 
Thomas Boteler and adjacent to Lytham ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Sessional Papers, bdle. 4. 

For a more violent dispute in 1531-2 
see Duchy Plead. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 206 3 li, 9. 

* Lancs, and Ches. Anti. Soc. vi, 122. 

The award was made in 1769 ; Lancs, 
and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc.), i, 56. 

* Cal. Chart. R. 1226-57, p. 476 : 
the name is wrongly given as Robert, 

%6 Thid, 1257-1300, p. 326. 

™ Plac, de Quo Warr, (Rec. Com.), 386. 
Wreck of the sea was also claimed, as 
having been an appurtenance of the lord- 


7 


ship from the time of William the 
Conqueror. 

38 Pal. of Lanc. 
Hen. VII. 

29 Pal. of Lane. Feet of F. bdle. 54, 
m. 152. The hall is not specially named, 
the estate being described as three mes- 
suages, &c., in Great and Little Layton, 
the Pool and Warbreck, together with the 
tithes and fisheries at Marton and Layton. 

30 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvi, no. 5. 
In 1651 Jane Rigby, daughter of Alex- 
ander Rigby of Burgh, farmed the demesne 
of Layton ; Cal. Com. for Comp. iii, 1650. 
A pedigree was recorded in 1664, the 
family being described as ‘of Layton’; 
Dugdale, Visit, (Chet. Soc.), 244. 

31 In 1671 Alexander Rigby of Layton 
held messuages, &c., in Great and Little 
Layton, Marton, Warbreck and Pool, 
also, though no ‘manor’ is named, 
views of frankpledge in Great and Little 
Layton and Pool (i.e. Blackpool) ; Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 206, m. 32. 
An account of this branch of the Rigby 
family has been given under Duxbury ; 
see also Fishwick, op. cit. 94—105, where 
there is a pedigree. The estates were 
sold under a Private Act 1 Geo. I, 
cap. 45. 

82 Ibid. 105. The manor was held by 
Lady Drummond, widow of T. H. Clifton 
of Lytham. 

33 Richard Boteler in 1323 held land, 
&c., in Little Layton occupied by Roger 
le Waleys and Agnes his wife. The 
tenure is not recorded ; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents, ii, 145. Earlier still, in 1303, 
Richard Boteler, together with Adam de 
Walton and Alice his wife, called upon 
the custodee of William son and heir of 
Nicholas Boteler (of Rawcliffe) to warrant 
to them, inter alia, the third part of three 
messuages and 3 oxgangs of land in 
Little Layton claimed as dower by Mabel 
widow of Nicholas; De Banco R. 144, 
m. 141. In 1315 Nicholas del Marsh 
and Ellen his wife claimed dower in six 
messuages and 6 oxgangs of land in 
Little Layton against Agnes widow of 
Nicholas Boteler, who called upon Richard 
son of Richard Boteler to warrant her ; 
ibid. 209, m. 252. 

Two other pleas may be cited. In 1320 
Maud widow of Ralph de Bickerstath 
claimed dower in 100 acres of land against 


249 


Writs Proton. 13 


Alice widow of Geoffrey de Cuerdale and 
her daughters Agnes and Margery, while 
in 1322 she claimed similarly against 
Thomas Curwen, who held three mes- 
suages and half an oxgang of land ; ibid. 
235, m. 166; 244, m. 15, 135d. 

Cecily widow of Richard le Boteler was 
in 1336 the wife of Thomas de Molyneux, 
and claimed her dower in Little Layton 
against the above-named Roger le Waleys 
and Agnes his wife ; ibid. 306, m. 268 d. 

34 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 37, 
m. 108. The property is described as 
messuages, windmill, &c., in Little Layton 
and Great Bispham. Massey probably 
acquired further lands; he died before 
1600, when his son John had to defend 
his title against claims put forward by the 
Fleetwoods, who were desirous of limiting 
the extent of the sales made by William 
Fleetwood ; Fishwick, op. cit. 10-13, 
quoting Duchy of Lanc. Plead. 42 Eliz. 
Fr4. 

John Massey of Layton recorded a 
pedigree in 16133; Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 
79. He died in 1618 holding the capital 
messuage called Whinney Heys in Little 
Layton of the king as of his duchy 
by the twentieth part of a knight’s fee, 
and other lands, &c., there ; Lancs. Ing. 
pom. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 
117-19. His heirs were his daughters 
Ellen wife of Edward Veale, aged thirty- 
six, and Alice widow of Thomas Bamber, 
aged thirty-four. The former had four 
sons, of whom the oldest, John, was 
about twelve years old. 

35 For an account of them see Fishwick, 
op. cit. 81-93, with a pedigree. The 
succession appears to be thus: Edward 
Veale, d. 1650 —s. John, d. 1669 —s. John, 
d. 1704 -s. Edward, d. 1723 —sister 
Dorothy, d. 1748. Another sister, Sarah, 
married Edward son of Richard Fleetwood 
of Rossall, Their daughter Margaret 
married Roger Hesketh, who inherited. 

A letter of Edward Veale’s, lamenting 
‘the miserable distress of this poor 
Fylde .. . by reason of the fearful infec- 
tion’ of 1631, is printed in Hist. MSS. 
Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 47. About the 
same time he arrested a man for taking 
a hawk, called a merlin, belonging to 
Edmund Fleetwood, who proved unwilling 
to prosecute; ibid. He was a member 
of the Presbyterian Classis established in 


32 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


A pedizrce was recorded in 1664.% Mr. Thornber 
says: ‘The traditions of the neighbourhood intro- 
duce us to John Veale, esq., 
of Whinney Heys, as main- 
taining this character [of the 
plain old English gentleman) 
during the eventful periods of 
1715 and 1745, when he 
acted as a magistrate in the 
county. His lady, Mrs. 
Dorothy Veale, with thrifty 
care, superintended the labours 
of her household and en- 
couraged by the presence of 
herself and family the inno- 
cent mirth and hilarity of her 9°" 

dependants. From what I 

can gather of the pursuits of the Rigbys of Layton 
Hall the family group, partaking of the boisterous 
mirth and sports too generally practised by the 
Cavalier party of the unfortunate Charles and his 
son, formed a striking contrast to the domestic 
arrangements of Whinney Heys; the one family 
employing the fong winter’s night in useful occupa- 
tions, enlivened with cheerful conversation, the 
other, according to stories still [1837] repeated, in 
gambling, cards, dice and the drunken bowl.’ The 
estate passed by marriage to the Fleetwoods of 


Verate of Whinney 
Heys. Argent on a bend 


sahi. three calves passant 


can be given of them.” \Warbreck occurs as a sur- 
name.” Lancaster Priory *’ and Cockersand Abbey “ 
had land in the township. 

Something has been related above 
concerning the growth of BLACK- 
POOL.” A local board of nine 
members was formed in 1853 under an Improvement 
Act®; in 1871 the number 
of members was increased to 
eighteen.“ Five years later, 
by charter 21 January 1876, 
the town was incorporated, 
and the council was to consist 
of a mayor, six aldermen and 
eighteen councillors, chosen 
from six wards.6 In 1879 
the municipal boundaries were 
extended to include South 
Shore and parts of Marton 
and Bispham.® In 1894 the 
part of Marton within the 
borough was united to Layton, 
and the whole became one 
township, Blackpool, the old 
names and limits being obli- 
terated. An increase in the 
governing body was made in 1898, and the council 
now consists of a mayor, twelve aldermen and thirty- 


BOROUGH 


Boroven or Brace- 
root. Barry wary of 
six sable and or a sea- 
gull volant proper, on a 
chief argent a thunder- 
bolt between a fleur de 


lis and a lion rampant 


gules. 


Rossall. 


A fev other estates occur, :ut no connected history 


1646; Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1868), i, 228. 
A grandson, Edward Veale, wis N ncon- 
formist minister at Wapping, dying in 1708. 

36 Dugdale, /‘isi2. (Chet. Soc.j, 321. 

7 Blackps:l, 87. In a list ot the in- 
habitants of the parish compiled about 
1686—the whole number was 385—the 
first place was taken by Alexander Rigby, 
esq., his three daughters, ten menservants 
and three maidservants ; and the second 
by Joha VWeaie, gent., his wife, mother, 
two menservants and two maidservants. 

3* Robert Lawrence of Ribbleton, 15 24, 
had land in Layton; Duchy of Lanc. 
Inq. F-m. v, no. $7. 

Whoiam Smith died in 1602 holding 
eight mevsuages, &c., in Little Layto:, 
aiso others in Thornton and Ribbleton— 
perhaps the Lawrence estate—and leaving 
a grandson and heir Alexander Smith (son 
of Henry son of William), aged fifteen. 
The Layton lands were held of Edmund 
Fleetwood as of his manor of Great 
Layton ; ibid. xvii, no. 22. 

Lawrence Cowborne of Frecketon held 
messuagesand land in Laytonax! Bis: am 
in 1604 of the Earl of Derby ty 44. rent 
or (? by correction) of the king as of his 
duchy by the fortieth part of a knight's 
fee and 24.4, rent; Laces. Inz. p.m. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 32, 45. 

The Bamters, who occur in neigh- 
bouring townships, held land in Layton. 
William Bamber of Por] in 1576 obtaines 
messu:ces, &c., in Layton and Bispham 
from W liam Bamter the elder and 
E?:sund his son an} heir-apparent; Pal. 
of Lane. Feet of F. bdle. 28. mg. The 
same William Bamber of Poo. in 1579 
made an agreement with Richard Bam*.r 

* Marton as to 2 partition of lands; 
W. Farrer’s Deei:. William Bamber 
died in 1597 holding a messuage and 
lanz in Great Layton and Warbreck «f 
the king as duxe by the two-hun:redth 
part of a knight’s fee. His som and heir 


six councillors, chosen by six wards as formerly.47 It 


R bert was then thirty-seven years old ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), i, 116, 
This is probably the Robert Bamber 
of W--breck who died in 1624 holding 
lands by the same tenure, and leaving 
a son Wiiiam, aged three; ibid. iii, 
462. Richard Bamber died in 1609 
ho:ding messuages and land in Great 
Lavton of the king as duke ty knight's 
service ; his son and heir Joh.. was forty- 
seven years old; ibid. i, 164. Some 
further particulars will be found in Fish- 
wick'’s Bipsam, 116-19. 

John Anicn in 1609 held messuages, 
&c., in Warbreck of the king as duke by 
the one-hundredth part of a knight's fee ; 
his he:r was his son John, aged twenty- 
two ; Lancs, In7. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), i, 155. 
This son seems to be the ee Anion 
who died in 1623 holding by the two- 
hundredth part of a knight's fee. His 
son and heir Jolin was ten years old; 
ibid. iii, 435. See Fishwick, op. cit. 115. 

Thomas Jollice in 1618 held a mes- 
suage, &c., of the king as duke by the 
three-hundredth part of a knight's fee ; 
he left a son and heir Robert, aged five ; 
ibid. ii, 111. 

John Walsh died in 1624 holding land 
in Layton of the king and leaving a son 
Henry ; Lancs. and Ches. Antig. Notes, i, 
-4, where some particulars of the family 
are given. 

Robdert Crane died in 1627 holding a 
messuaze, &c., in Layton, tenure not 
recorded ; h's heir was a grandson Robert 
(son of Richrd son of Robert) Crane, 
aged fi‘tteen; Duchy of Lane. Inj. p.m. 
xxvi, no. 31. 

Robert Gaulter died in 1631 holding a 
messuace, &c., in Little Layton of Paul 
Fieetwood as of his manor of Little 
Lavton. H's heir was his brother G-orze, 
ared forty-four; Towneley MS. C 8, 13, 
Fo 459s 

** Richard Waibreck, 1628, held his 


250 


became a county borough in 1904. The council has 


messuage in Warbreck of the king by 
the two hundredth part of a knight's fee. 
Thomas, his son and heir, was four years 
old; ibid. 1309. See Fishwick, op. cit. 
Lig, 125. 

“" The priory seems to have had merely 
an acre, given them by William son of 
Emery Je Boteler, so that they might 
build a tithe-barn there, This acre lay 
by the pathway leading from the high- 
road ty the little mere 5 Lanc, CA, (Chet. 
Soc.), ii, 438. It was included in the 
grant of the advowson of Poulton to 
Thomas Fleetwood in 1554. 

41 William le Boteler granted the 
canons all hie part of Threplands, 
within his demes :e of Layton, as marked 
out by crosses, with right of way to the 
sca and the pool, excejting 25 acres neld 
by Walter son of Swain (de Carleton) by 
a rent of 6d.; Cockersand Chartul. i, 
155-7. Threplands or Threfelt was 
between Layton and Marton. The same 
benefactor gave 20 acres in Withroom, 
on the west side towards the miil, and a 
rent-charge of 40s. from his camcra or 
treasury ; ibid. i, 154, 154, 161. 

* Porter, Fylde, 311 62. Further 
details, particularly with regard to the 
recent changes, have been supplicd by 
Mr. T. Loftos, town clerk. 

There are eight later Improve:nent 
Acts. 

4 Ibid. 339. The title was changed 
from Layton-with-Warbreck Local Board 
to Blackpool Loca! Board in 1868. 

“ Ibid. 355-9. The original wards 
were Claremont, Talbot, Bank Hey, 
Brunswick, Foxhall and Waterloo. 

42 & 43 Vict. cap. 199. The part of 
Bisrham included was the detached por- 
tion known as Bispham Hawes, south of 
Layton. The boundaries of the 
were altered. 

‘7 The tvvnship bo ndary was ex- 
tended in 18y6 t» include the fore:hore. 


‘wae 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


carried out many works for the health’ and conveni- 
ence of the people and the beautifying of the town. 
It owns the gas and electric lighting and power works, 
also the tramways. A new town hall was built in 
1895-1900. A market, built in 1844, was acquired 
by the local board in 1853 and enlarged in 1872; 
the free library ° was built on the site in 1895, a 
new market being opened in Lytham Road. A new 
free library building has recently been given by Mr. 
Camegie ; a technical school was erected in 1905-6. 
There are also a court-house, police stations and fire 
brigade station. A bench of magistrates for the 
borough was constituted in 1898. A coat of arms 
was granted in 1899. 

There was in the 13th century achantry chapel in 
Layton,” but it disappeared, and the existing places 
of worship in Layton are all modern and due to the 
rise of Blackpool. In connexion with the Church of 
England St. John’s was erected in 1821 © and re- 
built in 1878 on the old site ; a separate parish was 
assigned to it in 1860.°! The patronage is vested in 
trustees. The incumbent from 1829 to 1846 was 
the Rev. William Thornber, B.A., whose history of 
the town written in 1837 has been quoted frequently 
in the present work. Holy Trinity, South Shore, 
built in 1836 and rebuilt in 1895, had a parish 
assigned in 1871.5 Lady Drummond’s trustees pre- 
sent the vicars. Christ Church, Blackpool, built in 
1866, became parochial in 1871. St. Paul’s, North 
Shore, was built in 1898-9. These two churches 
are in the gift of bodies of trustees. There is a 
mission church, St. Peter’s, 1878, connected with 
Holy Trinity ; also another, All Saints’, connected 
with St. John’s ; and school-chapels at South Shore 
and Marton Moss. 

The Wesleyan Methodists opened a chapel in Bank 
Hey Street in 1835; this was replaced in 1861-2 


PART OF 
LANCASTER 


by the present Adelaide Street church. They 
have now two others in Blackpool and two in South 
Shore. The United Methodist Free Church opened 
their first chapel in 1864,°° and have since added two 
others in Blackpool and South Shore. The Primitive 
Methodists, after meeting for some time in a room, 
built a church in 1875.57 The New Connexion, 
now joined to the United Methodists, also has a 
church. 

The Baptists held services in a room from 1858 
till Union Chapel was opened in 1861; it was 
rebuilt in 1904. They have now a second chapel in 
Blackpool and another in South Shore. 

About 1820 the Congregationalists began preach- 
ing in Blackpool, and in spite of much opposition 
were able to open Bethesda Chapel, near Fox Hall, 
in 1825. A larger building in Victoria Street was 
built in 1849, and for a time Bethesda ceased to be 
used, except occasionally by the Methodists; but 
services there were resumed in 1875. Another 
chapel was opened at South Shore in 1885, and 
more recently (1901) another in Claremont Park. 

A Unitarian chapel was opened in 1875," and 
the present church succeeded it in 1883. The 
Plymouth Brethren, Swedenborgians (New Church) 
and Salvation Army are also represented at Black- 
pool. 

The Roman Catholic Church of the Sacred Hearts 
of Jesus and Mary was built in 1857 and has been 
enlarged.” It is served by Jesuits. St. Cuthbert’s, 
South Shore, built in 1880, was succeeded by the 
present church ten years later. St. Kentigern’s, 
Blackpool, was begun in 1907. hese are served 
by secular priests. There is a convent and boarding 
school, the Holy Child Jesus, at Little Layton. 

The Jews have a synagogue, and there is a 
Spiritualists’ Hall. 


PART OF LANCASTER 
STALMINE WITH STAYNALL 


Stalmine, Dom. Bk.; Stalmin, 1205 ; Stalemynne, 
1278. 

Stainole, 1277 ; Staynol, 1292 ; Staynolf, 1331. 

This composite township, with Stalmine to the 
north and east and Staynall to the south-west, has a 
total area of 2,5834 acres,! the two hamlets having 
1,771 and 8124 respectively, and the population in 
1901 was 537. ‘The River Wyre forms the western 
boundary, and upon it, at the south of Staynall, is 
the hamlet of Wardleys, where before the rise of 


Fleetwood there was a small port, with warehouses, 
from which the Kirkham spinners a century ago 
drew their supplies.’ 

The surface is comparatively level, but there is a 
ridge of higher land by the bank of the river, on 
which Staynall is placed ; and inland, Stalmine, with 
its church, stands on another piece of higher ground. 
The greatest elevation is about 75 ft. above sea level. 
The principal road is that from Shard Bridge to 
Preesall, passing through Stalmine. 


‘8 The Free Libraries Act was adopted 
in 1879, 

* Lanc. Ch. ii, 436. 

50 Porter, op. cit. 330. 

51 Lond, Gaz. 10 Mar. 1860, 

5) A memoir by Mr. C. W. Sutton is 
prefixed to his tale called Penny Stone, 
1886, He was the son of Giles Thornber 
of Poulton, born about 1805, and educated 
at Brasenose Coll., Oxf.; B.A. 1828. 
His History of Blackpool was first printed 
at Poulton in 1837, and reissued later ; 
It is of great value, both on account of 
the author’s local knowledge and as re- 
cording conditions that have long passed 
away. He wrote other antiquarian 


essays. He died at Stafford 8 Sept. 
1885. 

53 Porter, op. cit. 
22 Dec. 1871. 

54 An iron church was erected in 1861 ; 
Porter, op. cit. 341. For district, Lond. 
Gaz. 28 Mar. 1871. 

55 Porter, op. cit. 335. 

56 Ibid. 345. They had_ previously 
used Bethesda Chapel. 7 Ibid. 359. 

58 Ibid. 340. The congregation origi- 
nated in a division in the Congregational 
chapel; Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. i, 


148. 


360; Lond. Gaz. 


39 Ibid. i, 137-515 Porter, op. cit. 


333) 338 
2451 


60 Nightingale, op. cit. i, 162. 

61 Porter, op. cit. 359. 

62 Ibid. 3393; Kelly, Engl. Cath. Mis- 
sions, 86. 

1 The Census Rep. of 1901 gives 2,303 
acres, including 3 acres of inland water. 
There are also 58 acres of tidal water and 
374 of foreshore. 

3 In 1825 the Baltic produce used at 
Kirkham was ‘brought up the Wyre and 
landed at Warleys,’ where the Kirkham 
manufacturers had ‘large and commodious 
warehouses’ for storage. Wardleys waa 
part of the port of Poulton; Baines, 
Lancs. Dir. i, 656. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


The soil is various, with subsoil of clay. Oats 
and potatoes are grown. There are 6464 acres 
of arable land, 1,4724 in permanent grass and 11 of 
woods and plantations. 

The township has a parish council. 


The chapélry contributed as follows to the 
county lay of 1624, which was based on the 
older fifteenth: Stalmine with Staynall, £1 18:.; 
Preesall with Hackinsall, £2 3s. 8}/, or a total of 
L4 1s. 84d. towards each £100 required from 

Amounderness.” 


Pilling 
a as 
6 pee OL ey Z i 
\ st PREESALL wiTH Qk ee 
SNS. HACKINSALL “oo. 
ey 4 = Lickow 


“3 AK of, rae 
\ A Corcaz*.* ee. 
SN \-. STALMINE 


72) 


Earl Tostig held STuSLMINE in 
1066 as part of his Preston fee; it 
was then assessed as four plough- 
lands,‘ but in 1212 as three. Later it was held 
in thegnage of the king or the lord of the honour 
of Lancaster by a rent of tos. The first re- 
corded possessor is Robert de Stalmine, who with 
Peter his son granted one plough-land called 
Corcola at a rent of 8s. to the monks of Furness 
about 1165. He also granted other parts of his 
land to younger children.’ The Peter just named 
was lord in 1205.8 He had a son William,’ to 
whom a brother Robert succeeded in 1235-6." 
Three years later Robert was followed by his son 
Adam," and he by a son John,” lord of the manor 


MANORS 


Priory." 


3 Gregson, Fragmeats (ed. Harlan), 23. 

4 7°.C.H. Lanes. i, 2884. 

5 Lancs. Inz7. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 47. 

® Ibid. ; Dep. Keeper’s Rep. xxxvi, App. 
163. 

7 He gave 6 oxgangs of land to Siward 
son of Huck in marriage with his daughter 
Eva, chie‘ly, it would appear, in Staynall, 
2 oxgangs each to his sons Henry and 
Alan ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 47. 
From the Cockersand and Lanca ter 
charters it appears that Alan had a 
son Geoffrey and a daughter Maud, 
who married William the Marshal and 
had a daughter Godith wife of Randle 
son of Michael the Clerk. John the son 
of Randle de Stalmine was contemporary 
with John son of Adam de Stalmine. 

Mabel widow of Geoffrey de Stalmine in 
1235 released her dower in half an oxgang 
of land to the Abbot of Furness; Fina/ 
Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 68. 
John de Stalmine (probably the son of 
Randle) in 1256 released to Adam de 
Stalmine his hereditary right in 3 oxgangs 
and 30 acres of land ; ibid. 120. 

8 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 205 ; he paid 
1 mark to the scutage. From the charter 
above referred to it appears that Peter's 
wife was named Adelisa. The name of 
Peter de Stalmine, paying 10s. for three 
plough-lands held in thegnage in Stalm ne, 
occurs in the Pipe Roll of 1226, but he 
may nave been dead at that time ; Lancs. 
se 4 and Extents, i, 139. 

In a grant to Furness Robert is called 
son of Peter de Stalmine, so that Wi:liam 
must also have been a son ; Dep. Keeper's 
Rep. xxxvi, App. 163. Wiliam was lord 
of Stalmine in 1239; Lanc. Ch. (Chet. 
Soc.), ii, 362. William de S:almine and 
Robert his brother attested a Cockersand 
grant; Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 19%. 

Henry and John sons of William de 
Stalmine occur as benefactors to Furness ; 
Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxvi, loc. cit, As they 


survived their father yet did not inherit 
they must have been illegitimate. 

10 Excerpta e Rot. Fin. (Rec. Com.), i, 
306 ; Robert was to pay tos, as reliet. 

1 Orig. R. 23 Hen. III, m. 2; Adam 
son of Robert owed ros. for relief. He 
was a benefactor of Cockersand Abbey ; 
Chartul. i, 86, &c. He gave a toft and 
an acre in Fernbreck to Lancaster Priory 
in 1256; Lane. Ch. ii, 375. He occurs 
as juror from 1242 to 1255. 

Adam's wife Helen survived him and 
married Wiliiam de Chamber, and was at 
one time described as lady of Stalmine ; 
Coctersand Chartul,i, 89-90. She claimed 
jo-ser im 1273 against William son of 
William de Hambleton and against John 
de Thornton and Clarice his wife ; De 
Banco R. 24, m. 70. 

2 John son and heir of Adam de Stal- 
mine did fealty for his lands in 1259 on 
succeeding, and had to pay 20s. as relief ; 
Excerpta e Rot. Fin. ii, 312. He gave an 
acre on Harecarr Furlong to Cockersand, 
and as ‘lord of Stalmine’ confirmed 
another gift; Ceckersand Chartul. i, 109, 
113. 

John de Stalmine was summoned to 
warrant two of the tenants of the manor 
in 1288; De Banco R. 73, m. 74.3 78, 
m. §d. 

In 1297 the ros. rent was paid to the 
Earl of Lancaster by the vill of Stalmine 
with Staynall ; Lancs. Ing, and Extents, i, 
289. 

13 Plac, de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 179- 
80. He stated that Ellen de Staimine 
held 8 acres as dower, the Abbot of 
Furness one plough-land, the Abbot of 
Cockersand another, Simon the Clerk an 
oxgang of land and Adam de Stalmine 
another. “ 

M For the gifts to Cockersand in Stal- 
mine see Chartul. i, 86-113, and in 
Staynall, 114-36; to Furness—Dep. 
Keeper's Rep. xxxvi, App. 163-43 Beck, 
Annales Furn. xxviii ; to Lancaster Priory 


262 


in the time of Edward I. 
moned to prove his title, but replied by saying 
that he held part only." 
other members of the family were benefactors of 
Cockersand and Furness Abbeys and Lancaster 
Instead of Stalmine the surname Beau- 
front was used.'44 

John de Stalmine transferred the manor to 
William de Oxcliffe,!® whose son Nicholas’* held 


He was in 1292 sum- 


Adam de Stalmine and 


—Lane. Ch. ii, 363-75 for Stalmine and 
355-61 for Staynall, Among the place- 
names occurring in these charters are 
Arghole and its pool, Harestane and Hare- 
carr, Yarsmoor and Warlesmoor, Scaling- 
stud, laylid, Lawrence’s Cross, Fernbreck, 
Kel iwellbreck, Lamypot, the Greenway 
and Oxenholme in Stalmine ; Cumbclow, 
Alsergate, Argholestan, Risegreve, Wall- 
gate, Smercpot, Hychum Oxgang and 
Uttingland. . 

Ha John son of William Beaufront, who 
was a benefactor of Cockersand Abbey 
(Chartul. i, 95), seems to be the above- 
named John son of William de Stalmine. 
John de Stalmine son and heir of Adam 
Beaufront gave land to Furness between 
1274 and 1284 ; Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxvi, 
Arp. 163. In claims for the manor 
against the Goosnargh family William 
Beaufront son of John son of Adam de 
Stalmine was plaintiff in 1334 and 1335, 
and William Beaufront (perhaps a different 
person) in 1354; De Banco R. 298, 
m. 574.3 311, m. 833 Assize R. 1425, 
m. 4; Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 3, m. v. 
Shortly afterwards John Beaufront claimed 
the manor; Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxii, 
App. 335- 

15 The Abbot of Furness had in 1313-14 
to complain of a small encroachment on 
his land in Stalmine by William de Ox- 
cliffe, Nicholas son of Nicholas (William) 
de Oxcliffe, and William son of Alice de 
Stalmine ; Assize R. 424, m. 2. In 
defence it was stated that the former 
William had entered by grant of John de 
Stalmine, formerly lord of the town, but 
the verdict was for the abbot. 

William seems to have been a son of 
John de Oxcliffe ; Assize R. 1425, m. 4. 

16 William de Oxcliffe in 1310 gave 
all his lands in Stalmine and Stayr.ail, 
together with the service (8:.) due from 
Furness Abbey for the grange, to his ton 
Nicholas; Dep. Keeper's Rep. mrxv., 
Arp. 164. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


it in 1324,!7 and appears to have been succeeded by 
a brother William, who alienated it to Thomas de 
Goosnargh.!8 ‘This last held the lordship and two- 
thirds of the vill in 1346, and Nicholas Boteler of 
Of the Goosnargh 
family next to nothing is known. 
descended to Alexander Goosnargh, who died in 
1524 at Mansergh holding the manor of the king by 
His son Thomas having died before 


Rawcliffe held the other third.1® 


arent of Sy. 


William seems to have died about 1316, 
in which year Nicholas de Oxcliffe claimed 
a messuage and g acres of land against 
John son of William de Norbreck ; 
De Banco R. 216, m. 363. In the year 
following Alice widow of William de 
Oxcliffe claimed dower in a messuage 
and 24 acres in Stalmine against Nicholas 
son of William de Oxcliffe ; ibid. 220, 
m. 231d, 

Nicholas was plaintiff in 1318 (ibid. 
221, m. gd.), in which year he came 
to an agreement with the monks of 
Furness as to certain approvements ; Dep. 
Keeper's Rep. ut sup. From this it 
appears that Nicholas had a salt-pan on 
the waste and the monks had a water- 
mill by their grange. 

V He held the manor of Stalmine and 
Little Staynall by a rent of ros. and doing 
suit to county and wapentake ; Dods. 
MSS. cxxxi, fol. 40. 

At the same time the doomsmen of 
Stalmine and Staynall are named in the 
court roll of the hundred ; Lancs. Cr. R. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 115. 

%In 1338 Thomas de Goosnargh 
claimed to hold by grant of William son 
of William son of John de Oxcliffe ; 
Assize R. 1425, m. 4. A William de 
Oxcliffe had been defendant in the case 
in 1334 3 De Banco R, 298, m. 57d. 

Thomas de Goosnargh and Margaret 
his wife in 1357 obtained from John son 

_ of William Beaufront a release of his 
claim in the manor of Stalmine ; Dods. 
MSS. liii, fol. 83. 

19 Survey of 1346 (Chet. Soc.) 47; 
Thomas de Goosnargh held two plough- 
lands and paid 6s. 8d. of the rent, while 
Nicholas Boteler held one plough-land 
and paid 3s. 4d.; but Thomas did the 
whole suit to county and wapentake. 
Later the manor seems to have been 
held in moieties, each paying 5s. 

Thomas son of Walter de Goosnargh 
was in possession of the manor in 1354 ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 3, m. 5. He 
and his wife Margaret occur a year later ; 
ibid. 4, m. 15. 

7 In 1363 John de Oxcliffe appeared 
against John son of Thomas de Goosnargh 
to claim a messuage and land which 
Ralph Gentyl had given to Nicholas de 
Oxcliffe and Alice de Slyne and their 
issue ; in default to remain to Nigel son 
of the said Alice, and in default to the 
right heirs of Nicholas. Nicholas, Alice 
and Nigel had died without issue, and so 
the right came to plaintiff. John de 
Goosnargh said that Thomas his father 
died in possession, and he was himself 
under age, whereupon the trial was 
deferred ; De Banco R. 416, m. 455d. 
John de Oxcliffe had claimed in 1360 3 
Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 342. 

Thomas Goosnargh and Nicholas 
Boteler held in 1445-6 just as in 1346 ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Knights’ Fees, bdle. 2, 
NO. 20, 

Robert Goosnargh son of William 
agreed with Joan his father’s widow as to 


The manor 


dower in 1452 ; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. g20. 
Robert and Maud his wife in 1459 
demised Redeford in Plumpton and a 
messuage in Catterall for a term of 
twenty years ; ibid. fol. god. Robert wae 
summoned to warrant by James Pickering 
in 1473 in respect of a manor in Stalmine ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Writs Proton. file 13 
Edw. IV. 

21 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, no. 55. 
Alexander was separated from his wife 
Agnes daughter of John Boteler by an 
arbitration in 1496, he retaining the 
custody of the children ; Dods. MSS. liii, 
fol. gt. He must have married again. 

In 1518 Alexander Goosnargh made a 
feoffment of the manor of Stalmine Hall, 
&c., with remainder to his son Thomas ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 123, m.g. This 
son probably died soon after, for no 
remainder was stated in another feoffment 
in 15223 ibid. 131, m. 2. At his 
death Alexander held lands in Stalmine 
and Staynall, Hambleton, Goosnargh, 
Woodplumpton and Catterall. By his 
will (recited in the inquisition) he charged 
his lands with a yearly stipend of 5 marks 
for twenty-three years to find a chaplain 
to celebrate at the altar of St. George in 
Kirkby Lonsdale Church. 

2 From the inquisition it might be 
supposed that Margaret Waring was dead 
in 1525, but in 1528 Richard Waring 
and Margaret his wife demised to Edward 
Mansergh certain messuages and lands in 
Stalmine, together with seven saltcotes 
there ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 11, 
m. 1574, 

In 1540 Nicholas Butler purchased 
from Robert Parker and Maud his wife 
(she being the heir of Thomas Goosnargh) 
a moiety of the manor of Stalmine, with 
various lands (including thirty salt-pits) 
there and in Staynall, Preesall, &c. ; ibid. 
bdle. 12, m. 28. Possibly Alexander 
Goosnargh had been married twice, and 
Maud was half-sister to Margaret but 
whole sister to Thomas. The purchase 
of this moiety was confirmed by Maud 
Parker, widow, with George Knott of 
Canterbury and Joan his wife—Joan being 
the daughter of Maud by a former husband 
(William Cowper) and her sole heir—to 
Richard Butler and Henry his brother 
in 15643 ibid. bdle. 26, m. 101 3 Dods. 
MSS. liii, fol. 83. 

The other moiety seems to have been 
obtained in 1537-45 by Nicholas Butler 
from Margaret Waring, widow, daughter 
and co-heir of Alexander Goosnargh ; 
Dods. MSS. ut sup.; Pal. of Lanc. Plea 
R.181,m. 9d. It was perhapsa daughter 
of Margaret who married Arthur Bayne, 
for about 1556 he and Margaret his wife 
complained that Nicholas Butler was 
wrongfully holding lands in Stalmine 
Manor and detaining their title deeds ; 
Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), i, 291. In 
1559 a rent of £4 195. 8d. from 
lands in Stalmine, &c., was settled on 
Arthur Bayne and Margaret his wife, with 
remainder to James Bayne ; Pal. of Lane. 


253 


PART OF 
LANCASTER 


him, his heir was his grandson Alexander Waring 
(son of a daughter of Margaret), aged eight.2! It 
appears, however, that there was another daughter 
Maud, afterwards wife of Robert Parker.?? 
sold the manor to the Butlers of Rawcliffe,23 and the 
whole descended with Rawcliffe till the forfeiture in 
1716. This estate seems to have been sold in parcels 74 ; 
the Bournes of Hackinsall became the principal pro- 
prietors,?° but the manor has disappeared. 


They 


Feet of F. bdle. 21, m. 117. Yet some- 
what later (1562) Agnes Warren and 
Maud Parker claimed messuages, &c., in 
Stalmine Manor against Richard Butler 
and Margaret Waring ; Ducatus Lane. ii, 
258. Again in 1565 James Bayne and 
Margaret his wife (widow of — Waring) 
claimed the estate of Alexander Goosnargh, 
Margaret and Maud being daughters and 
heirs, against Richard and Henry, sons 
of Nicholas Butler, who defended by 
alleging the feoffment by Margaret 
Waring ; ibid. 303. 

*3 The available evidence is given in 
the preceding notes. In 1571 the manor 
of Stalmine was reckoned as part of the 
Butler estates; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F. bdle. 33, m. 79. 

It will have been seen from the text 
that this family had long held certain 
land in Stalmine, and there are some 
charters in the Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.), 
xxxvili, 380-1. In 1323-4 Nicholas son 
of William Boteler claimed a messuage 
and land against Nicholas de ‘Oxcleve’ 
and William son of Adam, to which 
Nicholas replied that his name was 
‘Oxclyf,’ and that William Boteler had 
held his land of him by knight’s service, 
on which account he had taken posses- 
sion, The jury did not accept the spell- 
ing and also decided against him as to 
the tenure, giving a verdict for the 
plaintiff ; Assize R. 425, m.5. In 1502 
the tenure of the lands in Stalmine and 
Staynall was grouped with that in Thistle- 
ton, Kirkham and Freckleton, as of the 
Earl of Derby by knight’s service and a 
rent of 8s.; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
iii, no. 45. Shortly afterwards James 
Boteler, who died in 1504, was stated to 
have held messuages, lands, &c., in Stal- 
mine and Staynall of the Earl of Derby 
in socage; ibid. iii, no. 10g. This 
same tenure was again recorded of Wi- 
liam Butler, 1639, though the estate had 
been increased by many purchases, so that 
he held the manor of Stalmine with Stay- 
nall, messuages, lands, twelve saltcotes, 
two windmills, a ferry boat on the 
Wyre and a fishery there; ibid. xxx, 
no. 18. 

The manor is mentioned in a settle- 
ment by Richard Butler in 1714 ; Pal. 
of Lance. Plea R. 501, m. 2 d. 

24%n 1752 Richard Harrison the 
younger purchased from Nathan Arderne 
and Elizabeth his wife a third of the 
eighth part of the manor of Stalmine with 
Staynall, court baron, &c. ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 349, m. 60. 

25 John Bourne of Stalmine (d. 1841) 
was reputed to be lord of the manor in 
18363 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1), iv, 550. 
He was followed by Cornelius Bourne, the 
reputed lord in 18503 Raines in Notitia 
Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 443. 

According to the pedigree in Foster’s 
Lancs. Peds. John Bourne (d. 1783), 
grandfather of the above-named John, 
married Jane daughter and co-heir of 
Cornelius Fox of Stalmine Hall. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


STAVNALL, probably one plough-land,”* gave a 
surname to the lords of it,” but the family cannot be 
traced, and the lordship probably became merged 
Sir Adam de Shevington and Emma 
his wife in 1344 claimed messuages, lands and mills 
in Great Marton and ‘ Staynolf,’ but the defendants 
—John son of Richard le Boteler, Clemency his 
wife, Cecily wife of Richard le Boteler and others— 
protested that there was no such vill as ‘ Staynolf’ 
absolutely ; either Great Staynolf or Little Staynolf 
must be named, and the jury agreeing, the plaintiffs 


in Stalmine. 


were defeated for the time.?® 


In addition to the families named those of Hamble- 
ton,” Shireburne ® and Singleton™ had lands in this 
Some later owners 


township from an early time. 


2 The old distinctions of Great and 
Little Staynall have disappeared. 

In 1324 ‘Staynolf’ was used of Stanah 
in Thornton and ‘Little Staynolf’ of 
Staynall. But see p. 234, note 31, above. 

Z Siward son of H ick and Eva his wife 
(daughter of Robert de Stalmine), the 
latter described as the Laiy Eva, granted 
lands in Staynall to Cockersand Abbey ; 
Chartal. i, 114,118. Their sons Henry 
and Richard were also benefactors ; ibid. 
These took their surname from Staynall, 
as did Henry son of Robert de Stalmine, 
who seems to have had several children. 
Robert and Roger, sons of Henry de 
Staynall, were benefactors of Cockersand ; 
ibid. 119-21; Kuerden MSS. iv, S 20. 
Richard son of Richard son of Henry de 
Stayna!i, who had a brother Peter, gave a 
messuage and land to Lancaster Priory ; 
Lane. Ch. il, 355) 359 The said Peter 
gave landto C ckersand ; Cha-sui. i, 121. 

Adam son of Eva de Elswick in 1288 
claimed half an oxgang in Staynall by 
Stalmine against Richard son of Adam de 
Staynall and Maud his daughter; De 
Banco R. 75, m. 61d. 

3 Assize R. 1435, m. 44. 

29 Gilbert de Hambleton was a bene- 
factor of Lancaster Priory, giving a toft 
in Staynall which Gilbert son of Peter de 
Hackinsall had held ; Larc. CA. ii, 361. 
Alice widow of William de Hambleton 
was plaintiff in 1285 and 1292 in res; ect 
of lands in Staimine ; De Banco R. 59, 
m. 23; Assize R. 408, m. g>. 

William the Buker son of Hugh de 
Hambleton gave an oxgang of land in 
Stalmine to Furness Abbes ; Dep. Aceper's 
Rep. xxxvi, App. 163. Wiliam san of 
Wiliam son of Henry de Hambicton 
gave half an oxgang of land (held of Adam 
lord of Stalmine} t > Willlam son. of 
Wiliam the C.c:k of Hambleton ; ibid. 
Log. 

The Hackinsall family just named 
probably held lands in the township, for 
their successor James Pickering in 147g 
held messuages and a windmill in Stay- 
nail, partly of the king in socage and 
percy of Richard Staynall by 24d. rent ; 

wanes. Ing. pom. (Chet. Soc), ii, 127-8. 
See as: the later inguisitions of Booth 
and Butler of Hackinsall. 

Rotert son of Gregory de Winmarleigh 
and Avice his wife were benefactors of 
C>ckersani, giving land in Stalmine in 
12623 Ctarcul.i, 11035 Final Conc. i, 135. 

One Robert de Wath had land in the 
same part of the township, and gave to 
his daughter Clarice, who married John 
de Thornzo=, znd was a wid: w in 1292 3; 
Assize R. 408, m. 69d. 9 Their son 
Richard de Thornton appears ten years 
later ; -d¢free. Plac. (Rec. Com.), 246. 


appear in the records. 
Warrington ™ seems to have passed with Layton to 
the Fleetwoods of Rossall.% Theobald le Boteler held 
an oxgang of land in Staynall int 249." John Braddyll 
in 1561 purchased messuages and fishery in Great 
Staynall and Stalmine from Wilfrid Banastre,™ and at 
his death in 1578 was found to have held them of 
the queen in socage by 6¢. rent,” but later the 
tenure was recorded as of Shireburne of Stonyhurst.” 
There were some other owners. 

Little can be said of the monastic estates. 


The estate of the Butlers of 


That of 


Furness, Stalmine Grange,” came in part at least to 


John son of Lawrence de Thornton held 
a messuage and land in 1354; Dep. 
Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 332. 

A Peacock family occurs in 1350; De 
Banco R. 362, m. 60. 

John Shaffer and Emma his wife (in 
her right) held land in Hackinsall and 
Stalmine in 13953 Final. Conc. iii, 45. 
Hugh Chaftar had messuages and land in 
Staynall in 1432 ; Brockholes of Claugh- 
ton D. 

30 Robert de Shireburne gave land in 
Stalmine to Cockersand Abbey ; Chartu.. 
i, 106, 

John Travers in 1318 released to 
Robert de Shireburne his claim to tene- 
ments which his brother Lawrence had 
granted to Walter de Shireburne ; Dods. 
MSS. lili, fol. 844. 

In 1321 W.tiam de Hornby and his 
wife Alice (widow of Thomas Travers) 
claimed dower in Stalmine against Robert 
de Shireburne; De Banco R. 238, m. 
86d. 

Thomas son of Lawrence Travers in 
1348 claimed two messuages and 20 
acres there aganet William son of Sir 
R bert de Shireburne; De Banco R. 
354, m. 326. Agnes widow of Richard 
Shireburne was tenant in 1446; Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), 11, 53. 

Richard Shire}urne in 1513 held his 
lands in Stalmine of Alexander Goosnargh 
in socage ; Duchy of Lane. Inq. p.m. iv, 
no. $6. A similar statement is made in 
later inquisitions, but the property scems 
to have been sold before ihn, 

8) Maud widow of Robert Je Singleton 
gave land in Stalmine t) Cockersand ; 
Chartul, i, 111. Thomas Banastre was 
defendant therc in 12923 Assize R. 40%, 
m. 97. Sir Thomas Banastre also held 
there in 13855; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soes.) 15. 1G. 

This was probably the estate afterwarcs 
shared :y the Radcliffes of Winmarleigh 
ani «ther heirs of Balderston. The 
tenure is not serarately stated, 

32 Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. v, no. 13 ; 
lanzs, &c., in Stalmine and Staynall, of 
tenure unknown. 

S bid. xi, no. 2. The lands held by 
Th-mas Fleetwood in 1576 are herein 
tegarded as part of the Great Layton 
estate, formerly that of Butler of War- 
rington. 

4 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 172-3. It 
became merze? in the estate of the Butlers 
of Rawcili‘t-, having teen granted by 
Theobald Walter to his kinsman Richard 
:¢ Boteler in the time of Henry III; 
Kuerden MSS. iv, R. 5. In 1324 
Wiliam ecn and heir of John Beaufront 
teleased to Nicholas son and heir of 
Wiliam Boteler the rent of 8s. 64. which 


254 


a family named Smith, who held it for some time.” 
That of Cockersand “' seems to have been dispersed in 
parcels, while that of Lancaster Priory may have been 


was due from an oxgang of land in Stal- 
mine ; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 83. 

S Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 23, 
m. 1563; 26, m. 160. The estate was 
perhaps the messuage, &c., in Stal 
purchased by Sir Thomas Lawrence in 
1503 from Thomas Standen and Ellen 
his wife ; Final Cone. iti, 153. 

86 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 85, 

87 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 109. 

3 Nicholas Beconsaw in 1407 granted 
a windmill in Staynall to James Pickering ; 
Dods. MSS. lili, fol. 102. The family 
probably had other land there, for Cuth- 
bert Clifton in 1562 purchased a messuage 
and fishery at Staynall from William 
Beconsaw; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 24, m. 47. At his death in 1580 
Cuthbert held messuages and land in 
Stalmine and Staynall of Henry Butler 
by 1d, rent ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
xiv, no. 76. 

George Kirkby of Upper Rawcliffe 
about 1560 held lands in Stalmine of 
Richard Butler by 4d. rent; ibid. xi, 
no. 8. 

Richard ‘'hompson purchased a mes- 
suagce, &c.,in Staynall from the Heskeths 
in 1569; Pal. of Lane. Feet of F. bdle. 
31, m. 983; 34, m. 117. Nicholas 
Thompson of Larbreck in 1609 held a 
messuage there of Henry Butler by 2d. 
rent ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 202. 

5° The Abbot of Furness in 1535-6 
complained of trespass on his turbary at 
Stalmine Grange by Nicholas Butler; 
Duchy Plead. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), ii, 74. At the Dissolution the 
abbey received £8 65. gd. from Stalmine 
Grange and Staynall, including £4 4s. for 
20 quarters of salt; West, Furnes ‘ed. 
1812), 139. 

" John Smith died at Stalmine Grange 
in 1§98 holding messuages in Staynall, 
Preesall and Hckinsall. His heir wae 
his grandson John Smith (son of Richard 
son of John’, aged seventeen ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Inq. p.m, xvii, no. 47. John Smith 
of Stalmine was a fr eholder in 1600; 
Misc. (Ree. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 232. 
See also Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Ree. Soc. 
Lan:a, and Ches.), i, 963 il, 277. 

In the time of Elizabeth the tenants of 
the Grange had various disputes with the 
lords of the manor and others ; Ducatus 


Parts of Stalmine Grange «were granted 
by the Crown to Edward Howard and 
others in 1604-5; Pat. 2 Jas. I, pt. ii. 
A saltcote and iands in Hacki>sat were 
included. 

“ The rentals 1451 to 1537 are printed 
in Chartul. iil, 1268-9. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


treated similarly." The Knights Hospitallers had 
lands in Staynall in 1292. 
John Clifton of Stalmine compounded for his 
recusancy in 1630 by an annual payment of 
244 
Christopher and Thomas Butler, who were sons of 
Richard Butler of Rawcliffe, and James Danson, as 
‘Papists,’ registered estates in 1717." 
The chapel of Stalmine is first named 
CHURCH about 1200, when it was a dependency 
of Lancaster.“6 When a cemetery was 
consecrated in 1230 the lords of the ‘parish ’— 
Geoffrey the Arbalaster of Hackinsall and William de 
Stalmine—renounced all title to the advowson.” It 
seems probable that the townships of Stalmine and 
Preesall had been either an entirely independent 
parish reduced to a chapelry or else included in 
the parish of Poulton, and that in the latter case 
the monks of Lancaster, on receiving Poulton Church, 
had made a separate chapelry at Stalmine, attaching it 
to their own church at Lancaster. The names of 
some of the earlier chaplains are on record,** and in 
1430 the vicar of Lancaster was made responsible for 
the maintenance of a chaplain there. Its history after 
the Reformation is doubtful, but as the small tithes— 
valued at £10 a year in 1650—appear to have been 
devoted to the chaplain’s stipend, it is most probable 
that service was kept up with some regularity. During 
the Commonwealth period £50 a year was given to 
the minister from Royalist sequestrations.*' Later 
some private benefactions raised the certified income 


PART OF 
LANCASTER 


to £28 125. 4d. before 1717, and the vicarage is 
now returned as worth £320 a year. The vicar 
of Lancaster is patron. 

The chapel was rebuilt in 1806 and called St. 
James’s. The registers begin in 1593, but were 
not regularly kept before 1700. In the churchyard 
is a sundial dated 1690. 

The following have been curates in charge and 
vicars © ;— 

c. 1593-1610 John Picke® 

oc. 1622-42 Richard Leigh” 


oc. 1646-51 Henry Jenny, M.A.* 
oc. 1653 Henry Smith 
1669 Christopher Hall ® (‘T.C.D.) 
1681 John Wells, B.A. 
oc. 1700 George Yates 
1714 John Anyon 
1725 Robert Loxham, M.A." (Trin. Coll., 
Oxf.) 
1725 Thomas Holme * 
1737 Thomas Knowles, M.A.* 
1773 John Spicer 
1778 Thomas Smith ® 
1782 James Fenton, M.A.® (St. Peter’s 
Coll., Camb.) 
1787 James Thomas, B.A. 
1799 Joseph Rowley, B.A.% (Queen’s 
Coll., Oxf.) 
1864. Joseph Kirby Turner, M.A. (Trin. 
Coll., Camb.) 
1894 Henry Barnett, M.A. (T.C.D.) 


# Lands of Cockersand were granted 
to Roger Dalton in 1579 for twenty-one 
years ; Pat. 21 Eliz. pt. xi; see also Pat. 
42 Eliz, pt. xvi and 2 Jas. I, pt. xix. 

Thomas Danson in 1628 held mes- 
suages, é&c., in Stalmine and Staynall of 
the king, partly as of the manor of East 
Greenwich and partly as of the honour of 
Tutbury. His son and heir James was 
eleven years old; Towneley MS. C 8, 
13 (Chet. Lib.), 344. 

48 Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 375. 
From the change of tenure recorded it is 
probable that this was the Braddylls’ land. 

4 Trans. Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xxiv, 173. 

Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurors, 133-4. Christopher Butler 
made a point of his lease of Stalmine 
Hall being in right of Agnes (Goss), his 
Protestant wife. 

46 Lanc. Ch. iy 117. 

{7 Thid. ii, 362. 

47a From the saving of the right of the 
church of Poulton in 1230 it may be 
inferred that Stalmine, though separated 
by the Wyre, had been part of that parish ; 
while the similar saving of the right of 
Lancaster Church shows that it had 
already been included in the parish to 
which it has continued to belong. 

The chapel of Stalmine is specially 
named as one of those held pleno jure by 
the monks of Lancaster about 1290 ; ibid. 
i, 145. 

* Robert ; ibid. ii, 360. John (Cocker- 
sand Chartul, i, 102) was a benefactor of 
the canons. Geoffrey the chaplain of 
Stalmine attested a deed in 1297 ; Raines 
MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xxxviii, 379. 

® Lane, Ch. iii, 578. 

At an inquiry in 1527 it was recorded 
that there was a free chapel at Stalmine, 
of which John Lawfield had been incum- 
bent for seven years at the will of the 
vicar of Lancaster. It was worth Loa 


year; Duchy of Lanc. Rentals, bdle. 5, 
no. 15. 

The list of church goods seized by the 
Crown in 1552 is imperfect 5 Chet. Misc. 
(new ser.), i, 10. 

50 This is shown by some entries in the 
register being as old as 1583 and by the 
list of curates, 

51 Commonw. Ch, Surv. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.),127. The additional £50 was 
ordered as early as 1646; Plund. Mins. 
Acts. (Rec. Soc, Lancs. and Ches.), i, 
13, 28. 

52 Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 443-4. Ofthe income £1 was derived 
from tithe of hay and geese in Stalmine, 
£2 from surplice fees and £5 10s. from 
Easter dues; while £6 135. 4d. was a 
rent-charge given by Richard Fleetwood of 
Rossall in 1687 on condition that he and 
his heirs should have the nomination 
of the curate—a condition never observed 
—and £12 95. was the interest on a gift 
of £324 (part lost) from Mr. Tite. In 
addition £1 a year was given from Robert 
Carter’s school charity. The clerk’s in- 
come was derived from fees of 2d. from 
each house, 1s. at a marriage, 6d. at a 
burial and 2d. at a churching. Each of 
the townships had a chapel-warden, 

58 Manch. Dioc. Dir. 

54 The ancient chapel is said to have 
been St. Oswald’s. ‘The day on which 
the village wake is celebrated (the first 
Sunday after 12 Aug.) is still [1836] 
called Tossets Day, by corruption of 
St. Oswald’; Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1), iv, 

°. 

A short description of the building by 
Col. Fishwick is printed in Pal, Note Bk. 
ii, 244. 

55 Some details are due to Col Fish- 
wick’s article above cited. 

56 Hist, MSS. Com, Rep. xiv, App. iv, 
8; he was ‘no preacher.’ Edward 


255 


Rawstorne, clerk, is named in the visita- 
tion papers about 1611, but is not 
described as curate. 

57 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 69 (lecturer), 124 (curate). 

58 Plund. Mins. Accts. i, 14, 2393 
Commonw. Ch. Surv. 127. He was 
afterwards minister of St. Michael’s for 
a short time. 

59 Appeared at the visitations of 1674 
and 1677. 

60 Visit. List, 1691. 

61 From this time the licences to the 
curacy are recorded in the church papers 
at Chester Dioc. Reg. They state that 
‘John Anyon was educated in the Presby- 
terian way and lately came over to the 
church and was accepted as curate to 
Mr. Harrison, late vicar of Poulton. 
After Mr. Harrison’s death Mr. Hall 
(now vicar) continued Mr. Anyon as his 
curate at Stalmine.’ 

62 Loxham became vicar of Poulton 
1726-70. Bishop Gastrell (Notitia Cestr. 
ii, 445) names Alexander Bagot, A.B., 
as curate in July 1725; he must have 
been a temporary assistant. 

63 Also rector of Claughton 1711-41. 

6t Thomas Knowles in 1760 made a 
list of the old ‘customs’ belonging to 
the parochial chapel; they included an 
estate in Preesall, consisting of a house, 
barn and 17 acres of land, a rent-charge 
of £6 13s. on Clarkson’s tenement in 
Preesall and g acres of land in Thornton. 
He was rector of Claughton 1741-73. 

65 Also curate of Admarsh. 

66 Son of James Fenton of Lancaster ; 
rector of Doddington-with-Althorpe 1787. 

6&7 Also vicar of Bolton-le-Sands, 

68 He held the incumbency till his 
death in 1864. He was non-resident, 
being chaplain of Lancaster Castle ; Lanc. 
Ch. (Chet. Soc.), iv, 698. 

69 Rector of Quernmore 1890-4. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


1g01 William Poole, M.A. (Dur.) 
1910 Daniel Schofield 


In 1689 a Presbyterian meeting was licensed at 
Thomas Dicconson’s house at Stalmine,’! and about 
1717 Bishop Gastrell recorded that ‘the presbyterian 
meeting house is very near the chapel.’?? Nothing 
seems to be known of it now. 

Apart from the school endowments 

CHARITIES for Preesall and small gifts for re- 

ligion there is no charitable founda- 

tion 7 in the chapelry except 10s. a year from Robert 

Carter’s benefaction, 1710. This sum is divided 

among about eight poor persons who are by custom 

selected from residents in the Pilling Lane portion of 

Preesall. Thomas Bell of the Ridge in Pilling had 

in 1723 left 5s. a year for the poor of Preesall, but 
this had been lost by 1826. 


PREESALL WITH HACKINSALL. 


Pressouede, Dom. Bk. ; Presoure, 1168; Pressore, 
1176; Presho, 1199; Preshou, 1246; Presoude, 
Presehou, Presthowe, 1292. 

Haccumeho, Hacunesho, 1199 ; Hacumesho, 1200; 
Hakinishal, 1244; Hakonesho, 1246. Hackensall 
is a common modern spelling. 

The township is bounded by the River Wyre on 
the west, the Lune estuary on the north and a small 
brook on the south. In the north-west angle is 
the hamlet of Knott End, with a ferry across the 
Wyre to Fleetwood ; to the south, on a stretch of 
higher land, is Hackinsall ; while Preesall lies a mile 
to the east, on the side of another tract of higher 
land, and Pilling Lane occupies its north-east 
corner.! The surface to the north and east is flat 
and lies very low, much of it below the 25 ft. level, 
but the highest land in the township is about 100 ft. 
above the sea. There is a wide expanse of sands to 
the north. The area in all measures 3,393 acres,” 
and there was a population of 1,423 in 1901. 


Preesall is the central point of the township ; from 
it roads spread out in various directions—south to 
Staynall and Stalmine, east towards Garstang and 
north-west to Knott End. From this last another 
road goes cast along the coast to Pilling. There is a 
salt mine to the south-west of Preesall, and from it a 
railway runs down to the Wyre. The railway from 
Knott End to Pilling and Garstang was opened in 
1908. 

In Preesall is the cemetery for the chapelry. 

The township is governed by an urban district 
council of twelve members. 

The soil is various, with subsoil of clay and gravel. 
Wheat, oats and potatoes are grown. Of the land, 
869 acres are arable, 1,648 in permanent grass and 
20 in woods and plantations.** 

A small detached part of Pilling was added to 
Preesall under the Divided Parishes Act of 1882. 

There was a fairy well to the north of Preesall 
village. 

In 1066 PREESALL was assessed as six 
MANOR plough-lands and was included in the 
Preston fee of Earl Tostig.? The demesne 
tithes were in 1094 granted to St. Martin of Sées 
by Roger of Poitou,* and later still, in 1168-9, 
Preesall was in the demesne of the honour of 
Lancaster.6 About 1190 John Count of Mortain 
granted Preesall and Hackinsall to Geoffrey the 
Arbalaster or crossbowman,® and renewed the gift 
after he came to the throne.’ It appears, however, 
that 4 oxgangs of land in the township had long 
before been held by serjeanty by Hugh de Hackinsall, 
whose son Robert obtained confirmations from John 
when Count of Mortain, and afterwards when king.® 
An agreement respecting the same was made between 
Geoffrey, as lord of the whole, and Peter de Hackin- 
sall,® and, as Geoffrey’s descendants assumed their 
surname from HACKINSALL, they no doubt 
obtained a surrender of the 4 oxgangs.!° 

Geoffrey the Arbalaster held the six plough-lands 

in 1212 by the service of two crossbows yearly.!! 


70 Previous!y vicar of Wyresdale. 

Hist. MS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 
230. Dicconson was one of the trustees 
for Carter’s school. 

"? Notitia Cestr. li, 444. 

73 An official inquiry was held in 1901. 
The report, published the following vea:, 
includes a rezrint of the former official 
report of 1826, 

' Formerly called the Lower End of 
Pilling. 7 

® The Census Rep. of 1g01 gives 
3.232 acres, including 3 of inland water. 
There are also 105 acres of tidal water 
and 3,428 of foreshore. 

The acreages of the three hamlets 
separately are—Preesall, 2,238 ; Hackin- 
sail, §41; and Piil’nz Lane District, 81. 

% Statistics from Bd. of Agric. (1905). 

3 F°.C.H. Lancs. i, 2885. 

4 Farrer, Lazcs. Pit: R. 290. 

> Tbid. 123; it contributed to the aid 
in 1168-9 together with Preston, &c. 
Again in 1176-7 it is found paying 
1 mark to an aid; ibid. 35. © Ibid. 431. 

7 Geoffrey in 1201-2 proffered 15 
marks to the king for confirmation 
(ibid. 152), and received a charter ac- 
cordingly 3 Laecs. Inj. and Exierss (Rec. 
Soc. Lanes. and Chres.), i, 45. 

3 Thid., to be held by the ‘ free service 
of free serjeanty.’. Robert de Hackin- 
sail had given ro marks for the con- 


firmation in 1199-12203; Farrer, op. cit. 
116, b24. 

9 Geoiirey acknowledged the 4 or- 
gangs of land in Hackinsall and 
Preesall to te the right of Peter (son of 
Robert and grandson of Hugh), who was 
to hold of Geotrey and his heirs by free 
serjeanty of performing suit to county 
and wapentake for Geoffrey's land and 
of summoning pleas of Geoffrey’s court 
in the vill Exc-;tion was made of 18 
acres of land, and the messuage formerly 
Peter's, a fishery adjoining and an acre 
of meadow lying east of the path through 
the ealand called Holm; tiese were to 
be Geoffrey's, Peter was released from 
the payment of §s. a vear for four cows 
which Geoffrey had farmed to him, and 
he was at liberty to make two new 
fisheries on the sea side of Geoffrey’s ; 
Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 9. From the date of the fine (1199) 
it appears that Robert died and Peter 
succeeded in that year. 

10 Robert de Hackinsall gave the third 
part of his land in Hackinsall and 
Preesall to Cockersand Abbey, his heir 
assenting ; Csckersand Chartul. (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 72. Nothing further i: known 
of Peter son of Robert, 5:t Alan son of 
Peter de Hackinsall gave the same abbey 
land on Northerofts, Hackicsail and the 
Coteflatt ; also his share in the waste 


266 


within bounds beginning at the Stocken- 
pool, where there was a cross, and going 
directly south to the cross on the Tongue ; 
ibid, i, 72-3. 

Roger de Hackinsall, a defen jant in 
1292, may have been Alan’s successor. 
Anabil (or Aline) de Preesall had left a 
son William and a daughter Sabina, who, 
as her brother’s heir, claimed a messuage 
and land in Preesall from Roger ; Assize 
R. 408, m. 47d. 63. Roger de 
Hackinsall was plaintit? and Thomas son 
of Thomas de Hambleton defendant in 
resrect of their inheritance from 1301 to 
13133 AssizeR. 419, m. 43 424, m. 5. 

In 1364 Maud widow of Thomas de 
Carleton claimed land in Hackinsall 
against Margaret wife of William son of 
John son of John son of Alan <e 
Hackinsall and Ismania her sister; De 
Banco R. 417, m. 214. 

" Lanes. Ing. and Extentyi,g4. Geoffrey 
gave to Cockersand Abbey lands in Pree- 
sall, viz. all that between Colecross and 
Fauerbeck ; also 2 oxgasgs which Michael 
the reeve had held, 2 acres in the field 
called Kirkgate, other parcels, also a 
fishery on the Wyre to the north of 
Hackinsall ; Cockersand Chareul. i, 67-9. 

Geoffrey was a benefactor to St. Mary's, 
Lancaster, giving land for the repair of 
the church, including the site of a grange 
which he gave when Ranulf Earl of 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


His son John,” known as Arbalaster and de Hackinsall, 
in 1246 agreed with Eva, his father’s widow, as to 
dower.13 At the same time he claimed wreck of the 
sea at Hackinsall, but without good ground.4 John 
died in 1262 holding six plough-lands in Hackinsall 
and Preesall as before, also three plough-lands in 
Hambleton ; Geoffrey his son and heir was of full 
age.!5 John the son of Geoffrey succeeded before 
1284,!6 and was himself followed about 12991” by a 
brother Richard.8 John the son of Richard de 
Hackinsall !9 had a son William, who wasin 1335 to 
marry Alice daughter of John de Bradkirk.?? William 
had a daughter Ismania,?! whose daughter Joan 
married James Pickering,” and in 1402 James and 
Joan had a dispute with the Abbot of Cockersand 
respecting 900 acres of land in Preesall held by the 
abbot, a dispute renewed in 1437 by the plaintiff’s 
son James Pickering.” 

It was probably this James who died in 1479 in 
possession of the manor, but leaving four daughters as 


PART OF 
LANCASTER 


co-heirs—Margaret wife of Richard Boteler, Isabel 
wife of John Leyburne, Mabel wife of Thomas 
Acclamby and Joan wife of Nicholas Acclamby. 
Each of them had a fourth part of the manor,” but 
the descent is by no means clear, as the subdivisions 
are given differently at different times. 

The Boteler share may be that held by the Butlers 
of Hackinsall.?> William Butler died in 1586 holding 
a fourth part of the manor of Hackinsall, with 
messuages and lands in Hackinsall, Preesall, Poulton, 
Thistleton, Staynall and Elswick.2° The heir was 
his grandson William, aged twenty-three, who died 
in 1613 holding a moiety of the manor of the king 
in socage, and leaving a son Henry to succeed him.2? 
Henry’s daughter Ellen carried the estate to William 
Fyfe of Wedacre.?® Their daughter Catherine became 
heir, and marrying John Elletson, this part of the 
manor has descended to Mr. Henry Chandos Elletson 
of Parrox Hall.® He is said to hold a third part of 
the manor. : 


Chester was at Jerusalem (1219) ; Lanc. 
Ch, (Chet. Soc.), ii, 352. 

In 1227 a confirmation of Preesall and 
Hackinsall was granted to Geoffrey de 
Rifford (Balistarius in margin); Cal. 
Chart, R. 1226-57, p. 39- 

13 John son of Sir Geoffrey de Hackinsall 
was also a benefactor of Cockersand, and 
he and his wife Amabil desired to be 
buried'in the abbey ; Cockersand Chartul. 
69-71. His charters included part of 
Licol (Lickow) field, within Hackinsall, 
and 2 half-oxgangs of land in Preesall ; 
the carr, the deep moss and Sandiford in 
Preesall are named. 

18 Final Conc. i, 96. Eva, as the 
widow, was in the king’s gift, but William 
de Lancaster had her marriage; Assize 
R. 404, m. 22. That Geoffrey died 
about 1246 seems to be implied in a 
claim by William de Hambleton to prove 
his liberty against Geoffrey de Hackinsall, 
ending in his acknowledging that he was 
John’s villein ; ibid. m. 4. 

Mt Thid, m. 22 ; it appeared that Geoffrey 
had had three casks of wine cast up by 
the sea which the king had granted to 
him in the name of wreck. 

'5 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 2293 
Heckinsall and Preesall were worth 
£12 4 year. The estates were in the 
escheator’s hands for six weeks, during 
which time £3 35. was received by him ; 
ibid. 231. The rent of two crossbows 
due to the king was payable in 1297 to 
the Earl of Lancaster ; ibid. 289. 

Geoffrey son and heir of John de 
Hackinsall gave land in Preesall to Lan- 
caster Priory, including the meadow in 
the field called Flimingswell Syke ; also 
2 acresin Petit Middleargh in his demesne 
of Hackinsall ; Lanc. Ch. ii, 353. The 
same Geoffrey made a number of gifts to 
Cockersand Abbey, confirming also his 
father’s ; Chartul. i, 73-81. One clause 
gave permission for the canons’ cattle to 
cross the sands in summer from Preesall 
to Cocker. He also allowed a fishery 
in the Wyre between that of Alan 
de Hackinsall and one the canons had, 
for their sustenance. Certain disputes 
having arisen between him and the canons 
as to dykes around their lands in Preesall 
a friendly agreement was made in 1271, 
by which he allowed them to make a dyke 
from that at the Blacklache straight across 
to their eastern dyke ; ibid. 83. 

In 1266-7 Geoffrey the Arbalaster son 
of John released to Edmund his lord son 


7 


of King Henry, Richard son of Lyol de 
Singleton and William his brother, with 
all their seguela and chattels; Great 
Coucher, i, fol. 62, no. 14. 

16 In that year there was a dispute as 
to 40 acres in Hackinsall, of which 
20 acres were held by John son of 
Geoffrey de Hackinsall, 9 by Amery 
widow of Geoffrey, 9 by the Abbot of 
Cockersand and 2 by the Prior of Lan- 
caster. It was alleged that one Adam 
de Dissheford had held them, and the 
claimant was his daughter Alice widow 
of Simon son of Henry de Hambleton ; 
Assize R. 1268, m. 11d. 

7 Writ of diem cL extr. issued 25 
June 1299 ; Excerpta e Rot. Fin. (MS.), 
li, 27 Edw. I, m. 13. 

18 Assize R. 420, m. rod. Richard 
de Hackinsall held the manor, together 
with Preesall and Hambleton, in 1324, 
by the service of two crossbows and 
405.3; Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 40d, The 
40s. was for Hambleton. 

19 Maud de Preesall in 1331 claimed 
a messuage and land in Preesall against 
Richard de Hackinsall, John his son and 
William the Pinder. It appeared that 
Richard was dead and John was then 
tenant. A verdict was recorded against 
William ; Assize R. 1404, m. 18d. 

20 A settlement was made by which the 
manor of Hackinsall and 4 oxgangs of 
land in Preesall were given to John son 
of Richard de Hackinsall, with remainder 
to William (son of John) and Alice and 
their issue. There were a sheep walk, 
&c., held by Jordan del Celer, 20 acres 
held by William de Hackinsall and Ellen 
his wife, 12 acres held by Master 
Edmund de Lacy and Margaret daughter 
of Richard de Hackinsall and Isabel 
daughter of Master Edmund; also an 
oxgang of land held by Thomas de 
Goosnargh for life; Final Conc. ii, 95. 
A further agreement as to § oxgangs of 
land in Preesal] was made at the same 
time, these being given to John de 
Hackinsall and Christiana his wife, with 
remainder to William their son and Alice 
his wife, daughter of John de Bradkirk ; 
ibid. 98. 

In 1346 John de Hackinsall held a 
plough-land and a half, the Abbot of 
Cockersand a plough-land and John 
Lawrence half a plough-land by the 
service of two crossbows (or 4s.) yearly ; 
Surv. of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 54. 

21 William son of John de Hackinsall 


247 


and Alice his wife in 1357 granted the 
manor of Hackinsall, with exceptions, to 
John son of Robert de Dalton for life ; 
Final Conc. ii, 151. 

32 The descent is given in Dep. Keeper's 
Rep. xl, App. 534. The name of 
Ismania’s husband is not recorded. 

8 Ibid. : 

4 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 
107-8. The manor was held of the 
king as of his duchy in socage by the 
annual service of two crossbows or 2s. 8d., 
and was worth £20 a year. The ages of 
the daughters were forty, thirty-six, thirty- 
four and thirty-three years respectively. 

25 The Richard husband of Margaret 
was son of John Boteler of Rawcliffe, as 
appears by an arbitration deed of 1478 
among the Dalton of Thurnham 
muniments. 

The paternity of William Butler, who 
acquired part of Hackinsall, seems to 
have been doubtful. He had three aliases 
—Ward, Parr and Taylor. Richard 
Butler had two sons, George and Thomas, 
and a daughter Margaret, who married 
John Lancelyn ; William Butler alleged 
in 1540 that he was the son of Thomas ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 168, m. 63 171, 
m. 14. 

William Butler of Preesall in 1535 
granted the marriage of his son George 
to Nicholas Butler of Rawcliffe ; Dods. 
MSS. liii, fol. 84.4. 

William Butler appears as plaintiff in 
549 respecting the fourth part of 
Hackinsall Hall and lands, &c.. Henry 
Barton and Barbara his wife being 
defendants, Butler held in common 
with Sir Marmaduke Tunstall, William 
Mordaunt, Anne his wife and — Bewley. 
Barbara claimed by grant of John Booth, 
as recorded later; Duchy of Lane. 
Plead. Edw. VI, xxxi, B 8. 

26 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 
47; the premises in Hackinsall were 
said to be held of the queen as of her 
duchy by the fourth part of a knight’s 
fee and the rest of the estate in socage. 

27 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 240-1 3 all was held of the 
king in socage. Henry Butler was twenty- 
two years old. Henry Butler in 1631 
compounded for refusing knighthood ; 
Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 222. 

28 Dugdale, Visit. 113. The marriage 
took place in 1648. 

29 Foster, Lancs. Ped. ; abstract of titl: 
in possession of W. Farrer, William 


Be) 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


PARROX HALL is a low two-stor - 

house with rough-cast and htteouhed eee 
grey slated roofs, very much modernized, but still 
preserving some of its ancient features. The building 
itself offers no architectural evidence of a date earlier 
than the first half of the 17th century, but there 
have been so many alterations at different times that 
it is quite possible the structure may incorporate parts 
of an earlier building, though whether of date prior to 
the 16th century it is impossible to say. Any earlier 
building which may have stood on the same site was 
probably pulled down wholly or piecemeal at the 
time the present house was erected or came into 
being. 

The principal front, which is about 75 ft. in length, 
is now north, but this is probably a later modification 
of the original design, the entrance having been most 
likely on the south side, now the garden front. The 
east or kitchen wing is over 60 ft. in length, but the 
west wing is very much shorter with only a slight 
projection north and south. The original plan 
appears to have been changed, perhaps more than 
once, and how far the modern work reproduces old 
features it is now impossible to say. An arched 
entrance at the south end of the east wing, if it 
represents in any way an older feature, suggests the 
entrance gateway to a courtyard on the south side of 
the house.?% 

The hall occupies the west end of the main wing 
and is 22 ft. 6 in. long by 16 ft. in width, with a 
stone fireplace at the east end. The entrance is in 
the middle of the north side by a door which appears 
to be an 18th-century insertion, and the staircase, 
which occupies a gabled bay in the angle formed by 
the main and west wings, leads from the north-west 
corner. ‘The hall and screens may have originally 
occupied the whole of the middle wing, the eastern 
end of which is now occupied by the dining-room, 
but this is uncertain. A modern pointed doorway at 
the north-east corner, now disused but opening into 


a passage north of the dining-room between the hall 
and east wing, if it reproduces an original entrance, 
suggests the north doorway of the screens, but there 
is no other evidence that this was so. The hall, 
however, may always have been its present size with 
a passage-way behind the fireplace as at Speke. The 
walls are wainscoted their full height with 17th- 
century oak in diamond-shaped panels and the stair- 
case has square newels and turned balusters. The 
floor is flagged diagonally, and the ceiling, which is 
8 ft. 8 in. high, is of plain plaster crossed by two 
cased beams running its greater length. With the 
exception of four mullioned windows in the north 
front, a large one of six lights in the west wing and 
the others in the east wing, all the windows are 
modern sashes or casements, and externally the build- 
ing has little or no architectural interest. The interior 
contains some good oak furniture, but more has been 
taken away, and in one of the bedrooms is a good 
oak mantel. There appears to have been a restoration 
in the 18th century, most of the internal oak panelled 
doors being apparently of that date, but except 
for the hall the interior has been almost wholly 
modernized. 

It is not clear what became of the Leyburne share, 
but that of Thomas and Mabel Acclamby or Aglaby 
descended to their daughter Agnes,®° whose son 
Thomas Booth succeeded in 1514, and was followed 
by his brother John Booth, D.D., Archdeacon of 
Hereford,®! after whose death? there was much 
contention as to the inheritance, which had been 
augmented to a moiety of the manor.** William 
Mordaunt and Agnes his wife, who acquired it, were 
succeeded by William Twynehoe and Etheldreda his 
wife.44 They sold to Edmund Fleetwood of Rossall 
in 1596,°° and it descended to his son Paul in 1622. 

The other Acclamby share seems to have been 
divided between two daughters, of whom one, Mabel, 
carried an eighth part of the manor to her husband, 
Reginald Preston, who in 1519 was succeeded by 


Elletson and Elizabeth his wife had lands 
in Hackinsall, Preesall and Stalmine in 
1759; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 360, 
m. 46. James Pickering in 1456 gave 
Parrock hey to Richard Boteler and Mar- 
garet his wife; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 
101. 

3a The walls here, however, are of 
brick and plaster of no particular thick- 
ness and are apparently modern. 

30 Duchy of Lanc. Ing, p.m. iv, no. 60. 

It appears that her first husband was 
Roger Booth of Old Durham ; she after- 
wards married Richard Skelton. The 
fourth part of the manor, with messuages 
and land in Hackinsall and Preesall, was 
held of the king by the rent of the fourth 
part of two crossbows or 2s. 8d. Thomas 
Booth her son was twenty-four years 
old. 
Sl Ibid. vi, no. 56. The estate is 
described as ‘the manors’ of Hackinsall 
and Preesall ; it had in 1515 been settled 
on Alice wife of Thomas Booth and widow 
of John Lawrence. The service due to 
the king as duke was two crossbows or 
2s. $d. Thomas Booth died 13 Mar. 
1527-8. His brother John was thirty- 
three years old. 

83 John Booth was Archdeacon of Here- 
ford 1523-42; Le Neve, Fasti, |, 481. 
In 1533 he obtained the king’s licence to 
acquire from John Ashton, John Jackson, 
Charles Booth and Douce Booth their 


estate in a fourth part of the demesne 
lands of Hackinsall, and also to acquire 
both moieties of another fourth part; 
L. and P. Hen, VIII, vi, g. 1060 (3): 
He died in August 1542, leaving a moiety of 
the manor of Hackinsall, with messuages, 
&c., there and in Preesall, Stalmine and 
Staynall, all held of the king as duke by 
knight’s service and a rent of 25. 8d. His 
next heir was a niece, Anne Booth, 
daughter of his brother Charles, aged 
thirteen ; but he had in 1540 demised 
the moiety of the manor to Francis Booth 
(son and heir of Roger) and his wife 
Barbara Booth, the last-named being a 
cousin, at a rent of £7 year ; Duchy of 
Lance. Ing. p.m. vil, no. 18; ix, no. 42. 
The latter inquisition, taken in 1549, 
gives Agnes (daughter of Charles) as the 
name of the heiress. Anne and Annes 
were frequently confused. 

It would appear that the Booths had 
acquired the Leyburne share of the manor, 
and that they were responsible for the 
whole service due to the duchy. ; 

83 Geoffrey Starkie and Barbara his wife, 
formerly wife of Francis Booth, in 1550 
complained that William Westby detained 
the title deeds of the moiety of the manor; 
Duchy of Lane. Plead, Edw. VI, xxvil, 
S. 16, They also claimed arrears of rents 
and profits for saltcotes, with boons, 
services, &c., against William Mordaunt, 
Anne his wife and others (ibid. xxxii, $9), 


258 


and a little later had a further dispute 
with William Mordaunt and Annes his 
wife ; ibid. Eliz. xxix, M 3. 

From the pleadings it appears that the 
Starkies held the Booth moiety for the 
term of a hundred ycars from 1539 under 
the grant of Archdeacon Booth ; also the 
Butler fourth part under grant of William 
Butler for thirty years from 1538. Sir 
Marmaduke Tunstall held one-half the 
remaining part an¢ Thomas Bewley the 
other half; these portions had also been 
leased to Geoffrey Starkie, so that he 
held the whole manor of Hackinsall and 
Preceall. ; 

34 William Mordaunt and Anne his 
wife in 1573 made a settlement of the 
moiety of the manor of Hackinsall and 
Preesall, with messuages, dovecote, lands, 
&c.; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 35. 
m. 12, They made a further settlement 
in 1587, the estate being described as the 
manor of Preceall and a moiety of the 
manor of Hackinsall, the remainder teing 
to William Twynehoe and Ethelsreda his 
wife and the heirs of Etheldreda ; sbid. 
bdle. 49, m. 23. 

bas the. bdle. 59, m. 17% Edmund 
Fleetwood died in 1622 holding a motety 
of the manor of Hackinsall and Preesali, 
with lands, &c., of the king as of his 
duchy by a rent of 25.5 Lance. Ing. pm 
(Rec. Soc Lancs. and Ches.), iti, 345 


16. 


ee ae 
ee ye TT id 


PreesaLL wiTH Hackrinsatt: Parrox Hatt: Nortu Front 


PreesatL wir Hacxinsatt: Parrox Hatt: THe Hatz 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


their son Thomas. This portion was sold to 
Tunstall,?” then to Starkie.8 The other eighth part 
seems to have been held about 1555-68 by Thomas 
Bewley.** 

In 1555 an agreement was made as to the 
partition of the manor between Sir Marmaduke 
Tunstall, Thomas Bewley, William Butler and 
William Mordaunt and Anne (Agnes) his wife.4° 

The fourth part of the manor held by Robert 
Dalton of Thurnham in 1578 resulted from the 
purchase of the Tunstall and Bewley shares 4!; the 
tenure was not known.” This part was purchased 
by the above-named Paul Fleetwood in 1618. 

The three-fourths of the manor was in 1729 sold 
by Edward Fleetwood of Rossall to the executors of 
Edmund Hornby of Poulton, and to Robert Loxham, 
vicar of Poulton, in moieties, and in 1797 the 
former moiety was sold to James Bourne by Geoffrey 
Hornby the younger.## 

In 1813 the manor was held by Daniel Elletson, 
James Bourne and Robert Loxham."* The second of 
these seems to have become the chief owner, and 
Hackinsall Hall descended to his brother Peter, who 
died in 1846,!° and was succeeded by his son 
Sir James Bourne, bart.47 Dying in 1882, he was 
followed by his son Sir James Dyson Bourne, who 
survived his father only a year, and the inheritance 
then passed to his sister Harriet Anne Dyson, who 
married Mr. James William Seaburne May of 
Liverpool. He took in 1897 the additional sur- 
name of Bourne, and Mrs. Bourne-May continues to 
own the estate, which is said to include two-thirds of 
the manor. 


PART OF 
LANCASTER 


HACKINSALL HALL, now used as a farm-house, 
is a large irregular two-story building of 17th-cen- 
tury date with mullioned and transomed windows, 
but it retains few or none of its original architectural 
features, having undergone a very thorough restoration 
about the year 1873. The walls are entirely of 
rough-cast, the roofs covered with blue slates, and the 
mullioned windows throughout are modern. The 
restoration, however, probably reproduces more or 
less the original characteristics of the building, though 
little of the actual structure but the masonry of the 
walls remains. Built into a low gable on the south 
side is a stone inscribed :— 


F 
RA 
GOD’s PROVI- 
DENCE 1656 


the initials being those of Richard and Anne Fleet- 
wood, and the date probably that of the erection of 
the house. 

“The famous boggart of Hackinsall Hall had the 
appearance ofa huge horse, which was very industrious 
if treated with kindness; thus we hear that every 
night it was indulged with a fire, before which it 
was frequently seen reclining, and when deprived of 
this indulgence by neglect it expressed its anger by 
fearful outcries.’ 48 

The Cockersand Abbey estate, chiefly in the 
LOWER END of Pilling, was in 1346 considered a 
third part of the vill.° After the Dissolution it seems 
to have been granted out in parcels.5° Roger Dalton 


36 Duchy of Lanc, Inq. p.m. v, no. 18 ; 
Mabel died before her husband. Thomas 
Preston was twenty-two years old. The 
manor was said to be held of the king as 
duke by the serjeanty of rendering to the 
king two crossbows or 45. 

37 Sir Marmaduke Tunstall (of Thur- 
land) in 1543 purchased the manor of 
Hackinsall from Wilfrid Preston and 
Joan his wite ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 12, m. 69. He died in 1557 hold- 
ing an eighth part of the manor of 
Hackinsall and Preesall, with land, &c., 
of the king and queen as of their duchy, 
by knight’s service ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
p.m. x, no. 5. His son Francis and Alice 
his wife in 1563 sold to Geoffrey Starkie ; 
Pal. of Lane. Feet of F. bdle. 25, m. 138. 

38 Geoffrey Starkie has already been 
mentioned as interested in the manor 
through his wife Barbara. 

Thomas Starkie, as nephew and heir 
of Geoffrey (viz. son of Richard Starkie 
of Stretton), claimed the manor in 1568 
against Richard Hothersall and Edmund 
Clerkson, who alleged a conveyance from 
Geoffrey. Hothersall had married Anne 
daughter of Geoffrey, whose wife Bridget 
(apparently a second wife) survived him ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Plead. Eliz. Ixxvii, S 16. 
Barbara’s right went to Robert Dalton, 
and two years later William Mordaunt 
and Agnes his wife claiming by Charles 
Booth, her father, sought lands, &c., in 
Hackinsall against Richard Hothersall, 
Anne his wife, Bridget Starkie and Robert 
Dalton ; ibid. xciii, M 16 3 cl, M ro. 

9 In 1568 an eighth part of the manor 
of Hackinsall, with lands in Preesall, a 
fishery in the Wyre, &c.. was held by 
Thomas Bewley, who in conjunction with 
his son and heir William conveyed to 


Richard Hothersall, John Smith and John 
Aglaby; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 
30, m. 81. Of these three Hothersall 
appears to have conveyed to Dalton ; John 
Aglaby sold in 1582 to Henry Thompson 
(ibid. bdle. 44, m. 129) ; and John Smith 
(of Stalmine Grange) died in 1598 hold- 
ing two messuages, &c., in Hackinsall 
and Preesall, tenure not recorded ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvii, no. 47. 

40 Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 197, m. 10. 

41 From preceding notes it may be 
gathered that Richard Hothersall acquired 
the Tunstall-Starkie eighth and also that 
of Bewley. See also Dods. MSS. liii, 
fol. 1024. In 1569 Robert and Thomas 
Dalton purchased the manor of Hackin 
sall, with dovecote, lands, &c., from 
Richard Hothersall and Anne his wife ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 31, m. 
28. 

William Butler in 1571 complained 
that in the conveyance by Hothersall to 
Dalton his fourth part of the manor, the 
thirty years’ lease of which had expired, 
had been wrongly included; Duchy of 
Lanc. Plead. Eliz. xc, B 38. 

4 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 
1; the heir was Robert Dalton son of 
Thomas (brother of Robert), who had 
left a widow Anne. 

43 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 94, 
no. 17. 

There are a number of references to 
the Hackinsall estate of the Fleetwood 
family (1628-57) in Exch. Dep. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), and some of the 
depositions are printed in the introduction 
to that volume, pp. x—xxiv. 

In 1658 Richard Fleetwood held the 
manor of Preesall and a moiety of the 
manor of Hackinsall, with lands, free 


a59 


warren, &c.; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 162, m. 164. In 1695 the manor 
of Hackinsall with Preesall is named 
among the Fleetwood properties ; ibid. 
bdle. 235, m. 75. 

44 Abstract of title in possession of W. 
Farrer. 

45 Pal. of Lanc. Fines, 53 Geo. III, 
m. 93 Richard Dickson was plaintiff. 

46 Foster, Lancs. Pedigrees. There are 
family monuments in Stalmine Church. 

47 Sometime M.P. for the borough of 
Evesham. 

48 Thornber, Blackpool, 333. 

4 See a former note. Rentals from 
1451 to 1537 are printed in the Chartul. 
iii, 1268-71. 

50 Part of the Cockersand lands was 
leased to Roger Dalton for 21 years in 
1579, and a lease of the same to other 
persons was given in 1600 ; Pat. 21 Eliz. 
pt. xi; 42 Eliz. pt. xvi. Robert Dalton 
claimed the messuage, &c., called Tunges 
in 1601 against Richard Hoghton ; Ducatus 
Lanc. (Rec. Com.), iii, 436, 457. In 
1583 lands in Preesall and Hackinsall, 
late of Cockersand Abbey, called the Lower 
End of Pilling, were given to Theophilus 
and Robert Adams, to be held of the 
manor of East Greenwich by §s. rent ; 
Pat. 25 Eliz. pt. iv. Another grant was 
made to Edward Badby and others in 
1622-3; Pat. 20 Jas. I, pt. iii, Land 
called Tongues, lately of Cockersand 
Abbey, was in 1588 granted to Edward 
Wymcock ; Pat. 30 Eliz. pt. vii. 

James Fisher died at Preesall in 1640 
holding a messuage, &c., there of the 
king as of his manor of East Greenwich. 
His heir was his son John, aged thirty- 
three ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxx, 
no, 16, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


had some of it, which was sold in 1587 to Robert 
Bindloss of Borwick,*! and he died in 1595 holding 
the Lower End of Pilling, but the tenure is not 
recorded.” 

At the byrlaw or burley court of Robert Bindloss 
in 1590 various persons were fined for non-attendance, 
including John Smith of Stalmine Grange. It was 
ordered that the watercourses must be ‘scoured and 
drawn’ before St. Helen’s Day, ‘being the 3rd day of 
May.’ Fines were ordered for foldbreak (breaking 
the lord’s pinfold), rescues, bloodwick and hubble- 
showe (affray), playing unlawful games, keeping 
unlawful fences and neglect to ring swine. Turf 
was not to be taken without the owner’s leave ; 
scolding women were to be punished by fine ; and 
‘inmakes or bysiers’ were not to be entertained by 
anyone in the lordship.* 

John Lawrence was a partner in the vill in 1346, 
and his estate may be that subsequently held by 
Beconsaw and Clifton of Westby.” 

Though it is Preesall which is named in Domesday 


Book, the manor in later times seems to have been 
known as Hackinsall ; yet in the 16th century and 
later a manor of Preesall is separately mentioned, 
usually in connexion with Hackinsall.* A family of 
Bradshaw of Preesall occurs.” 

It would appear that Hereward Abbot of 
Cockersand (1216-35) undertook, in return for the 
gifts to his abbey, to find a fit monk to celebrate in 
the chapel of Hackinsall for the souls of King John, 
Geoffrey and Eva and others, but the chapel is 
not mentioned again.® 

There are now two places of worship in the 
township. St. Oswald’s was built in 1898 in con- 
nexion with the Church of England, and is a chapel 
of ease to Stalmine. Bethel Congregational Chapel 
was built in 1835 and enlarged in 1888. Services 
were first begun about 1830, owing to the efforts 
of the minister of Elswick, who described this district 
as ‘destitute of the Gospel,’ but ‘ready to attend 
it if preached.’ ® 

Two schools were founded in Preesall about 1700.” 


ST. MICHAEL-ON-WYRE 


UPPER RAWCLIFFE WITH TARNACRE 


OUT RAWCLIFFE 
GREAT ECCLESTON 


The church from which the parish takes its name 
lies in the township of Upper Rawcliffe, on the 
south bank of the Wyre, which river divides the 
area into two unequal parts. The district is for the 
most part flat and lies low, except in the extreme 
south, where a height of about 120 ft. above sea 
level is attained. The acreage amounts to 18,8884, 
and the population in 1901 was 3,691. 

The history of the parish has been extremely 
placid, and there is even yet no railway line within 
its boundary. The population is employed almost 
entirely in agriculture, and the land is now occupied 
as follows! :— 


INSKIP WITH SOWERBY 


ELSWICK 
WOODPLUMPTON 
Arable Permanent Woods and 
land grasa plantations 
ac, ac. ac, 
Upper Rawcliffe 1,5984 1,991 49 
Out Rawcliffe 1,565 2,437 46 
Great Eccleston 1094 1,125 3 
Elswick . . 145% 6904 15 
Inskip with 
Sowerby } 9424 1,875 As 
Woodplumpton . 178 4,492 fe) 
4,539 12,611 154 


51 Dalton probably purchased from 
Adams, An estate of forty messuages, 
500 acres of salt marsh, &c., was in 1536 
granted to feoffees by Anne Dalton, 
widow, Barnaby Kitchin, Huzh Hesketh 
and Alice his wife ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F. bdle. 48, m. 48. In the following 
year the feoffees, in conjunction with 
Roger Dalton, sold the greater part to 
Robert Bindloss ; ibid. bdle. 49, m. 21. 

52 Duchy of Lanc, Ing. p.m. xvii, no. 7. 

58 Preston Guard. 29 June 1878. 

+4 See a former note. Edmund Law- 
rence of Lancaster had land in Preesall in 
1358; Duchy of Lanc, Assize R. 7, 
m.4d. 

§§ Cuthbert Clifton in right of William 
Beconsaw of Wray claimed in 1574 a 
messuage, &c., in Stalmine, with common 
of pasture on the waste grounds of Preesall 
called Preesall Park and Park Moss, and 
other wastes of Hackinsall and Preesall. 
Beconsaw also had messuages and lands in 
Preesall and others, known as Wheatholme 
Carr, in Hackinsall, He conveyed all to 
Cuthbert Clifton, whose right to common 
was denied by Robert Dalton, partly in 
virtue of a lease of Cockersand Abbey 


lands and partly in virtue of his lordship 
of part of the manor; Duchy of Lance. 
Plead, Eliz, g C6. 

* Cuthbert Clifton died in 1580 holding 
lands, &c., in Hackinsall and Preesall of 
the heirs of Thomas Booth in socage by 
suit at the court of his manors; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 76. In 1585 
the Clifton lands were stated to be held 
of the queen as of her duchy by the 
service of two crossbows ; ibid, xiv, no, 21 3 
Ct. of Wards Ing. p.m. xxi, 238. 

In 1581 Roger Dalton claimed turbary 
in Preesall Moss and a messuage called 
Quatholme (or Wheatholme) against 
Robert Carter, whose right was derived 
from William Beconsaw ; Ducatus Lanc. 
iii, 94,126. Thomas Carter died in 1622 
holding land in Hackinsall of the king as 
duke in socage ; George his son and heir 
was fifteen years of age ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec, Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 317. 

56 The manor of Preesall is named 
separately in a deed of 1642 by Henry 
Philpott and Robert Swayne ; Com. Pleas 
Recov. R. Trin. 18 Chas. I, m. 5. 

Maud daughter of Sabina de Preesall 
in 1319 claimed a messuage and land in 


260 


Preesall from William son of Robert de 
Leyland ; De Banco R. 230, m. 92. See 
note 10 above. 

Christiana widow of William Wileock- 
son claimed dower in a message in 
Preesall in 1342 against John son of 
John de Poulton; ibid. 332, m. 524 4 
Maud daughter of William Wilcockson of 
Preesall claimed lands there in 1357} 
Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 6, m. I. 
Henry Blundell and Alice his wife io 
1371 claimed (in Alice's right) a messuage 
and land in the same place against Maud 
daughter of William Wilcockson ; De 
Banco R. 443, m. 306. 

Thomas Dobson of Preesall made 4 
purchase there in 1355 from Richard 
Page and Amabil his wife ; Final Conc. tl 
148, 
%S Dugdale, Visit. 55. ‘They occur also 
at Scale in Skerton. 

58 Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 216. , 

59 Nightingale, Lanes. Nonconf. i, 

66-73. 

‘ 60 ewe Fleetwood’s, 1687-95, and 
Robert Carter's, 1710; End. Char. 
Rep. 
© Sede from Bd. of Agric. (1905) 


Ee a MI 


= 


is es 
eee 


PreesaLL witH Hackinsatt: Hackinsatt Hai 


See aa 


Sr. Mrcuaei’s on Wrre CuurcH FROM THE NorrH-EasT 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


The plague of 1349—-50 visited the parish, taking 
off many of the people." Sir Richard Kighley of 
Inskip was one of those who fought at Agincourt, 
being killed in the battle? The Reformation was 
long resisted by a number of the people here as 
elsewhere in the Fylde? In the Civil War the 
principal squires—Butler and Kirkby—lost sons in 
the cause of Charles I; but men were raised also 
for the Parliament,! and around Elswick there was 
sufficient Puritanism to stir the people to the build- 
ing of a place of worship. The Jacobite rising of 
1715 brought disaster to the Butlers of Rawcliffe, 
but in 1745 the parish seems to have been untouched 
by the invasion. 

To the ancient tax called the fifteenth St. 
Michael’s contributed £6 45. when the hundred paid 
£56 4s. 8d,° and to £100 leviable on the same 
district for the county lay of 1624 this parish would 
contribute {10 I2s. 24.6 

The church of 


ST. MICHAEL- 
ON-WYRE 


and appearance of the earlier structure, except that 
its length must have been about the same as that of 
the present building. On the north chancel wall 
the older masonry, which is of red sandstone, in- 
cludes a buttress 2 ft. 6 in. wide with a ro in. 
projection, and at the west end of the south aisle 
the fragment of old walling, which is 3 ft. 6 in. 
wide and stands 6} in. in front of the later wall, 
has been pierced by a pointed window 2 ft. g in. 
high and 12 in. wide, now built up. The present 
plan is that of the 15th-century building, but there 
is said to have been a restoration or partial rebuild- 
ing in 1549,° when the tower is said to have been 
erected and new bells purchased. The tower seems 
to have been rebuilt or refaced in 1611 by Henry 
Butler, whose arms and initials together with the 
date are carved on the north-west merlon of the 
parapet facing west. The north chapel, originally 


CHURCH ST. MICHAEL’ 

stands close to the 
left bank of the River Wyre, 
which bounds the church- 
yard on the north side, the 
west end facing on to the 
road immediately south of the 
bridge. It consists of a chan- 


polm. 


He 


Moorham 


cel 33 ft.6 in. by 1g ft. 8 in. oi 
with north vestry, nave Ayre cain, SMichad SO 
. . . Tle 
45 ft. 6 in. by 19 ft. 8 in., Ecetesfon Cee au 1 Sonert ty 


south aisle 15 ft. 10 in. wide 
extending the full length of 
nave and chancel, short north 
aisle 8 ft. 3 in. wide, and 
north chapel 24 ft. 8 in. by 
12 ft. 9 in., south porch and 
west tower 13 ft. square, all 
these measurements being in- 


CON 
joi WW gg 
va “iiling 
Iirfifand 
OUT RAWCLIFFE: Mo5s5 A GG 
UPPER RAWCLIFFE} 
WITH “NY gtrer® 


ZEKIRKEHAM 


igh : LDDs 
Ga ont 


ZG ARS TANCE 
tithe FE ‘ 


6 Copp Rie 
Bacaitie a8 1 MyerscoughZ 
ELSWIcK, INSKIP wrrn SEZ hee he Zi 


ot, 3 : . 
 Crossm. ©" nskip ie ‘ 


ternal. 

The building is substanti- 
ally of 15th and early 16th- 
century date, but there may 
be portions of an older struc- 


LA 


MZ 
(of 8 


Ki 


ture in the north wall of the 


chancel and at the west end 

of the south aisle adjoining the tower, the masonry 
of which may date from the 13th century. The 
evidence of the building, however, is not sufficient to 
make it possible to trace the development of the 
plan or to arrive at any conclusion as to the extent 


la Engl. Hist. Rev. v, $293 fourscore ibid. 16-17. 


An annotated list of the 


the chantry of St. Katharine, was repaired in 1797, 
and in 1854 the church was reseated and some resto- 
rations carried out, the old square pews being 
taken away and the whitewash removed from the 
arches and columns of the nave.® 


Extracts from Subsidy Rolls 1523-80 


men and women was the Archdeacon of 
Richmond’s estimate. The jury appear 
to have allowed 20s, out of the 5os. 
claimed for probates. 

? Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 116. 

8 This appears in the township histories, 
but the only residents who in 1630-2 
compounded for the two-thirds of their 
estates liable to sequestration for recusancy 
were Thomas Kirkby of Rawcliffe (by 
an annual payment of £5), Leonard 
Clarkson of Woodplumpton (£3), and 
Robert White of Great Eccleston 
(£8 135. 4d.) ; Trans. Hist. Soc. (new 
ser,), xxiv, 176-8, 
_ Alist of recusants in 1610 is printed 
in Fishwick’s St. Michael’s (Chet. Soc.), 
12-14. A large number of the people 
refused to make the Protestation of 1641 ; 


convicted recusants c. 1670 will be found 
in Misc. (Cath. Rec. Soc.), v, 166, 180-2, 
199-2, 204-6. 

4 War in Lancs. (Chet. Soc.), 42. The 
same chronicler shows that the royal and 
parliamentary troops crossed the parish 
from time to time; e.g. 38, 67. 

5 Gregson, Fragments (ed. Harland), 19. 
The details were: Upper Rawcliffe, 
8s. 8d.; Out Rawcliffe, £1 6s.; Great 
Eccleston, 16s. 4d. 3 Elswick, 19s. 44. ; 
Inskip with Sowerby, tos. 4d.; Wood- 
plumpton, £2 35. 44. 

6 Ibid. 23. The details were : Upper 
Rawcliffe, 14s. 10$d.; Out Rawcliffe, 
£2 45. §3d.; GreatEccleston, Ai 7s. 114d; 


Elswick, £1 135. o§d.5 Inskip with 
Sowerby, 175. 8d, ; Woodplumpton, 
£3 145. 14d. 


261 


are printed in Fishwick, op. cit. 9-11 3 
they give the names of the principal 
residents, 

7 The invocation appears in Domesday 
‘Michelescherche.’ It had then one 
plough-land. The distinguishing phrase 
“upon Wyre’ is found in 1216. 

8 Fishwick, op. cit. 62. The state- 
ment seems to be based only on the fact 
that in 1549 Thomas Singleton by 
his will left gos. ‘towards the churche 
and buyldinge of the steple of Seynct 
Mychaells.’ The later notes to Glynne’s 
Churches of Lanc. 24 give the date of re- 
building as 1525. 

9 Some work was apparently done in 
1809 and 1811, these dates being on 
spout heads on the south side of the 
building. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


The chancel and nave are under one continuous 
blue-slated roof and the south aisle has a separate 
gabled slated roof finishing behind an embattled 
parapet. The walls are generally constructed of 
rubble masonry with sandstone dressings, the whole 
of the parapet of the south aisle, together with its 
eastern gable, being of dressed stone. 

The east wall of the chancel, however, is built of 
red sandstone blocks and may be a 17th-century 
reconstruction. The east window is of three 
trefoiled lights with perpendicular tracery and 
moulded jambs and mullions with a very slight 
reveal and without hood mould. On the south side 
the chancel is open to the aisle by two wide arches, 
but there is a 5 ft. 6 in. length of straight wall at 
the east end in which is a piscina with cinquefoiled 
head and chamfered jambs, now only 1g in. from the 
floor and without bowl, and on the east wall to the 
north of the window isa plain stone bracket. The 


north wall sets back 6 in. at a distance of 7 ft. 3 in. 


SSIS "cent if 
E16 "ceNTE 
E117 CENT 
EA18°CENT 


two chamfered orders springing from octagonal piers, 
1 ft. 8 in. diam., with moulded capitals and bases and 
from responds at ends. The two easternmost arches 
to the chancel are wider than those to the nave, the 
piers are thicker and the detail of the capitals different, 
but they appear to have been bui't at the same time. 
The north arcade consists of four pointed arches on 
octagonal piers similar to those on the south side, the 
capitals only slightly differing in detail. The piers are 
5 ft. 6 in. in height to the top of the capitals, the height 
of the arches above being 10 ft. 2 in. to the crown, 
There is a 4 ft. length of blank wall at the west end 
of the nave on the north side and the whole of the 
interior walling is plastered. The windows of the 
south aisle are all square-headed, of three lights with 
external hood mould,!° and are probably of 16th- 
century date. There are two windows and a priest's 
door to the chancel aisle and a single window and 
doorway to the nave. The east window of the aisle 
has a four-centred head with three pointed lights 
and hollow-chamfered 
mullions and the west 
window is modern. 
The porch, which 
is dated 1611, stands 
12 ft. from the west 
end of the aisle, and 
is built of wrought 
stone with a blue- 
slated overhanging 
roof and segmental 
outer arch. It is very 
plain in character and 
small in size, measur- 
ing only 8 ft. 3 in. by 
8 ft. 11 in. wide, and 
has a seat on each side. 
The north aisle pro- 
per is confined to the 
two western bays of 
the nave, beyond 
which, to the east, it 


———— 


INTL: 


is merged into the 


C_] MODERN 


Pray or Sr. Micuaeu’s Cucrcu 


from the east, forming a slight recess about g ft. long, 
to the west of which is a modern two-light traceried 
window. Before the erection of the vestry there was 
a second window to the eastward, the position of 
which may still be seen in the plastered wall within 
the recess, of which part of the external hood mould 
remains. The arrangements of the sanctuary being 
altered in 1907 necessitated the vestry door being 
pushed further westward and a skew passageway 
being formed through the wall. There is no chancel 
arch or screen and no distinction between the chancel 
and the nave, except in the construction of the roof, 
which in the chancel is boarded and consists of three 
bays with plain king-post trusses, the tie-beams 
cutting across the top of the east window. The 
same roof is continued over the nave with collared 
Principals and shaped wood brackets on stone corbels, 
and is of seven bays plastered ketween the trusses 
and with three modern dormer windows on the 
south side. 

The south arcade consists of six pointed arches of 


SCALE or FEE4 


chantry chapel. Its 
west end, which now 
forms the baptistery, 
is lighted by a modern 
three-light segmental-headed traceried window, and 
has a pointed north door opposite the second 
bay. The wall west of the doorway is occupied by 
a modern Gothic memorial to members of the 
Swainson family, and the floor of the baptistery is 
raised two steps above that of the nave. The aisle 
roof is a continuation of that of the nave, with low 
overhanging eaves. ; 

The Butler chapel, or St. Katharine’s chantry, 1s 
now seated with modern pews and open to the nave, 
but at the west end is separated from the aisle by 
an ornate early 19th-century Gothic screen, said to 
have been made at Lancaster and bearing the arms 
of the France and Wilson families.!! The floor is 
boarded and raised two steps above that of the nave, 
and the chapel is covered with a separate low-pitched 
gabled roof with flat plaster ceiling, the latter probably 
introduced in 1797. At this time, too, a fireplace was 


© The westernmost one is slightly different in detail. 
il Fishwick, op. cit. 57. 


262 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


built in the north-east corner, and is still in position 
though bricked up. There are two segmental- 
headed windows on the north side, each of three 
cinquefoiled lights and trefoiled tracery, and at the 
east end a taller three-light window of similar type 
with perpendicular tracery.'? On the exterior, which 
is almost entirely covered with ivy and has a modern 
straight parapet and two square buttresses and a 
diagonal one at the north-east corner, is a shield with 
the arms of Butler. The chapel contains no monu- 
ments, but on a framed board at its west end is an 
escutcheon with the arms of Roe of Rawcliffe, with 
helm, crest, mantling and motto. 

The tower is faced with large wrought sandstone 
blocks and is very irregular in shape, the west and 
south walls being at an obtuse angle. It has a pro- 
jecting vice in the south-east corner and diagonal 
buttresses of five stages finishing below the belfry 
stage, which is slightly set back with a plain splay. 
The belfry windows are of two flat trefoiled lights 
without hood mould, and have slate louvres, and the 
tower finishes with an embattled moulded parapet, 
angle pinnacles and leaded roof, the height to the 
top of the parapet being 46 ft. 6 in. The west 
door has a four-centred head of two hollow-chamfered 
orders and hood mould, and above is a three-light 
segmental-headed transomed window of poor detail, 
with plain chamfered jambs and mullions and rounded 
heads to the lights. ‘There is a clock on the east and 
west sides, but the north and south sides are plain 
except for the belfry windows and a square opening 
immediately below. The date 1611 on the parapet 
is probably that of the whole of the external walling, 
if not of the entire rebuilding of the tower. The 
tower arch is of two chamfered orders placed high up 
above the roof principals, obtuse and awkward in 
shape. 

All the fittings, including the font and pulpit, are 
modern, but there are fragments of ancient glass in 
the north chancel window and westernmost window 
of the chapel, the former heraldic and the latter a 
circular piece with a picture of sheep-shearing, 
one of a former series representing the months or 
seasons. }8 

There is a ring of three bells, the first dated 


1) The lower part of all these windows 18 Ibid. 337-8. 


If H. did not him- 


ST. MICHAEL- 
ON-WYRE 


1652, with a long inscription in Gothic letters 
difficult to decipher. The second bell is dated 1663 
and inscribed ‘God save the King,’ and with various 
initials, and the third is by Abel Rudhall of Gloucester, 
1742. 

The plate consists of two silver chalices of 1792, 
with the arms of Wilson impaling France, two silver- 
plated patens and a plated flagon.1® 

The register of baptisms begins in 1659 and those 
of marriages and burials in 1662. From 1659 to 
1707 the registers have been printed.!® 

The churchwardens’ accounts begin in 1667. 

In the churchyard is a sundial, the plate dated 
1796 and bearing the names of the Rev. Hugh 
Hornby, vicar, and of five churchwardens. The 
oldest dated gravestone is 1667. 

At the Conquest the church was 
no doubt in the gift of Earl Tostig 
as lord of Amounderness. No change 
seems to have been made afterwards, so that Theobald 
Walter, when lord of the wapentake, 1190 to 1200, 
had this advowson also, for he gave the church of 
St. Michael with all its appurtenances to the Abbot 
and monks of Wyresdale in alms; they were to 
appoint a vicar with a portion sufficient for his 
maintenance.!7 The monks accordingly appointed 
one H. to the charge, allowing him the land to the 
east of the church with the fishery there and half a 
mark yearly. They also undertook to provide a 
clerk to assist him.!® 

The monastery was transferred to Ireland, and the 
gift of the church appears to have lapsed, for when 
in 1203-4 it was alleged that Garstang was a chapel 
pertaining to St. Michael’s the patron was the king.1° 
From that time the advowson remained with the 
honour of Lancaster ®° until 1409, when Henry IV 
gave it to the newly-founded college of St. Mary 
Magdalen at Battlefield near Shrewsbury.2! A vicar 
was appointed in 1411, on the death of the last 
rector.22, When the college was suppressed with 
other chantries in 1546-8, the rectory and advowson 
were taken by the Crown, and after minor grants” 
the rectory was in 1611 sold to Francis Morrice and 
Francis Phillips of London, but the advowson was 
reserved.*4 ‘This, however, with the rectory soon 


ADVOWSON 


in 1589; ibid. 31 Eliz., pt. vii. Further 


to a height of 18 in. has been filled 
in with brick, so as to form a window 
seat inside. 

13 It bears the figure of the crab and is 
lettered ¢ Junius.’ 

M In 1692 it was ordered that during 
the winter the sexton should ring the 
great bell at 8 p.m. and 4.a.m. ; Fishwick, 
op. cit. 65. In 1742 the churchwardens 
reported their two bells out of order, ‘the 
great bell being lately burst’; Visit. Ret. 

® On 21 Apr. 1671 Thomas Knowles 
and Ann his wife bestowed on the church 
a piece of silver plate inscribed ‘Ex dono 
Thomae Knowles et Annae ejus uxoris 
de Sowerby,’ to remain for ever as a 
proper right of the parish to be employed 
about the holy sacrament of the body 
and blood of Christ. This appears to 
have been lost. 

"Lancs. Parish Reg. Soc. Publ. xxvii 
(1906). Transcribed by Henry Brierley. 

7 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 3363; from 
the confirmatory grant by William de 
Chimelli, Archdeacon of Richmond, be- 
tween 1194 and 1198, 


self act as chaplain he was to provide a 
sufficient deputy. The monks reserved 
the right to construct a mill on the land 
to the east of the church. 

®See the account of 
Church. 

20 Thomas Earl of Lancaster had the 
advowson in 1316, and received the 
king’s licence to alienate it; Cal. Par. 
1313-17, p. 512. : 

21 Duchy of Lanc. Misc. Bks. xvi, 
139 (pt. ili); Cal, Pat. 1408-13, p. 59. 
The papal confirmation was obtained ; 
Cal. Papal Letters, vi, 226. 

22 Dugdale, Mon. viii, 1427. The 
college was to keep the chancel in repair. 
An imperfect translation of the ordina- 
tion of the vicarage in 1411 may be seen 
in Porter’s Fylde, 458-9. 

28 Some of the lands, particularly in 
Tarnacre, were granted to John Pickerell 
and John Bernard in 1549; Pat. 3 
Edw. VI, pt. xi. The rectory was leased 
to Robert Worsley for eighty years in 
1575; ibid. 18 Eliz, pt. vi. Other 
church lands in Tarnacre were granted 


263 


Garstang 


details from the Duchy Pleadings are 
printed in Fishwick, op. cit. 46-53. 

An agreement as to the rectory between 
William Doddington and Henry Kirkby 
was enrolled in 1564 in the Common 
Pleas ; Mich. 6 & 7 Eliz. 

24 This is stated in an abstract of title 
of William Johnson’s trustees in the 
possession of W. Farrer; the date is 
28 July 1611. In the following October 
the grantees sold to Thomas Gatacre and 
Richard Taylor, who in 1613 sold to 
John Cook of Hartwell Park, Northants. 
The purchaser had already secured the 
interest of Worsley and others to whom 
grants had been made. In 1620 Cook 
sold to William Johnson. For this see 
also Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 326, m. 3d. 

The Patent Rolls show grants apparently 
at variance, viz. in 1610 to John Eldred 
and others in fee (Pat. 8 Jas. I, pt. xxi), and 
in 1612 to Robert Earl of Salisbury for 
forty years ; ibid. 9 Jas. I, pt. x. 

Various references are given in Exch, 
Dep. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 10, 
12, &c. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


afterwards became the property of William Johnson.” 
‘After various sales the advowson came into the 
possession of the Rev. Hugh Hornby, vicar from 
1789 to 1847, and it has descended to his grandson 
the present patron, Mr. Hugh Phipps Hornby.” ; 
In 1216-26 the rectory, then in the king’s gift, 
was valued at 30 marks yearly,” but not long after- 
wards, in 1246, it was said to be worth 70 marks.”* 
The value continued to increase, and in 1291 was 


firmed in 1341. In 1527 the rectory, appro. 
priated to Battlefield College, was valued at fro 
a year and the vicarage at £8." Some eight years 
later, however, the farmers of the rectory paid 
£31 15. 4d. to the college,” while the vicarage was 
worth £10 175. 6d. clear." By 1650 the value of 
the vicarage had increased to {50 a year,™ but about 
1717 was certified as £44 105.8 The vicar and 
patron in 1816 obtained an Act of Parliament to 


recorded as £66 135. 4¢.,” but this after the raid of 
the Scots in 1322 was reduced to little more than a 
This valuation was con- 


third, viz. £23 65. 8a.” 


The following have been rectors and vicars :— 


Recrors 
Instituted Name Patron 
c. 1196. Ps, te ah, ey is, Ale a Wyresdale Abbey . . 
oc. 1204. Mr. Matthew the Physician *° ; 
Get 16' 2 Mr. Macy“. 2 cece 7s a | King Joha 
Gp 12 Bde cs William of Savoy®. . . .).) .) Henry II 
5 Oct. 1227 Mr. William de Avignon® . |. x : 
15 Nov. 1227 Mr. Henry de Bishopston“ . . . i 
6 Mar. 1237-8 Mr. Peter de Aqua Blanca®. . si 
OC. 1246— 3 5 James de Monasteriis ‘ So 8 
19 Feb. 1264-5 Richard le Rus 
oc. 1289-95. Walter de Langton ” : 
OG. N2Qd-a < % Thomas son of Alan*. . . 
oc. 1312. Simon de Balderston ® 


32> How he acquired the advowson does 
not appear—perhaps in virtue of the 
Worsley lease—but he presented in 1628, 
when the king also presented by way of 
confirmation. 

The above-named abstract mentions 
William Johnson, Julalia his wife, Alex- 
ander and Richard his sons. Alexander 
about 1630 married Anne Turner, and 
in 1654 was described as of Rushton 
Grange in Yorkshire ; his son William 
was married to Mary daughter and heir 
of Thomas Coomber, D.D. The will of 
Alexander Johnson was dated 1666 and 
that of his son Richard 1680 ; the latter 
left a son and heir Alexander, who 
married in 1681 Mary sister of Allen 
Bellingham of Levens. They had a son 
Allen, who in 1706 was to marry Eliza- 
beth Lawson of Wakefield. 

Allen Johnson and others had the 
asvowson in 17033 Pal. of Lane. Plea 
R. 478, m. 5d. 

Some further particulars of the family 
are given in Fishwick, op. cit. 45, where 
it is stated that Allen Johnson sold the 
advowson to the Rey. Richard Cromble- 
holme, whose son Edward sold it to 
Thomas Whitehead ; his great-grandson, 
of the same name, rector of Eccleston, 
sold it to the Rev, Christopher Swainson ; 
his grandson sold to Joseph Hornby, 
who gave to his brother the Rev. Hugh 
Hornby. 

> See the account of Ribby-with- 
Wrea and the pedigree in Burke, Landed 
Gentry. 

7 Lancs. Ing, and Extents (Rec. Soc, 
Laocs. and Ches.), i, 12:. 

23 Assize R. 4oq, m. 223 it was in 
the king's gift. 

9 Tt was worth 1co marks, and in the 
Earl of Lancaster's gift, in 1297; Lancs. 
Ing. and Extents, i, 298. 

30 Pope Nich. Tax. (Rec. Com.), 307, 
327. 

8! Ing. Nonarum (Rec. Com.), 37. The 
decline was attributed in part to the 
allowance of hay tithes and other altar- 


age (£14 135. 4d.) and £2 for glebe, but 
chiefly to the invasion of the Scots and 
other misfortunes, resulting in a decline 
of £26 135. 4d. The separate townships 
contributed thus: Upper Rawcliffe, £2 ; 
Out Rawcliffe, £4; Eccleston, Elswick 
and Inskip-with-Sowerby, £2 135. 4d. 
each, and Woodplumpton £9 6s. 8d. 

82 Duchy of Lanc. Rentals, bdle. 5, 
no. 15. 

83 Valor Eccl. (Rec. Com.), iii, 195. 

4 Ibid. v, 263. The mansion-house 
and glebe were worth 115. 4d., small 
tithes £3 os. 8d., Easter roll £7 133. 
The vicar paid ecclesiastical dues amount- 
ing to 7s. 6d. 

3 Commonw. Ch. Surv. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), 146-8. The vicar 
had a house, ro acres of glebe (in Tarn- 
acre) and the small tithes, out of which 
he had usually paid the curate of Wood- 
plumpton £4 a year. The value of the 
tithes was much reduced by prescriptions. 
In 1651 an augmentation of £50 a year 
was ordered out of the sequestrated estates 
of Sir Thomas Tyldesley and others ; 
Plund. Mins. Accts. (Rec. Soc. Lanes. 
and Ches.), i, 105, 114, &c. 

35 Gastrell, Noritia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 448. The glebe, 24 acres, was worth 
£10, Easter dues and small tithes 
£24 10s, surplice fees £5, legacy 
from Ralph Longworth £5. There 
were five churchwardens, being one for 
each township, except Woodplumpton. 

87 Ibid. 449. 

38 Manch. Dioc. Dir. For the Terle- 
ways land see a later note. 

89 Farrer, op. cit. 337. A much later 
charter relating to Ellel and Sowerby 
was attested by H. chaplain of the church 
of St. Michael and Thomas, deacon of 
the same place ; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. god. 
This H. isno doubt the ‘Henry the 
Chaplain’ named in Cockersand Chartul. 
(Chet. Soc.), i, 245. 

“0 Farrer, op. cit. 192; the king’s 
physician. He proffered 10 marks in order 
that the trial of his claim that Garstang 


264 


commute the vicarial tithes, &c., for a corn rent, 
securing a clear annual income of £700,” and the 
net value is now given as (584 a year.™ 


Cause of Vacancy 


prom, — of Savoy 


” 


: oo, oy 


. . . 


gece 


was a chapelry of St. Michael's might 
come on without delay. He occurs several 
timesin the Patent Rolls, &c., until 1209. 

‘1 Lancs. Ing. and Extents,i, 119. He 
may be the same as Master Matthew. 

42 The rectory about 1220 seems to 
have been much sought for. The Patent 
Rolls show that in 1224 Randle, clerk of 
the son of the Earl de Ferrers, had letters 
of presentation to it; Cal. Par, 1216-25, 
p- 472. In 1225 William de Thornour, 
clerk, was presented by the king ; ibid. 
1225-32, p. 8. Yet about the same 
time a son of the Count of ‘Salvata’ held 
it, as is shown by the cause of vacancy 
in 12273 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 119. 
It appears that this was William son of 
Thomas Count of Savoy, Bishop of 
Valence from 1226 till 1241, when he 
was succeeded by his brother Boniface, 
Archbishop of Canterbury, 1242-70; 
Gallia Christiana, xvi, 314. 

43 The rector having been promoted to 
a bishopric the king presented two clerks 
one after the other; Cal, Pat. 1225-32, 
Pp. 147, 169. William de Avignon was 
presented to Bromsgrove in the same 
year ; ibid. 

44 There are many references to this 
rector in the Patent Rolls of the time. 
According to Le Neve he refused the 
deanery of Salisbury. ; 

45 Cal, Pat. 1232-47, p. 2113 he is 
described as clerk to the bishop-elect of 
Valence. He had a grant of the arch- 
deaconry of Salop in 1239 ; Le Neve, Fast, 
i, 482. 

46 Assize R. 404, m. 22. 

46a Cal, Pat. 1258-66, p. 408. ; 

7 Cal, Papal Letters, i, 508, &c.; dit- 
pensations to hold other benefices. See 
Manchester. This busy ‘king’s clerk’ 
discharged his duties by deputy. 

48 Cal, Pat, 1292-1301, p. 123. From 
the Cal. Papal Letters, i, 559 it would 
seem that Langton still held St. Michael's 
in 1295. 

49 De Banco R. 193, m. 40d. 5 rector 
of St. Michael’s on Wyresbank. 


AMOUNDERNESS 


Name 


William de Balderston © 
William de Hornby® . . 
Thomas de Herdwick® . , 


Instituted 
oc. 1322-60. 
oc. 1367-88. eos 
1 Mar. 1399 . - 


oc. 1428. . . - Richard Raby®. . . 
5 June 1444 Thomas Wainwright *. 
oc. 1451-2 « Peter * ae 

18 June 1463 William Houghton . 
oc. 1504-8 Robert Richardson” , 


oc, 1509-30. . . 
(t532 . = + 
1535 2 
23 Sept. 1537 . - 
16 July 1549. 
27 June 1577. . 
31 Dec. rea 
8 May 1629) * 
oc. 1651-2 . 
16 Feb. 1658-9 
5 Mar. 1663-4 
25 Feb. 1668-9 
29 Feb. 1715-16 . 


Robert Hill 


50 He had a dispute as to the tithes of 
Myerscough with the monks of Lancaster 
in 1326 3 it was stated that he had carried 
away the tithes for five years past ; Lanc. 
Ch. (Chet. Soc.), 453-5. He seems to 
have been resident, as he occurs in local 
deeds; in 1348, Towneley MS. C8, 5 
(Chet. Lib.), Edw. III, no. 10 ; in 1360, 
Towneley MS. OO, no. 1565. The sur- 
name is given as Balderston and Bolleron 5 
Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 6, m. 4; 7, 
m. 6. 

51 Rector of Ribchester (q.v.) 1350-65. 
He is named as rector of St. Michael's, 
De Banco R. 426 (1367), m. 221 3 440, 
m. 333 463 (1376), m. 67. He was 
still rector in 1386 5; Dep. Keeper’s Rep. 
xxxii, App. 361-5. He was living in 1389, 
receiver of the duke, and probably re- 
tained the benefice till his death ; ibid. 365. 

In 1383 Margaret daughter of William 
son of Robert de Hornby called upon 
William de Hornby, rector of St. Michael’s, 
and John de Hornby, rector of Tatham, to 
hold to an agreement regarding lands in 
Bentley, &c.; De Banco R. 491, m. 574. 

5? Fishwick, op. cit. 109, quoting reg. 
of Richmond. He complained to the 
Archbishop of Canterbury as Lord 
Chancellor that Thomas de Urswick 
held the church (which was in the king’s 
patronage) and would not allow him to 
take the profits, disregarding the king’s 
order ; Early Chan. Proc. bdle. 16, no. 47. 
The date must lie between 1392 and 
1396 or 1407 and 1409. 

Thomas de Herdwick had a prebend in 
Lincoln Cathedral, which he exchanged 
for one at Lichfield in 1394. He died in 
1411, and was buried in the latter 
cathedral; Le Neve, Fasti, i, 5873 ii, 
223. His executors in 1416 gave fine 
for a writ ; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), iii, 85. 

58 He is named in local deeds; Dods. 
MSS. lxii, fol. go ; cxlix, fol. 332 (quoted 
By onlewieh) Towneley MS. DD, no. 
178, 

4 Raines MSS, (Chet. Lib.), xxii 3 

55 Brockholes ee cay 

5° Fishwick, op. cit.110. He is named 
a3 vicar in deeds from 1465 to 1478; 
Kuerden fol. MS. 72, 37. He was vicar 
in Dec, 1496 ; Towneley MS. C8, 13 


ij 


John Preesall ® . 


Christopher Gradell * . 
Michael Thornborow ® 
Thomas Cross . . 
Adam Wolfenden®. . 


Nicholas Bray® . 


Henry Jenny, M.A“... 
Nathaniel Baxter, M.A.® . 

John Greenwood®. . 

Thomas Robinson, BA.” . . 
Richard Crombleholme® . . . 


Vicars 


The King 


(Chet. Lib), B204. Also in 1503; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, no. 73. 

57 Kuerden MSS. iv, P 121, no. 743 
Fishwick, loc. cit. 

58 In a return of 1527 already cited 
John Preesall (Presewe) is stated to have 
been vicar for eighteen years; Duchy of 
Lanc. Rentals, bdle. 5, no. 15. See 
Fishwick, op. cit. 111. 

59 The vicarage was vacant in 1532, 
when William Knight, Archdeacon of 
Richmond, Humphrey Thomas alias 
Lashford, clerk, and Robert Hill, clerk, 
were ordered to permit the executors of 
Geoffrey (Blythe), Bishop of Lichfield, 
to present ; Pal. of Lanc. Writs Proton. 
no. 46, 24 Hen. VIII. 

A grant of the presentation by the 
master and brethren of the college led to 
a dispute. It appears that they granted 
the bishop the next presentation as early 
as 1515, but on the vacancy presented 
the above-named Robert Hill. Judgement 
was in 1535 given in favour of the 
executors and Christopher Gradell was 
instituted. Hill was ordered to restore 
half of the fruits of the vicarage which 
he had received; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 
158, m. 9. 

Gradell was vicar in 1535 3 Valor Eccl. 
vy, 263. 

60 Mr. Earwaker’s note from ‘ Ledger, 

= 330. 

61 The patrons for the turn were George 
Kirkby and Nicholas Lawrenson by grant 
of John Hussey, Master of Battlefield 
College ; Earwaker. Cross had been one 
of the chantry priests. 

6? Farwaker. Wolfenden was curate 
of Wigan in 1576; Pennant’s Acct. Bk. 
John Cottam as executor of Lawrence 
Cottam claimed the right to present on 
the ground of a further grant (1544) by 
the college to the said Lawrence ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R. 241, m. 28. Robert 
Worsley was joined in the defence with 
the Bishop of Chester and Wolfenden. 

At the visitation in 1598 the chancel 
was reported to be ‘very ruinous,’ and a 
sequestration was ordered. 

The vicar was returned as ‘no preacher’ 
both in 1590 and 1610; S. P. Dom. Eliz. 
xxxi, no. 47 5 Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, 
App. iv, 8. 


265 


HUNDRED 


Patron 


Battlefield Coll. . . . 


Battlefield Coll. . . . 


Battlefield Coll. . . 


Exors. Bp. Blythe. 
Battlefield Coll. 2. 
G. Kirkby, &c. 

. The Queen ' 
ea Johnson | 


Alex. Johnson. . . 


William Johnson... 
Thomas Clitherall 


ST. MICHAEL 
ON-WYRE 


Cause of Vacancy 


d. R. Raby 


d. J. Preesall 

d. C. Gradell 

d. M. Thornborow 
d. T. Cross 


res. A. Wolfenden 


exp. N. Baxter 
d. T. Robinson 


Being above the age of eighty, and 
having been vicar for fifty years and more, 
he in 1628 resigned the vicarage, desiring 
the bishop to institute Nicholas Bray ; 
Ch. Papers at Chester Dioc. Reg. 

For fuller accounts of the vicars see 
Fishwick, op. cit. 113-25. 

63 The double presentation (a resigna- 
tion intervening) was due to a doubt as 
to Johnson’s right. See Chester Act Bks. 
1579-1676, fol. gtd, 11443 Inst. Bks. 
P.R.O. as printed in Lancs. and Ches. 
Antiq. Notes, i, 95, &c. 

Bray is said to have been a zealous 
Independent ; Fishwick, op. cit. 115. 
St. Michael’s was not recognized in the 
Presbyterian Classis of 1646, and its 
minister did not sign the ‘Harmonious 
Consent’ of 1648. 

An anecdote of his hostility to Charles I 
is given in Loc. Glean. Lancs. and Ches. 
ii, 20. 

64 Plund, Mins. Accts. i, 106, 141. 

6 Tbid, ii, 288. He was educated at 
Jesus Coll., Camb.; M.A. 1660; and 
was ordained at Manchester in 1659, 
having obtained the vicarage through the 
influence of Isaac Ambrose, vicar of 
Garstang 3 Manch. Classis (Chet. Soc.), 
4123; Newcome’s Autobiog. and Diary. 
Like Ambrose he was ejected in 1662, 
and afterwards laboured as a Nonconfor- 
mist minister at Beauchief Hall, Derby- 
shire, and afterwards at Sheffield. He 
died in 1697; Calamy, Nonconf. Mem. 
(ed. Palmer), ii, 99-101. 

In 1660 Baxter secured the king’s 
patent for his vicarage, the patronage 
apparently being still doubtful; Pat. 12 
Chas. II, pt. i, no. 823; Dep. Keeper's 
Rep. xlvi. 

66 Nothing seems to be known of this 
vicar. He was buried in the chancel of 
the church on 6 Dec. 1668. 

67 Educated at Trinity Coll., Dublin ; 
Visit. List at Chester, He was ‘con- 
formable’ to the government in 1689 ; 
Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 229. 

68 The church papers at Chester Dioc. 
Reg. record the institutions from this 
time. As already stated, this vicar acquired 
the patronage, in which he was succeeded 
by his son Edward, The name is also 
spelt Cromleholme. 


34 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Name 
William Crombleholme ® 
Robert Oliver, M.A.” . 
Anthony Swainson, M.A.” 


Instituted 
14 June 1729 
24 Sept. 1765 


2 Aug. 1768 : 
14 Jur 1784 Charles Buck, M.A.” 
19 Oct. 1789 Hugh Hornby, M.A.” 


William Hornby, M.A.” 


Mar. 1547 : 
Phipps John Hornby, M.A.* 


15 Sept. 1885 


This list of clergy does not call for any comment, 
though one or two of the early rectors were men of 
eminence. The service of the parish church, chantries 
and chapelries before the Reformation would require 
a staff of at least five priests. The list of 1548 does 
not seem to have been preserved,’® but in 1554, and 
again in 1562, three names are entered in the Bishop 
of Chester’s visitation list.” Afterwards there were 
apparently only the vicar at the parish church and the 
curate at Woodplumpton.” Copp chapel was added 
in 1723. A religious census was made in 1755, when 
the vicar and churchwardens recorded the 367 families 
in the parish (apart from Woodplumpton) thus : 
Church of England, 297; Protestant Dissenters or 
Presbyterians, 26 ; Quakers, 3 ; Papists, 41.” 

There were two endowed chantries. One was 
founded by John Boteler of Out Rawcliffe (d. 1534) 
at the altar of St. Katharine in the north aisle of the 
church.” The priest was to celebrate for the souls 
of the founder and others and to teach a grammar 
school. The clear revenue at the confiscation in 
1547-8 was {5 10s. 8¢., derived from lands in 


Cause of Vacancy 
d. R. Crombleholme 
d. W. Crombleholme 
. res. R. Oliver 
d. A. Swainson 
res. C. Buck 
d. H. Hornby 
res. W. Hornby 


Patron 
. Edw. Crombleholme . 
Richard Whitehead 


John Swainson , 
Joseph Hornby 
William Hornby . 


. ” . 


founded by William Kirkby of Upper Rawcliffe, and 
had an endowment of £4 135. 10d." A gift of 
land in Great Sowerby, made by Thomas Urswick in 
1423 for the support of a chaplain in the parish 
church,* may have become merged in the general 
endowment. 

The old grammar school was destroyed with the 
chantry, and the next schools were not founded till 
the beginning of the 18th century. 

Official inquiries as to the endowed 
charities of the parish were made in 
1824 and 1898, and the report of 
the latter“ contains also a reprint of the former 
report. It appears that the gross income is £303 a 
year, but £104 is devoted to the schools and {67 to 
ecclesiastical purposes. It is singular that there are 
no funds for apprenticing children and no almshouses. 
For the whole parish there is an ancient bread 
charity of {2 yearly, distributed after morning 
service at the parish church on the second Sunday of 
the month in ‘cobs’ of bread. 

For the poor of Great Eccleston there are sums of 


CHARITIES 


Great and Little Eccleston, Esprick and Staynall 
The other chantry, of the B.V. Mary, was 


Mill.” 


Richard Crombleholme had been curate 
of Hambleton 1706-17 (q.v.). For his 
epitaph and will see Fishwick, op. cit. 
73, 120. 

© In 1730 there was ‘communion four 
times a year at least’; Visit. Ret. In 
1742 the report was ‘Lord’s Supper six 
times in the year’; ibid. 

70 Educated at Worcester and Merton 
Colls., Oxf. ; M.A. 1734 3 Foster, Alumni 
Oxon, He was schoolmaster of Preston, 
curate of St. George’s in that town, and 
vicar of Warton. 

71 Educated at Worcester Coll., Oxf. ; 
M.A. 1767; Foster, Alumni, For an 
account of him see Hewitson, Our Country 
Churches, 445. 

7 Educated at St. John’s Coll., Camb.; 
M.A. 1781. Became curate of Warton 
in Kirkham in 1789. 

3 Younger brother of the patron, from 
whom he obtained the adyowson. Hugh 
Hornby was educated at Christ’s Coll., 
Camb. ; M.A. 1790. He was incumbent 
of Whitworth near Rochdale 1804-29. 

} He was the only son of the preceding 

vicar, and was educated at Christ Church, 
Oxf.; M.A. 1836. He was appointed 
Hon. Canon of Manchester in 1850 and 
Archdeacon of Lancaster in 1870. He 
died 20 Dec. 1899. 
_ Archdeacon of Lancaster 1909. He 
18 a younger son of the late Archdeacon 
Hornby ; educated at Balliol Coll., Oxf. ; 
M.A. 1879. He has afforded information 
to the editors on several points. 

78 The record of church goods in 1552 is 
printed by Fishwick op. cit. 63. 

™ Chester Dioc. Reg. One of the 
three, Christopher Thompson, is noted as 
extra; see Chester Ordin. Bk. (Rec. Soc.), 
108, and the account of Winwick, 


£3 175. 


78 This was the case in 1622; Misc. 
(Rec. Soc, Lancs. and Ches.), i, 68-9, 

7 Visit. Ret. 

© The altar existed before the chantry 
and St. Katharine’s aisle is named in the 
will of Alice Boteler, widow, 1504; she 
left 20d. for the light burning there ; 
Fishwick, op. cit. §5. 

5! Raines, Chantries (Chet. Soc.), 217. 
Neither of the chantries is mentioned in 
the Valor Eccl. of 1535. William 
Harrison was the priest of the Boteler 
chapel in 1548 and fifty-four years old. 
There is a fuller account by Fishwick 
loc. cit., it being shown that this chantry 
was founded about 1528. 

In 1548 the king allowed Thomas Cross 
a pension of £4 135. 10d. in respect of the 
late chantry ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 890. 

Raines, op. cit. 220. Thomas Cross 
(afterwards vicar) was incumbent and 
forty years of age. It was part of his 
duty to ‘assist the curate’ of the parish. 
From the full account in Fishwick (op. 
cit. 58-62) it appears that this chantry 
was founded before 1505, and that 
William Richardson, Edmund Clarkson 
(there in 1526) and Thomas Cross had 
been the chantry priests. William 
Kirkby, the reputed founder, died about 
that time. 

S Add. MS. 32106, fol. 309, no. 384. 
Lord Derby's rental of 1522 (quoted 
below) shows that 14s, was paid yearly. 

At an inquiry made in 1561 it was 
stated that lands in Claughton called 
Mickle and Little ‘Tirlaweys’ (Terle- 
ways) of the yearly rent of 6s. had been 
given by Dame Ellen Urswick (see Upper 
Rawcliffe) to St. Michael’s Church. The 
tradition was that she had intended to 
give them to Garstang, but someone had 


266 


6d. from 
Gualter,* Jonathan Dobson ® and William Fyld,” 


the benefactions of William 


remarked that it would be more meri- 
torious to give to the other church, 
‘because St. Michael must weigh her 
soul,’ and so she changed her mind; 
Duchy of Lanc, Special Com. 33. 

The land was secured for the church 
(see Ducatus Lanc. [ Rec. Com.], ii, 283), 
and now yields £46 a year. It was 
formerly the custom to have a dinner 
for vicar and wardens out of the funds on 
5 November, on which day a sermon 
‘against popcry’ was preached ; the rest 
was applied to the church rate, The dinner 
and sermon are things of the past, and 
the net receipts are given to the church 
expenses account; End. Char. Rep. In 
1796 it was ordered that the balance, 
after paying for the dinner and a quart of 
ale for each participant, should accumulate 
for the purchase of an organ; Porter, 
Fylde, 465. 

* Tesued in 1899. 

8 By his will, dated 1748, he left two 
messuages and a close called the Towa 
Field in Great Eccleston to support two 
poor widows of the township. The sale 
produced £58, which is now held by the 
trustees of Copp School. The interest, 
Li 195. 6d., is distributed by the clerk of 
the parish council in money doles to 
poor widows, the number not being 
limited. 

*6 Jonathan Dobson the elder about 
1760 left £20 for the poor. This sum 
also is held in part by the Copp School 
trustees, but part was lost through the 
failure of Pedder’s Bank, Preston, and 
18s. is paid as interest. It is distributed 
in doles at the same time as Gualters 
charity. 

87 By his will in 1719 he left a rent- 
charge of 40s. a year on land called the 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


distributed in money doles,* and £1 from Ellen 
Longworth for bread for the poor attending Copp 
Church. Elizabeth Hoole or Hull gave about 
2 acres of meadow in Elswick to the Roman Catholic 
chapel in Great Eccleston, charging it with the pay- 
ment of £3 a year to the poor of Elswick.” This 
sum is distributed by the parish council in money 
gifts at Christmas. ; 

Thomas Knowles of Sowerby in 1686 gave his 
estate at Loudscales in Goosnargh for the benefit of 
the poor of Great and Little Sowerby, Inskip, Tarn- 
acre and Goosnargh, in equal shares. The gross 
rental is £90. Three-fourths of the net income, 
about £82, is divided equally between Inskip with 
(Great) Sowerby and Upper Rawcliffe with 'Tarnacre 
(which includes Little Sowerby). The money is 
given by the trustees in doles averaging about 14+. in 
December.” For Inskip with Sowerby there is a 
further money dole of {16 18s., due to the gift of 
John Jolly in 1750,” and for Upper Rawcliffe with 
Tarnacre other doles of £2 10s. from Ralph Long- 
worth® and {2 from John Hudson.* In Out 
Rawcliffe £1 1s. a year used to be given, but had 
ceased by 1824. 

The township of Woodplumpton has £23 185. 4¢. 
a year from the benefactions of Thomas Houghton * 
and George Nicholson,” applicable in kind, or in 
medical relief, money gifts or education. It has also 
£8 15s. a year, given in money, from the bequest of 
Richard Edward Waterworth in 1850.” 


UPPER RAWCLIFFE WITH 
TARNACRE 


Rodeclif, Dom. Bk. ; Rotheclif, 1301 ; Uprouthe- 
clyve, 1288. Up Rawcliffe was the form commonly 
used till about 1700, when Upper Rawcliffe, which 
appears in the 16th century, displaced it. 


ST. MICHAEL- 
ON-WYRE 


Trenaker, c. 1250. 

This township, which contains the parish church, 
has a total area of 3,839% acres,' of which two-thirds 
lie north of the River Wyre and the remaining third 
south. The population in 1901 was 518. Tarnacre 
or Trenacre, the acreage of which is now estimated 
as 486, is in the north-east,? Turnover Hall about 
the centre, on the north bank of the river, with 
Stockenbridge to the south ; White Hall is on the 
western border. ‘The Brock flows into the Wyre 
half a mile east of the church. The surface is flat 
and low ; the highest ground, about 50 ft. above sea 
level, is in the north, in Rawcliffe Moss. 

The principal roads go from east to west through 
the township, to the south and north of the river, 
from Myerscough to Great Eccleston (past the church), 
and from Catterall to Hambleton respectively. Near 
the church there is a bridge across the Wyre by which 
these roads are connected. 

A parish council administers local affairs. 

The soil is mostly light peat with subsoil of blue 
clay ; oats, potatoes, turnips, &c., are grown. 

There are ghost stories connected with two of the 
old houses. Major Longworth of St. Michael’s Hall 
was said to have haunted the place after his death. 
To lay his ghost the ‘combined power of priest and 
parson was brought into operation. The ghost was 
“laid” under the bridge near the hall, with the injunc- 
tion that it had to remain quiet “so long as the water 
flowed down the hills and the ivy remained green.” ’* 
The other ghost was said to appear in the garden of 
White Hall.‘ 

In 1066 Earl Tostig held a RAW- 

MANORS CLIFFE assessed as three plough-lands 
anda MICHAELKIRK assessed as one.’ 

Probably the whole was granted together with Gar- 
stang to form the Wyresdale fee of the Lancaster 
family.’ In 1242 Lambert de Multon held the twelfth 
part of a knight’s fee in Rawcliffe.’ He was then 


Stone Lands, for ‘the poorest sort of 
householders’ in the township. The 
charge is still paid, and the money is 
distributed with Debson’s. 

% The list of recipients is settled by 
the parish council. 

89 She left £20 in 1789 for the purpose 
named. The capital is intact, and £1 a 
year is paid as interest. This provides 
ten twopenny ‘cobs,’ which are given 
after morning service at Copp Church on 
the last Sunday of the month to poor 
people who have attended the service. 

% The rent-charge now exceeds the 
annual value of the land. 

91 The other fourth part goes to the 
poor of Goosnargh. 

2 He left the residue of his estate for 
the benefit of poor housekeepers in the 
township. The wholeamount was £370, 
but £170 was said to have been lost by 
the bankruptcy of a trustee; the re- 
mainder is lent on mortgage, and owing 
to various charges only a small amount 
yearly has recently been available for 
distribution. The trustees give it in 
sums of 15, to 3s. about Christmas time. 

%3 His will was dated 1691. In 1824 
the £2 10s. was paid out of the estate 
called St, Michael’s Hall, which had 
been owned by John Ashton Nelson of 
Fairhurst, and after his death in 1822 
by his sister. Archdeacon Hornby was 
the owner in 1898, and paid the rent- 
charge through his tenant. The sum 


was added to Knowles’ charity and simi- 
larly distributed. 

% By his will in 1722 he left his 
estate in Upper Rawcliffe to his son 
Robert charged with £2 to be paid in 
equal sums to four of the poorest persons 
in the township ‘to buy them such things 
as they should stand most in need of, 
against the great yearly festival of the 
Nativity.’ Ralph Baines was the owner 
in 1824 and William Baines Porter in 
1898 ; the rent-charge is duly paid and 
given in sums of 10s. to four poor persons. 

95 It had been paid by John France and 
then by his widow ; but there was nothing 
to show that it was not a voluntary gift, 
and on her death about 1822 it ceased. 

96 He in 1649 devised an estate in 
Woodplumpton and Broughton for chari- 
table uses; see End. Char. Rep. for 
Preston. A fourth part of the income 
(£67) is available for Woodplumpton. 
It used to be given in money doles, but 
is now united with Nicholson’s gift, as 
follows. 

97 He left money for ‘needful poor 
people’ in the township about 1666 ; and 
in 1672 it was decreed that £210 was 
the sum due to the poor. The income, 
now £7 35. 4d. from consols, was, like 
Houghton’s charity, formerly distributed 
in money doles, but since 1870 the two 
have been combined and regulated under 
a scheme of the Charity Commissioners, 
allowing payments as in the text. The 


267 


income is applied to paying bonuses to 
contributors to a clothing club, care being 
taken to allow larger sums to the poorer 
members. 

9 He left £600, half the interest to 
be paid tothe incumbent of Woodplumpton 
Church and half to be distributed in 
money or bread among poor persons, over 
sixty years of age, recommended by the 
said incumbent. 

1 The Census Rep. of 1901 gives 
3,842 acres, including 38 of inland 
water. 

2 It appears from charters, é&c., that 
this hamlet was formerly much more 
extensive, reaching to the south side of 
the Wyre by the church. 

3 Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 437. 

4 Fishwick, St. Michael’s (Chet. Soc.), 
167. 5 V.C.H. Lancs. 1, 2885. 

6 Ibid. i, 357, n. 13 3 Final Conc. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 214 3 ii, 51. 

7 Lanes. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 154. Lambert 
de Multon married Amabil daughter and 
co-heir of Richard de Lucy by Ada 
daughter and co-heir of Hugh de Morvill 
and Helewise de Stutevill, widow of 
William de Lancaster II. Ada de Lucy 
married for her second husband Thomas 
de Multon, the father of Lambert. It 
seems to have been in this way that 
Lambert obtained a part at least of Upper 
Rawcliffe ; Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. 
Soc), i, 178 n. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


apparently the immediate lord of the manor, but may 
not have retained it long. 

William de Lancaster III gave part at least of 
Upper Rawcliffe to Richard son of Roger de Kirkby,* 
no doubt of Kirkby Ireleth.? Richard acquired from 
his brother Roger z oxgangs of land in Rawcliffe, 
with tofts and part of the meadow called Meadow- 
gate, also the proportion of the fishery pertaining to 
2 oxgangs and liberty of grinding at the mill without 
multure.!° Roger had had the same from William 
de Tarnacre for the rent of a pound of cummin," 
Richard made some further acquisitions,!? and at his 


Ellen his wife,!® and in this way apparently Passed to 
William de Southworth,!® who was in Possession of 
the manor in 1314,'7 and in 1316-17 granted it to 
his son Thomis, together with the reversion of lands 
held in dower by Ellen widow of John de Kirkby 
and by Elizabeth widow of Nicholas de Southworth, 
son of William.!® 
Thomas de Southworth in 1331 obtaineda Messuag 

&c, from William son of Robert the Miller of Upper 
Rawcliffe. Part of tie tenement was then held in 
dower by Ellen widow of John de Kirkby.!? He 
obtained from Ellen daughter of Nicholas de South- 


worth a release of her 
interest in the manor 


NS, i eS 


rib aren: seta. 


Upper Raweuirrg: Sr. Micuary’s Vittace 


death left a son John to succeed him.13 
By them Upper Raweliffe 
was given to William de Whittingham, clerk, and 


son Peter is also named.!'! 


® John son of Richard de Kirkby in 
1285 gave to William de Whittingham, 
clerk, and Ellen his wife all the tene- 
ment and demesne in Upper Rawcliffe 
which his father Richard had had from 
William de Lancaster; Dods. MSS. 
exlix, fol. 75. 

® Richard was probably the son of 
Roger of Kirkby Ireleth by a daughter of 
Gilbert Fitz Reinfred, who is mentioned 
in 12223 see the account of Kirkby 
Treleth. 

10 Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 755. 

1 Tbid. 

12 Walter de Sowerby gave to Richard 
son of Roger de Kirkby the homage of 
two tenants of an oxgang of land in 
Rawcliffe for the rent of two barbed 
arrows ; Kuerden fol. MS. 380. 

Richard de Kirkby obtained half an 
oxgang of land from Richard de Rise, 
aso a fishery from Sir William de 
Carleton, who had received it from 
William de Lancaster for a rent of 6d, ; 
Dods. MSS. exlix, fol. 96, 7, 

3 John son of Richard de Kirkby 
grante] to Roger son of Henry de 
Forton a toft and a selion called Croft- 
land in Upper Rawcliffe, and William de 
Whittingham, clerk, renewed or con- 
firmed the gilt; ibid. fol, 854. The 
ae | cle also granted to Sir William 
son of Sir Richard Boteler the moiety of 


Another 


of marriage.?3 


his fishery in Out Rawcliffe ; ibid. fol. 
976. To Ralph de Catterall he gave half 
an oxgang of land, &c., in Upper Raw- 
cliffe at 1d. rent; Add. MS, 32104, 
no. 497. The same John son of Richard 
de Kirkby held 2 oxgings of land of 
Henry de Beconsaw, who transferred 
his homage and service to Thomas son of 
Thomas Banastre ; ibid. no. 1317. 

™ Peter son of Richard de Kirkby 
released to William de Whittingham all 
his right in the lands in Upper Raweliffe 
which should have descended to him 
after the death of Roger de Kirkby his 
brother ; Dds. MSS. cxlix, fol. 96. 

'8 See preceding notes. In 1281 John 
son of Richard de Kirkby gave land, in- 
cluding a piece by the mill called Peule, 
to William de Whittingham ; ibid. fol. 
95, 96. 

William de Whittingham acquired half 
an oxgang of land from Richard son of 
Adam de Inskip, part of the mill of 
Skippool from John son of William son 
of Richard de Rawcliffe, and the fishery 
(formerly John de Kirkby's) in Out 
Rawcliffe from William eon of Sir Richard 
Bote‘cr ; ibid, fol. 854, 964, 976. 

16 Tt is possible that Whittingham and 
Southworth were the same Person, or 
that the latter was son of the former. 
See Claughton, 

“In that year William de Southworth, 


268 


in 1336.% Edmund 
de Wedacre in 1 348-9 
claimed common of 
Pasture in Upper 
Rawcliffe against 
Thomasson of William 
de Southworth and 
Alice his wife.2! 

The next step shows 
the Urswick family in 
possession, but the 
story is confused and 
doubtful. It would 
seem that Margaret 
the daughter and heir 
of Thomas de South- 
worth married one 
Robert de Hornby, for 
Robert and Margaret 
occur in 1350-2.% 
Soon afterwards Mar- 
garet de Hornby 
married Robert de 
Urswick, and in 1367 


obtained the papal dispensation for an impediment 
of which they had been in ignorance at the time 


In 1369 Robert de Urswick and 


clerk, granted turbary in Upper Raw- 
cliffe Moss tu Henry son of Henry de 
Croft of Catterall, who had married his 
daughter Joan ; Towneley MS. DD, no. 
13. In or before 1315-16 he made an 
exchange of lands with Adam son of 
Richard del Hall, who transferred his 
part to John de Celer; Dods. MSS. 
exlix, fol. god, 

18 Ibid. fol. 97. The settlement was 
confirmed by fine in 1318, with te- 
mainder to Adam the brother of Thomas, 
There was an excertion of two mer 
suages, 2 oxgangs of land, &c.; Final 
Conc. ii, 26, 

19 Kuerden fol. MS. 257. 

70 Dods. MSS. exlix, fol. 90. 

7! De Banco R. 357, m. 27d. 

*2 Maud daughter of John de Cela 
(see above) in 1350 gave all her lands to 
Robert de Hornby and Margaret his wite ; 
Dods. MSS. exlix, fol. gs. In 1352 
Roger de Kirkby gave to the same Robert 
and Margaret a messuage and garden io 
Upper Rawcliffe ; ibid. 

3 Towneley MS. HH, no. 925. 

There appear to have been several 
Roberts, and this creates some uncertainty. 
Adam de Urewick, who had land io 
Westmorland, died in 1361, leaving o 
heir his son Robert she younger, of full 
age ; Chan. Inq. p.m. 35 Edw. III, pt. 
(18t nos.), no. 88. In 1366 Sarah widow 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Margaret his wife claimed from William de Scargill 
and Rose his wife the custody of the land and heir 
of John de Balderston in respect of a plough-land, 
&c., in Upper Rawcliffe held of Thomas de South- 
worth, the father of Margaret.4 Robert de Urswick 
the younger and Margaret his wife made a feoffment 
of the manor of Upper Rawcliffe in the same year.%5 
Robert de Urswick of Tatham in 1376 obtained a 
grant of free warren for Badsworth, Tatham, Cants- 


field and Upper Rawcliffe.?6 


Sir Robert Urswick died in 1402 holding jointly 
with Joan his wife a rent from Langbargh Wapentake 
His son and heir, Sir Robert, was 
Robert son of Robert de 
Urswick and Margaret his wife had acquired land in 
Sir Robert was Sheriff of 


in Yorkshire. 


thirty years of age.*” 


Yorkshire in 1391-2.778 


Lancashire in 1415-16 and 1418. 
manor or vill of Upper Rawcliffe he in 1420 made 
an agreement with the free tenants, viz. the Abbot 


of Adam de Urswick made a grant to her 
son Robert ; Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 914, 

It is possible that Margaret died about 
1370 and that Robert married again. 
Thus Robert de Urswick and Ellen his 
wife, executrix of the will of Sir John de 
Dalton, gave a receipt for money at Upper 
Rawcliffein 1372 and are named in 1379 3 
ibid. fol. 974, 924. Again Robert de 
Urswick of Upper Rawcliffe, Ellen his 
wife and a daughter Ellen occurin 1382 ; 
Final Cone. iii, 12, 13. 

The same or another Robert, not 
described as a knight, was escheator for 
Lancashire in 1384-91 ; Lancs. Ing. pum. 
(Chet. Soc.), i, 12, 45. One Robert de 
Urswick was an esquire of John Duke of 
Lancaster in 13953 Cal. Pat. 1396-9, 
p- 547. Robert de Urswick, one of the 
king’s esquires, received an annuity in 
1373, which was confirmed in 1378 and 
1399 3 Cal. Pat. 1377-81, p. 240 3 1399- 


1401, Pp. 29, 35. 
34De Banco R. 433, m. 451. It is 


noteworthy that the Balderstons also 
occur at Badsworth in Yorkshire, where 
the Urswicks obtained anestate ; Hunter, 
Deanery of Doncaster, ii, 4383 Yorks. 
Arch. Journ. x, 34.9. 

In connexion with the Balderstons 
may here be cited a complaint by William 
son of William de Balderston, in con- 
junction with John and Nicholas sons of 
Thomas Banastre, in 1334, respecting 
4 acres of moor in Upper Rawcliffe. It was 
alleged in defence that the same William 
son of William and a certain Adam 
Verious were lords of the vill; but the 
jury, while finding for the defendants, 
said that Adam Verious never had any- 
thing there; Coram Rege R. 297, m. 
103d. An Adam de Aspinwall and 
Elizabeth his wife had some claim in the 
township in 1318; De Banco R. 223, 
m. 105, 38 Final Conc. ii, 177. 

% Chart. R. 162 (47-51 Edw. III), 
m, 6, no. 13. 

7 Chan. Ing. p.m. 4 Hen. IV, no. 15; 

Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxiii, App. 4. In an 
inquisition taken in 1418 Sir Robert son 
of Robert son of Adam de Urswick is 
stated to have been thirty-four years old 
and arenes 3 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), 
i, 136, 
_ Sir Robert de Urswick is mentioned 
in various ways from 1386 to 14023 
ibid. 1385-9, pp. 233, 4715 1401-5, 
Pe 130. In 1398 he had a wife named 
Joan; ibid, 1391-6, p. 375 5 1396-9, 
P. 402, 


row, 30 


of Sir Robert. 


As lord of the 


John de Urswick, who married Con- 
stance Banastre, but died without issue, 
is said to have been a son of Sir Robert ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 16. 

7a Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. gt. In 1412 
it was stated that Margaret wife of Sir 
Robert de Urswick was divorced from 
him and married to Gilbert de Kighley ; 
Towneley MS. HH, no. 936. 

38 P.R.O. List, 72. He is not de- 
scribed as knight in this place, but else- 
where is designated chivaler ; Lancs. Ing. 
pom. (Chet. Soc.), i, 134. 

In 1406 Sir Robert de Urswick gave 
to Thomas his brother all his lands; 
Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 92+. He made a 
feoffment in 1410 ; ibid. fol. 935. 

39 Ibid. fol. gt. 

80 Ibid. fol. 954. 

31 Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxiii, App. 19 3 
Pal. of Lanc. Chan. Misc. bdle. 1, no. 14. 

82 Hunter, op. cit. ii, 436 ; Sir Thomas 
Urswick held Badsworth in 1424-5 ; it had 
in 1402 been held in moieties by Robert 
and Thomas Urswick. Sir Thomas had 
a son Robert who married Katherine 
Harrington of Hornby, and their daughter 
and heir Isabel (d. 1471) married William 
Vavasour ; ibid. 437, 441. 

33 The feoffees of Sir Robert gave lands 
to Thomas Urswick in 1424; Dods. MSS. 
exlix, fol. 955. Thomas Urswick, esquire, 
and Dame Katherine Urswick are named 
together in 1443 and 14553 ibid. fol. 
94. See also Yorks. Arch, Journ. xvii, 
119. 

ris Urswick, receiver to the king’s 
father and the king for twenty-four years, 
was in 1442 rewarded with an annuity 
of £10 secured on the herbage of 
Myerscough, Fulwood and Wyresdale ; 
Towneley MS. RR, no. 1664. See also 
Cal. Papal Letters, vii, 3303 Cal. Pat. 
1422-9, p. 4053; Anct. D. (P.R.O.), 
C 2978. In 1452 he was made serjeant- 
at-law and attorney in all the king’s 
courts of Lancashire; Pal. of Lanc. 
Chan. Misc. file 1, bdle. 1, no. 60. He 
was dead in 1456, when his successor 
was appointed; ibid. bdle. 1, file 11, 
no. 4. He is named in various pleadings, 
e.g. Pal. of Lanc, Plea R. 7, m. 21. 

Another Thomas occurs in the Raw- 
cliffe deeds as holding lands in Caton, 
Great and Little Eccleston, Elswick and 
Upper Rawcliffe in 1473 ; Dods. MSS. 
cxlix, fol. 944. He was recorder of 
London in 1455 and chief baron of the 
Exchequer from 1471 till his death in 
1479. He held manors, &c., in Essex ; 


269 


ST. MICHAEL- 
ON-WYRE 


of Cockersand, Nicholas Boteler, and others.29 In 
the same year he made a feoftment of his lands in 
Claughton, Rawcliffe, Eccles- 
ton, Goosnargh and Bilsbor- 
He died about the 
same time, and Thomas his 
brother was found to be his 
heir.3!. Thomas Urswick suc- 
ceeded to Badsworth,?? and 
apparently the same Thomas 
occurs in Lancashire,®% but the 
manor of Upper Rawcliffe 
went to daughters and heirs 
These appear 
to have been Ellen, who mar- 
ried Roger Kirkby, and Joan.34 
The latter or more probably 
a daughter and co-heir Joan 
was wife of William Clifton in 144 3—4.35 


oe) 
Rd 
ee) 


Urswick, Argent 
on a bend sable three 
lozenges of the field each 
charged with a saltire 
gules. 


Another 


Foss, Judges ; Dict. Nat. Biog. (called son 
of Thomas Urswick). 

34 Roger son of Sir Richard Kirkby in 
1420-1, i.e. shortly after Sir Robert’s 
death, demised to Thomas Urswick the 
moiety of the manor of Upper Rawcliffe 
which he (Roger) held by reason of the 
minority of (blank in the deed) the 
daughters and heirs of Ellen his wife lately 
deceased, viz, as father of the heirs, Roger 
being the nearest relative, to whom their 
estates held in socage could not descend ; 
Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 91. This deed it 
is difficult to explain in view of others. 
It is usually stated (e.g. in the recorded 
pedigree) that it was John, a younger son 
of Sir Richard Kirkby of Kirkby Ireleth, 
who married Ellen Urswick. Roger was 
the son and heir of Sir Richard; West, 
Furness (ed. 1774), 240. 

A fragment of pedigree in Towneley 
MS. HH, no. 936, gives Sir Robert de 
Urswick and Margaret his wife two 
daughters, Joan wife of Richard de 
Kirkby and Ellen wife of Roger de 
Kirkby. 

In a pleading as to the manor of Bads- 
worth in 1424 Thomas Urswick called 
the heirs of Sir Robert to warrant him, 
viz. John Worsley and Joan his wife, 
Margaret Kirkby and Joan Kirkby, of 
whom the last was under age ; De Banco 
R. East. 2 Hen. VI, m. 329d. (quoted 
in Gen. [new ser. ], xvii, 22). The two 
Kirkbys may have been daughters of 
Richard, and may have married Latus 
and Clifton respectively ; Joan was perhaps 
their mother, formerly wife of Richard. 

In 1437-8 John son of Roger Kirkby 
by Ellen his wife, daughter of Sir Robert 
Urswick by Margaret his wife, made a 
settlement of his purparty of the manor 
of Upper Rawcliffe and lands, &c., in 
Thistleton and Tatham ; also the reversion 
of others held for life by his brother 
Roger ; Kuerden fol. MS, 213. 

A John son of Richard Kirkby had the 
manor and advowson of Waberthwaite in 
1427-8; Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 984. 
In the same collection of charters are 
some relating to the town of Kendal, 
where the Kirkbys of Rawcliffe later 
held land. 

85 William and Joan received lands, 
&c., from Thomas Urswick about that 
time; Kuerden fol. MS. 410, 87. 
From abstracts preserved by Towneley it 
appears that some at least had been 
acquired from Robert Jenkinson of 
Bispham ; HH, no. 453. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


sharer in 1454 was William Latus.** A certain 
Elizabeth about 1468 made a settlement of part of 
the manor in conjunction with her husband Henry 
Holme.*7 In 1484-5 a partition was sought between 
William Kirkby, Richard Latus and Robert Clifton 
as co-heirs of Sir Robert Urswick.** 

Of these families the Kirkbys were resident. They 
appear to have inherited a moiety of the manor, and 
possibly acquired the whole. Going back a little, it 
appears that in 1454-5 John Kirkby and Clemence 
his wife had lands in Moorbreck.2® In 1459 John 
Kirkby complained that Nicholas and John Boteler 
of Rawcliffe were obstructing the flow of water to 
his mill in Upper Rawcliffe.4° William the son and 
heir of John Kirkby was about 1458 contracted to 
marry Isabel daughter of John Pudsey.*t In 1475, 
perhaps after the actual marriage, John Kirkby 
granted his part of the manor to his son and heir 
William.4? William and Isabel had a moiety of 
the manor in 1486-7, as well as lands in Goos- 
nargh, Haighton and Kendal.4? John the son and 
heir of William Kirkby was in 1485-6 contracted to 
marry Elizabeth daughter of Henry Banastre of 
Bank.# He was living in 1501,4° but it is unlikely 
that he outlived his father, for in 1507 Isabel was 
widow of William,4® and about the same time 
received dower from William son and heir of John 
Kirkby.47 

William Kirkby the younger was in 1506-7 con- 
tracted to marry Elizabeth daughter of William 
Thornburgh.4* He was living in 1549, at which 
time he was involved in disputes concerning the 
chantry lands.‘ His son George died in 1558 
holding the manor of Upper Rawcliffe and Tarnacre 
of the queen and John Rigmaiden as of the lordship 
of Wyresdale in socage by 6¢. rent; also various 
lands there and in nearly twenty other townships. 
The heir was a brother William, thirty years of 
age.50 William Kirkby made a settlement of the 
manor in 1564! and recorded a pedigree at the 
visitation of 1567.5? In 1588 inquiry was made as 
to the weirs on the Wyre, including one of William 
Kirkby’s which had lately been pulled down, appa- 


55 In 1464 John Kirkby received qos. 
and William Latus 20s. from Thomas 


20 marks a year, half the heriots in 
Waberthwaite, Keltontree and Kendal, 


rently because it was too high for the salmon to 
pass.°3 He and Isabel his wife in 1591 agreed that 
their son William should marry Joan daughter of 
Thomas Fleetwood of Col- 
wich.*4 William Kirkby died 
in December 1596 holding 
the manor of Upper Raw- 
cliffe, with messuages and 
lands there and in Tarnacre 
and Little Sowerby, a water- 
mill, and a fishery in the 
Wyre, of the queen as of her 
honour of Lancaster by the 
twelfth part of a knight’s fee. 
William his son and heir was 
fifteen years of age.®® 

The religious position of 
the neighbourhood in 1595 is 
shown clearly enough by someone zealous ‘for the 
furtherance of Christ His glorious gospel,’ in the 
Protestant sense, who wrote to the authorities to 
urge attention to it. In the parishes of Garstang 
and St. Michael’s, he said, there were ‘as many 
farmers notorious recusants’ as would make two 
grand juries. He therefore advised the prosecution 
of those known to be rich, naming among gentle- 
women Isabel wife of William Kirkby of Rawcliffe, 
Anne wife of Henry Butler of the same, and 
Elizabeth wife of William son of Henry. The 
husbands of these attended church perhaps not so 
much as monthly and the churchwardens should 
warn them to conform once a month. If they 
would not do so the gentlewomen and their husbands 
should be confined ‘during their obstinacy’ to the 
houses of Protestant gentlemen, so that they could 
neither ‘frequent shriving, massing, nor relieve 
papish priests or seditious seminaries, to the peril of 
their souls, great danger of their husbands, and utter 
spoil of their husbands’ simple seduced tenants and 
neighbours.’ 56 

From this time the Kirkbys declined in import- 
ance.” William Kirkby was said to be of full age in 
1602 58; in that year he and his son Thomas were 


Kirxay of U 
Rawcliffe. Arpaio 
bars gules on @ canton of 
the last a cross moline or, 


from ‘one white house called Cross 
House.’ The foundation being washed 


Urswick in satisfaction of profits he had 
taken of lands in Kendal, formerly Sir 
Robert Urswick’s and then belonging to 
John and William and their co-heirs ; 
Deds. MSS. exlix, fol. voz. The 
proportions indicate a moiety for Kirkby, 
and half of the other moiety for Latus, 

37 Final Conc. iii, 1323 they had a 
sixth part of the manor, i.e. the third of 
a moiety. It was to be held by Elizabeth 
for life and then to revert to Robert 
{? Clifton] and his heirs. 

38 Pal. of Lanc. Writs Proton. 

3° Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. gg. Clemence 
was living in 1488-9 ; ibid. fol. ro1. 

* Pal. of Lanc, Plea R. 21, m. 25. 

‘| Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 101 ; a grant 
to Isabel of lands in Bolton and other 
places, with remainder to William son 
and heir of John Kirkby. 

“Ibid. fol. rord, 8 Ibid. fol. ror. 

“Thid. fol. 100, 1005; lands in 
Thistleton, Goosnargh, Wray, Over 
Kellet, Cantsfieli and Tatham were 
ascizned to her for life. 

* Toid. fol. 1004. 46 Ibid. fol. 100, 

“ Tbid. fol. 99 (? misdated 23 Hen. 
VIII for VII). Isabel was to have 


and should enjoy the demesne lands of 
Upper Rawcliffe with the mill and fish- 
ing until the following Martinmas ; 
also the tithe corn of the demesne, paying 
305. for it. She was excommunicated at 
Kirkham in 1510; ibid, 

8 Thid. fol. 98. 

4 Fishwick, St Michael on Wyre 
(Chet. Soc.), 59. William son of 
William Kirkby was engaged in further 
contests in 1579 ; ibid. 61, 

5° Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xi, no. 8 ; 
Towneley MS. ‘Lancs, Tenures’ (in 
possession of W. Farrer). The socage 
tenure is noticeable, as agreeing with the 
statement ofa charter cited above. 

Ellen widow of George Kirkby was in 
1567 the wife of Edward Horsfall ; Dods. 
MSS. cxlix, fol. 100; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 29, m. 110. 

51 Ibid. bdle. 26, m. 199. 

5? Visit, (Chet. Soc.), 413 George 
Kirkby is not named in it. 

53 Duchy of Lanc. Special Com. 426. 
It was deposed that William Kirkby had 
an ancient mill called Cross Mill and a 
weir for the same on the Wyre. It 
stood over the other side of the water 


290 


out by the river, the mill fell, and was 
erected on a new site close hy. At spring 
tides the sea water reached nearly a mile 
further up the river. The water called 
Sowerby or Yowcles ran into the Brock. 

The jury in their verdict noticed all 
the weirs; the mill weir at Dolphio- 
holme was the highest up the Wyre. 
Corles Mill, Cleveley Mill, a mill weir 
near Goberthwaite Bridge and others are 
named. 54 Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 88. 

55 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xvii, no. 16. 
The change of tenure was perhaps the 
result of a search in the records, being 
the same as that recorded in 1242 for 
Lambert de Multon. 

Isabel the widow was in 1598 the 
wife of Gabriel Croft ; Dods, MSS. loc. 
cit. 

56 Hist, MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App ity 
584-5. f 

William Kirkby of Rawcliffe and Isabel 
his wife had been summoned before the 
ecclesiastical commission in 1583, but 
had conformed; English Martyrs (Cath. 
Rec. Soc.), i, 70 

57 Fishwick, op. cit. 163-5. 

63 Dods. MSS. loc. cit. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


enrolled at Preston Guild.°? They were or became 
recusants, as the above quotation indicates, and in 
1632 Thomas Kirkby of Rawcliffe compounded by an 
annual payment of £5 for the two-thirds of his 
estate which was liable to sequestration for his 
religion. In the Civil War he was a Royalist, and 
his estate, after being sequestered by the Parliament, 
was in 1652 ordered for sale.®! Three of his sons 
were stated to have been killed in the service of 
Charles 1.62 He was dead in 1655, when Edward 
Tyldesley of Myerscough petitioned to be allowed to 
contract for the estate.®? After that a family named 
Whitehead ® long held the manor, but there is 
nothing to record of them. The manor is now 
stated to be held by the Earl of Derby. 

A considerable portion appears to have been sold 
before 1655 to George Westby,®® a son of Thomas 
Westby of Mowbreck, who built White Hall,®” in 
later times regarded as the manor-house. He also 
was a recusant and a Royalist, and suffered the 
sequestration and confiscation of his lands by the 
Parliament.®8 He regained them through the agency 
of friends. A pedigree recorded in 1664 shows that 
he had sons Thomas (aged ten) and John.® In 1717 
John Westby of Upper Rawcliffe, son of John and 
nephew of Thomas Westby, registered his estate as 
a ‘Papist.’7 He was accidentally killed in a mill in 
1728 and left a son Thomas as heir. This branch 
of the family succeeded to part of the Mowbreck 
estate, but all has been sold in the last half-century. 
White Hall was in 1857 sold to — Stevenson, whose 
son, J. C. Stevenson of Leamington, was the owner 
in 1891. 

WHITE HALL, now a farm-house, stands close to 
the River Wyre, facing south, but is without archi- 
tectural interest, having been almost entirely rebuilt 


ST. MICHAEL- 
ON-WYRE 


and modernized about 1857; most of the old 
timbers were, however, again used. The building 
dated substantially from the beginning of the 17th 
century, the older house of the Kirkbys having 
entirely disappeared, but had been for a long time in 
a state of decay. The present structure is covered 
with rough-cast and whitewashed, the roofs covered 
with blue slates and all the windows are new. There 
is an old open fireplace in the kitchen now walled 
up. ‘The west wing is three stories in height with 
an unequal gable to the front, but the house generally 
is of two stories, with a projecting gabled two-story 
porch. The east wing appears to have been pulled 
down about 1870,708 

Other portions of the Urswick estate cannot be 
traced. One-fourth probably descended to Clifton 
of Kidsnape, but William Clifton in 1517 held only 
“messuages and lands’ in Upper Rawcliffe of the 
king and Thomas Rigmaiden as of their manor of 
Nether Wyresdale by a rent of 64.71 His widow 
Margaret claimed dower in the fourth part of the 
‘manor.’ 7? 

Rawcliffe gave a name to some of the earlier 
tenants, who with others were benefactors of Cocker- 
sand Abbey.’”? Warine de Cornay, one of them, in 
1246 claimed certain land from the Abbot of 
Cockersand.74 

TARNACRE or Trenacre also was used as a 
surname. The same abbey received land from 
William de Tarnacre, with his body, and from Alice 
his widow and Alan his son.7> About 1270 the 
abbot and canons agreed with Thomas son of Adam 
de Inskip as to an exchange of land,’® and other 
Inskips appear later in the township.” Alan son of 
William de Tarnacre and others gave land to Lytham 
Priory 7® and to the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem.” 


59 Preston Guild R. (Rec. Soc. Lanes. 
and Ches.), 54. They were also enrolled 
in 1622 ; ibid. 78. 

60 Trans. Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xxiv, 178. 
About the same time he paid £10 for 
having refused knighthood ; Misc. (Rec. 
Soc, Lancs. and Ches.), i, 221. 

61 Index of Royalists (Index Soc.), 41. 

8 Castlemain, Cath. Apology, as quoted 
by Challoner, Their names are given as 
William, Thomas and Edward in Gillow, 
Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. iv, 53. 

%3 Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), iv, 46. 

% To a fine of 1656 respecting the 
manor of Upper Rawcliffe the following 
were parties : Plaintiffs—Richard White- 
head and James Taylor; Deforciants— 
‘Edward Tyldesley, William Kirkby, 
Edward Kirkby, George Westby, Ralph 
Longworth, Richard Bannister, Dorothy 
his wife and James Curwen; Pal. of 
Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 159, m. 93. 
Richard Whitehead acquired other lands ; 
Lanes. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, 
and Ches.), i, 33. 

% See the accounts of Claughton and 
Forton and the pedigree in Fishwick, 
Garstang (Chet. Soc.), ii, 254. 

Thomas Whitehead was vouchee in a 
Tecovery of the manors of Rawcliffe and 
Tarnacre in 17243; Pal. of Lanc. Plea 
R. 521,m. 4d. Richard Whitehead was 
lord of the manor of Upper Rawcliffe and 
Tarnacre in 1794; Preston Guard. Loc. 
Notes, no. 1129. : 

5 See the fine above cited. 

* Fishwick, op. cit. 165-7, from 
which the later descent has been taken. 


88 Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 3138, where 
his residence is called ‘ Ratcliffe Hall’; 
Index of Royalists, 4.4. 

9 Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 332. 

70 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurors, 128. 

70a Fishwick, St Michael’s-on- Wyre, 
167. Baines mentions a ‘gateway half 
pulled down,’ a secret place formerly used 
as a chapel and a pfiest’s hole. The gate- 
way had disappeared when Fishwick 
wrote in 1891. ‘On pulling down the 
old house a secret room was discovered. 
The chapel was in what is now a bed- 
room on the third story’ ; ibid. 

71 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, no. 21. 

72 Pal. of Lanc. Sessional Papers, bdle. 4. 

78 Cockersand Chartul, (Chet. Soc.), i, 
178-83. The benefactors were William 
son of Alan de Rawcliffe, William son of 
Alan de Tarnacre (perhaps the same 
person), William son of Simon de Raw- 
cliffe, Warine de Cornay, Thomas son of 
Robert de Rice, Adam and William sons 
of Richard. One of the gifts was of half an 
oxgang of land, of which Richard son of 
William de Ireland was tenant at 12d. rent. 

Among the place-names are North- 
breck, Old Goredale, Kirkflat, War- 
oxgang, Tunstead, Swineland, Dunandes- 
pool on the Wyre and Serlescalespool. 

™ Assize R. 404, m.4d.3 he did not 
prosecute. 

™ Cockersand Chartul, i, 247-51. Other 
benefactors were William son of Alan de 
Wath and Richard de Tarnacre. The 
place-names include Kirkcroft, Priestpot 
and Cleanfield. 

76 Ibid. 251~2. The canons gave an acre 


271 


in Kilncroftfield for an assart adjoining 
their land and that of Roger de Wedacre. 

7 In 1288 Agnes daughter of Adam 
de Inskip complained that Richard son of 
Adam de Inskip had disseised her of half 
an oxgang of land; Assize R. 1277, m. 
31. Agnes daughter of Richard de Inskip 
was plaintiff in 1301 5 ibid. 1321, m. 8d. 
William son of Adam son of Richard de 
Inskip claimed 8 acres of land in 1351 3 
Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 1, m. 5 d. 

78 Alan gave the monks of Durham 
2 acres on the east of Morbreck and all 
his land called Culnstyde (Kilnstead), 
with easements in Rawcliffe and Tarn- 
acre; Lytham D. at Durham, 2a, 2ae, 4ae, 
Ebor, no. §2. He gave Lytham also an 
oxgang of land in Rawcliffe, formerly that 
of Richard son of Alan, in pure alms; 
ibid. no. 54. 

Warine de Cornay gave the monks an 
acre and a perch in Rawcliffe ; Lathbutt, 
Netherfield and the mill are mentioned ; 
ibid. no. 53. 

Among the same charters is one from 
William son of Alan de Romecliue 
(?Rouecliue) to his brother Richard, 
granting 2 oxgangs of land formerly held 
by Gamel and Walter son of Hartholf, 
at arent of 4od. As ‘gersum’ 40s. was 
given. The fishery and demesne were 
excepted, and in exchange for that part 
of the appurtenances lying in Holebrook 
Richard was to have two esselgones (selions) 
in Northfurlong ; ibid. no. 55. 

79 Lands of the Hospitallersin Rawcliffe, 
Tarnacre and Sowerby are mentioned in 
12923 Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 


375+ 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Alan's charter was alleged in a dispute in 1292 
between Hugh son of Hugh de Mitton and Roger 
de Wedacre, when Richard son and heir of William 
son of Alan de Tarnacre was called to warrant. The 
Prior of the Hospitallers had granted the land to 
Maud daughter of Hugh de Mitton; she married 
Roger de Wedacre and bore him a son Robert, whose 
estate was in his father’s hands.” The Cockersand 
lands*! were after the Dissolution purchased by 
John Braddyll,” and the Hospitallers’ lands by the 
Shireburnes.* 

The pleadings afford some details of the mediaeval 
tenements“ ; the inquisitions also preserve the names 
of landowners there. In the 18th century and 
later the house called Turnover Hall was held 
successively by Shuttleworth * and Westby.” 

Stockenbridge was owned by a family named 
Blackburne. Richard Blackburne of Eccleston and 
Tarnacre, holding in the latter place of the king, 
died in 1641, and had for heir a son John, aged 
forty-four. Richard and Edward Blackburne, re- 
cusants, in 1654 sought to compound for the seques- 
trated portions of their estates.” A later Richard 
Blackburne, described as of Stockenbridge, yeoman, 
in 1717 registered his estate as a ‘ Papist.’ He died 
about 1725.” John Blackburne of Field Plumpton, 
who had a son Thomas, made a settlement in 1727 
of the capital messuage called Stockenbridge, lately 
in the possession of Richard son of (the said) John 
Blackburne, who had died leaving a daughter 
Margaret wife of Thomas Eccles of Dilworth." From 


a deed of 1748 it appears that another daughter, 
Ellen, had married William Hathornthwaite, and 
their son John had Stockenbridge.” The estate 
afterwards passed by marriage to Leckonby of Great 
Eccleston and to Phipps.” 

Tarnacre Hall, now St. Michael’s Hall, near the 
church, was owned by the 
Longworth family, who re- 
corded a pedigree in 1664. 
Isabella Longworth had it in 
17703; next year, after her 
death, it was advertised for 
sale.“ The Butlers of Out 
Rawcliffe had from an early 
date estates in Upper Rawcliffe 
and Little Sowerby which 


were sometimes called Lenowonrii, Arpine 
manors.” three wolves’ heads 

LITTLE SOWERBY was erased sable. 
included in the Singleton 


estate; thus in 1293 Joan widow of Thomas de 
Singleton released to Thomas Banastre and Joan his 
wife all her right in landthere.® Richard Balderston 
had land in Sowerby in 1456,” and the Earl of 
Derby’s rental for 1523 shows lands in Upper 
Rawcliffe and Tarnacre. It was reckoned as a 
manor, for the manors of Great and Little Sowerby 
occur in feoffments of the Derby estates.” The 
manor is held together with the manor of Upper 
Rawcliffe by the present Earl of Derby, and courts 
are held.” 


© Assize R. 408, m. 73 d. 

§1 For the tenants 1450-1537 see 
Cockersand Chartul, iii, 1270-1. 

» Pat. 36 Hen. VIII, pt. ii. 

® See the account of Stidd. Richard 
Shireburne held land in Rawcliffe in 1628 ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvi, no. 4. 
The family, however, had held lands much 
earlier, for a pleading of 1334 already 
cited shows that Sir Robert de Shireburne 
held two messuages and half a plough- 
land in Old Upper Rawcliffe—a designa- 
tion which has not been noticed again— 
and that Nicholas Boteler, Richard son of 
Richard Travers, and Thomas son of 
Thomas de Rigmaiden were also owners ; 
Coram Rege R. 297, m. 103d. 

‘In 1291 Richard son of William 
de Eccleston claimed a toft, the moiety 
of a water-mill and the fourth part 
of a fishery against Geoffrey son of 
William de Eccleston and John de Rig- 
maiden, but did not succeed ; Assize R. 
407, m. 3d. In the following year 
Roger de Wedacre claimed the moiety of 
a water-mill against the same Richard 
(whose father William had died in seisin) 
and John de Rigmaiden, to whom Richard 
had demised it ; ibid. 408, m. 63, 71. 

Alan son of William de Eccleston, 
William son of Geoffrey de Whittingham, 
Roger son of Alan de Rowall and Mar- 
gery widow of Richard de Sale were 
concerned in pleadings in 12923; ibid. 
M. 44, 32, Sd. 

In 1334 John son of Amice daughter 
of Alan de Sowerby claimed messuages, 
é&c., in Upper Rawcliffe against John son 
of Roger Tunnison and John de Birewath ; 
De Banco R. 300, m. 70 d. ; 304, m.45 d. 
The Hornby family have been mentioned 
in the account of the Kirkbys; see also 
Final Conc. ii, 1453; Duchy of Lane. 
Aasize R, 6, m. 2d. 

There are a number of pleadings re- 


specting Tarnacre in Ducatus Lane. (Rec. 
Com.), i (2), ii (3). 

In 1492 Agnes and Margery, daughters 
and heirs of Richard Walton, had lands 
in Upper Rawcliffe; Pal. of Lanc. Plea 
R. 78, m. 4d. Agnes married John son 
and heir of Richard Boteler, and about 
1528 her land in Upper Rawcliffe, Wood- 
plumpton and Newsham was sold to 
Bartholomew Hesketh; ibid. 144, m. 
1gd.3 154, m. 5d, 

© William Walton of Walton-le-Dale 
in 1638 had the reversion of a messuage, 
&c., in Tarnacre ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. 
p-m. xxv, no. 35, 49. From the pedigree 
in the Visit. of 1613 (Chet. Soc.), 100, it 
appears that this was inherited from 
William's mother, Priscilla daughter of 
John Cottam of Tarnacre and wife of 
Thomas Walton. John Cottam was a 
freeholder in 1600; Misc. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), i, 233. 

Thomas Eccleston in 1592 held three 
messuages and land in Turnacre ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvi, no. 38. 

James Raby died in 1635 holding a 
messuage and land in Tarnacre of Robert 
Viscount ‘Kilnemurrie’ and Eleanor his 
wife (in her right) as of the manor of 
Nether Wyresdale by knight’s service ; 
also, of the king, 2 acres improved from 
the waste there. His son and heir Richard 
was eight years of age ; ibid. xxviii, no, 22. 

56 Margaret Shuttleworth of Turnover 
Hall, widow of William, in 1717 registered 
her estate as a ‘Papist’; Estcourt and 
Payne, op. cit. 141. A later William 
Shuttleworth died in 1745, leaving a son 
Thomas (s.p.) and a daughter Margaret, 
who married Thomas Westby of White 
Hall ; Fishwick, op. cit. 167-8. 

87 The house was bequeathed to another 
Thomas Westby, who died in 1830, 
leaving it to three daughters ; ibid. 

® Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. xxix, 


272 


no. 81. This family is stated to have 
been the senior branch of the more con- 
spicuous (Protestant) family of Blackburne 
of Orford and Hale ; Dugdale, Visit. 36. 

89 Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 3178, 
3185. 

9 Estcourt and Payne, op. cit. 92. 
His wife Mary was daughter and heir of 
Lawrence Livesey of Ravenhead. 

1 Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), iii, 234, 
from R. 1 and 2 of Geo, II at Preston. 

92 [bid. iii, 354, from R. 22 of Geo, II. 

93 Ibid. i, 361. 

4 Dugdale, Visit. 190 5 Piccope MSS. 
ii, 244. According to this, Ralph Long- 
worth, d. c. 1634, was the first of Upper 
Rawcliffe —s, Richard, d. 1660-8. Thomas 
-s. Richard, who married Fleetwood 
daughter and co-heir of Edward Shuttle- 
worth of Larbreck, by Alice daughter and 
heir of John Woodhouse of Larbreck 
-s, Edward -s, Ralph. A letter from 
R. Longworth, St. Michael's, 1690, is 
privted in Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, 
App. iv, 247. 

S niece Upper Rawcliffe and Little 
Sowerby are named among the Boteler 
possessions in 1333; De Banco R. 295, 
m. 102. See also ibid. 287, m. 307 4. 
The tenure is not recorded in the inquisi- 
tions beyond the statement that these 
(with others) were held of the king ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. viii, no. 8 

Among their charters was a grant by 
Thomas de Galwayth in 1386 to Roger 
de Birewath of lands in Little Sowerby in 
the vill of Upper Rawcliffe ; Dods. MSS. 
liii, fol. god. 

% Kuerden MSS. iv, $3. 7 

7 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 63. 

% Rental at Lathom. 

® Pal. of Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 175 
(1665), m. 143 ; 260 (1708), m. $3 

100 Information of Mr. Win 
Hale, 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


From a grant by Richard son of Richard de 
Tarnacre to Cockersand Abbey it appears that Little 
Sowerby was also called Aldred Sowerby, for land in 
it touched the Brock.1°! Walter de Ellel granted 
land in Aldrith Sowerby to Walter son of Richard 
le Boteler.1°? 

Some of the Commonwealth sequestrations for 
religion and politics have been recorded above. 
Dr. Wildbore, vicar of Garstang and then of Lancaster, 
had land in ‘Up Ratcliffe’ and Tarnacre which he 
gave to his daughter Elizabeth. She married Thomas 
Challoner, and the estate was sequestered for the 
husband’s ‘delinquency.’ After his death she married 
Samuel Barker, who in 1650 petitioned for the 
removal of the sequestration.!°3 Roger Hesketh as a 
‘Papist’ had had two-thirds of his lands in Tarnacre 
and Claughton sequestered ; after his death in 1649 
his son Richard petitioned for the removal of the 
sequestration or leave to compound.!! Thomas 
Wilkinson of Tarnacre was another who had two- 
thirds of his estate sequestered for his religion.!% 
Several ‘ Papists’ registered estates in 1717.108 

The parish church is situated in this township, 
and is the only place of worship there. 

A school was in 1708 founded by Richard Cornall 
in Upper Rawcliffe. 107 


OUT RAWCLIFFE 


Rodeclif, Dom. Bk. ; Routecliue, 1206; Routhe- 
clif, 1212. 

Middelrotheclyue, 
1309. 

Outroutheclif, 1328. 

The surface is undulating, much of it very low, but 
rising both in the south-east and in the west to $0 ft. 
above sea level. In the former more elevated patch 
is Rawcliffe Hall, the village lying a mile to the 
west. Liscoe is in the extreme south-west and Ashton 
in thenorth. The Wyre forms the southern boundary. 
The area measures 4,5934 acres,! and there was a 
population of 705 in Igor. 

The principal roads run from east to west, one 
near the river from St. Michael’s to Hambleton, and 
another further north from Garstang to the same place. 
Cartford Bridge in the south-east gives a passage over 
the Wyre, and from it a road goes north to Pilling. 


1273; Mideste Routheclif, 


10l Cockersand Chartul. i, 244. Styrop 


4 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 


ST. MICHAEL- 
ON-WYRE 


The township has a parish council. 

The soil is clay and moss, with clay subsoil ; wheat, 
oats and potatoes are grown. 

The portions of the township once 
MANORS known as MIDDLE and OUT RAW- 
CLIFFE seem originally to have been 
separate manors, and in 1066 the two Rawecliffes, each 
assessed as two plough-lands, were part of the Preston 
lordship of Earl Tostig.2 A century later they were 
part of the fee of the Botelers of Weeton,’ and Hervey 
father of Hervey Walter gave to Orm son of Magnus, 
with his daughter Alice, four plough-lands in Rawcliffe, 
Thistleton and Greenhalgh, tenable by knight’s ser- 
vice. The Rawcliffe here intended seems to be 
Mid Rawcliffe, which was in 1249 held by Sir John 
de Thornhill of Theobald Walter by the twelfth 
part of a knight’s fee,> Out Rawcliffe at the same 
time being held by tenants at will for the most part.® 
In 1346 it was recorded that the Earl of Ormonde 
held four plough-lands in Out Rawcliffe,” and his 
mesne lordship, as in the case of Weeton, passed to 
the Earls of Derby. 

Theobald Walter in 1266-7 granted to his ‘cousin’ 
Sir Richard Je Boteler all the land of Out Rawcliffe 
together with an oxgang in Staynall, for which he was 
to render the farm the men of the place had been 
accustomed to pay.8 At the same time he ordered 
these men to render their services to the said Richard,? 
whom they were to consider as their lord. The 
rents seem to have amounted to {£7 a year, for this 
was the sum remitted or commuted to a pair of gloves 
or 1d. by Theobald Walter, butler of Ireland, when 
William le Boteler, the son and heir of Richard, 
married Joan de Syfrewast.!° Richard had also acquired 
Mid Rawcliffe from Richard de Thornhill! and John 
Debaud,!? and thus held the whole, though by different 
tenures. From this time until 1716 his family re- 
tained possession, and there are practically no records 
of any other tenants. The manors seem to have been 
regarded as one, called indifferently either Middle or 
Out Rawcliffe; but sometimes these were named 
separately. The Botelers also held manors and lands 
in Hoole, Whittle-le-Woods, Freckleton, Goosnargh 
and other places. 

Sir Richard le Boteler, brother of Sir William le 
Boteler of Warrington, was living in 1273,'4 but must 
have died not long afterwards, leaving a widow 


11 Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 85 ; a grant of 


and the Sourlands are other field-names 
in the charter. 

10 Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 1005. 

108 Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), ii, 17-19. 

10 Tbid. iii, 195-8. Some field-names 
are mentioned—Breckfield, Little Brick- 
hill, &c. 

1% Cal, Com. for Comp. iv, 3178. 

In addition to those already given 
was the small estate of Richard Richardson 
of Garstang in the tithes of Tarnacre on 
the south-east side of the Wyre ; Estcourt 
and Payne, op. cit. 142. 

__ 1 Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), 
Ny 4515 End. Char. Rep. 

The Census Rep. of 1901 gives 4,501 
acres, including 13 of inland water. 
There are also 45 acres of tidal water 
and 147 of foreshore. 

2 VCH. Lanes. i, 2885. 

3 In 1205-6 Rawcliffe’s 12s. of tallage 
follows next after Weeton 3 Farrer, Lancs. 
Pipe R. 202. 


d 


Lancs. and Ches.), i, 37, 115, 145. 

5 Ibid. 174. Of the two plough-lands 
2 oxgangs were held in demesne, and the 
other tenancies are thus recorded : Roger 
son of Roger, 2 oxgangs at $s. rent; 
Jordan son of Roger, 1, at 2s. 6d. ; Uctred 
the Smith, 1, at 2s. 6d.; Sir Otto de 
Rowall, 5, by knight’s service; Richard 
de la Hay the same. 

6 Ibid. 172-3. Of these two plough- 
lands 15 oxgangs were worth 106s. 3d. 
yearly, and the remaining one was held 
by the service of performing suit to the 
county and wapentake courts. The mill 
was worth 16s, a ycar, the moor 6s. 8d., 
and the marsh 12d. 

7 Survey of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 54; for 
castle ward 5s. was payable. 

8 Dods. MSS. xxxiii, fol. 29 ; liii, fol. 99. 

9 Ibid. xxxiii, fol. 296; this charter 
supplies the date. 

10 [bid. fol. 30. Should William and 
Joan have no issue the rent was to revert 
to the grantor or his heirs, 


273 


all Thornhill’s land, made about 1253, 
Sir Robert de Lathom being sheriff and 
attesting. Richard de Thornhill directed 
his tenants in future to answer to Richard 
le Boteler as to their lord ; ibid. 

Richard de Thornhill granted 2 oxgangs 
of land and a half in Middle Rawcliffe to 
Richard de Thornton in free marriage 
with his ‘cousin’ Olive ; ibid. 

In 1308-9 William son of Nicholas 
Boteler made a claim respecting a tene- 
ment in Midst Rawcliffe against John de 
Thornhill and others, but did not prose- 
cute it; Assize R. 423, m. 2d. 5. 

12 Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 99 5 a direction 
to the tenants to render services to 
Richard le Boteler. 

13 Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xxxviii, 
93; Beamont, Annals of the Lords of 
Warrington, i, 60, 79. 

M In 1273 the sheriff was ordered to 
fix a boundary between the lands of 
Richard le Boteler in Middle Rawcliffe 
and those of the Abbot of Cockersand in 


a5 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Alice.!§ 


Pilling Grange; De Banco R. 3, m. 24. 
There had already (in 1270) been an 
agreement as to bounds, which were to 
go from the head of Pilling straight 
between Scytholme and south by the 
hedge to the head of Westpool; Dods. 
MSS. cxlix, fol. 120. In 1273 Richard, 
in bequeathing his body to the abbey, 
released his right in Pilling pasture ; ibid. ; 
Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 47-50. 

15 She was the daughter of William de 
Carleton ; Whittle-le-Woods and part of 
Goosnargh appear to have come to the 
Botelers through her, In 1251 dower 
was granted to her by her eldest son 
William, viz. the whole manor of M.ddle 
Rawcliffe. The other sons were Henry, 
Joun, Richard, Edmund and Geoffrey ; 
Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 85. For Richard 
sce the account of Marton in Poulton. 

Alice, when widow, granted to Richard 
son of Sir Henry de Kighley all her part 
of the fishery of Wyre, given her by her 
brother Adam ; ibid. fol. 97. 

18 At the beginning of 1287 Joan widow 
of Theobald le Boteler claimed dower in 
Rawclitfe—as to 6 oxgangs of land, &c., 
against Nicholas son of Theobald le 
Boteler, who was custodee of the land and 
heir of William son of Richard le Boteler ; 
and as to 10 oxgangs, &c., against Thomas 
de Singleton and Joan his wife ; De Banco 
R. 66, m. 27d. It appeared that Joan, 
who held in dower, was the widow of 
William le Boteler, whose son and heir 
Nicholas was under age ; ibid. 68, m. 21d. 

Nicholas occurs in a Wrightington 
plea in 1292; Assize R. 408, m. 4t. 

1S Assize R. 429, m. gd.3 from which 
it appears that William's wardship had 
been granted to Richard de Lathom by 
John de Kirkby as superior lord of 
Wrightington, where the family had lands. 
The lord of Weeton seems for the time 
to have been overlooked, but in 1313 
Edmund the Butler of Ireland appeared 
against William son and heir of Nicholas 
Boteler for having intruded himself into 
the manor of Out Rawcliffe, which had 
been held of plaintiff by the said Nicholas 
by knight’s service, so that William's 
wardship bel:nged to him; De Banco 
R. 198, m. 10d. 

12 Pink and Beaven, Parl. Repre. of 
Lancs, 29. 

% In that year Nicholas son of William 
Boteler claimed the third part of 47 vent 
from Out Rawcliffe against Randle de 
Singleton and Mabel his wife. Mabel 
was the widow of Nicholas Boteler, who 
had held the manor of a certain William 
(sic) Boteler by the rent of a pair of 
gloves. From Nicholas it had descended 
to William as son and heir, and he had 
granted Mabel a third of two-thirds of 
the manor for dower. The descent of 
the manor was traced (as in the text) ; 
it was stated that Joan, as widow of the 


His eldest son William did not long sur- 
vive him, being dead in 1287; his widow Joan had 
by that time married Thomas de Singleton.!® The son 
Nicholas was a minor at his father’s death,!* and by 
his wife Mabel left a son William, a minor in 1305."" 
This son also appears to have died young. 
wife Isabel he left a son Nicholas, who served as 
knight of the shire in 1344,!° and occurs from 1328”? 
until about 1364. He was succeeded by his son Sir 
John Boteler,*! who rendered public service as sheriff 
of the county *? and in other ways.*8 

Sir John died 27 September 1404, leaving as heir 
his son Nicholas, about twenty years of age, and 


Kirkby.?! 


By his years of age. 


married in 1401 to Margery daughter of Sir Richard 
Nicholas Boteler, who was knight of the 
shire in 1419 and 1426,?° was about 1452 succeeded 
by a son John,”’ who died in Septemter 1488 a very 
old man, his heir being a great-grandson James, twenty 
The manor of Out Rawcliffe, with 
messuages, lands, &c., there and in Stalmine, Staynall, 
Thistleton, Kirkham and Freckleton, was held of the 
Earl of Derby by knight’s service and the rent of 85,28 
James Boteler, who married Elizabeth daughter of Sir 


Thomas Molyneux of Sefton,” died in 1504, leaving 


first William (son of Richard), had re- 
ceived the £7 rent until her death, and 
it was argued that a third part of this was 
due from Mabel to the lord of the manor. 
The defence was that the rent had been 
extinguished by the charter to William 
and Joan; Assize R. 1400, m. 2334.5 
De Banco R. 276, m. 93. 

Isabel widow of the second William 
(father of Nicholas) had married Sir 
Henry de Croft by 1331; ibid. 287, m. 
307d. Dower was claimed in seventy- 
two messuages, lands, &c., in Middle 
Rawcliffe, Out Rawcliffe, Upper Rawcliffe, 
Great and Little Sowerby, Inskip and 
many other places against Nicholas son 
of William Boteler; ibid. 295, m. 102 3; 
Cal. Pat. 1330-4, p. 388. 

Nicholas occurs again in 1346-7; De 
Banco R. 348, m. 286; 351, m. 109d, 

*! Sir John son of Nicholas Boteler of 
Rawcliffe in the time of Richard II re- 
covered a moiety of the manor of Freckle- 
ton ; Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 116. 

Sir John Boteler of Rawcliffe and Agnes 
his wife occur in 1401; Final Conc, (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), iii, 62. 

From 1371 to 1374 ; P.R.O. List, 72. 

3 In 1386 he went to Ireland with 
Sir John de Stinley on the king’s ser- 
vice; Ca! Par, 1385-9, p. 126. John 
Duke of Lancaster in 1397 retained Sir 
John Boteler of Rawcliffe for his service 
in peace and war, giving him a fee of 
£20 yearly ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 860. 
A similar grant was made to him in 
1399; Cal. Pat, 1396-9, p. 557. 

4 Towneley MS. DD, no. 1460. The 
tenure of the lands in Middle and Out 
Rawcliffe is not stated. The marriage is 
also noted in Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 974, 

* Pink and Beaven, op. cit. 50, 52. 
Licence for an oratory was in 1428 
granted to Nicholas Boteler of Rawcliffe 
and Margery his wife; Raines MSS. 
(Chet. Lib.), xxii, 407. 

© In 1441 Nicholas appears: to have 
married Katherine widow of Sir Thomas 
Radcliffe, and lands in Catterall, Gar- 
stang and elsewhere were assigned to 
her; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 93. Nicholas 
was living in 1443 and 1451, as appears 
by the note following, but was dead in 
14553 ibid. fol. 98. John Boteler of 
Rawcliffe, as son of Nicholas, granted 
lands to Katherine, his father’s widow, 
in 1464 ; ibid. fol. g2. 

John son of John Boteler and brother 
of Nicholas released to trustees all his 
right in lands in Catterall, &c.; ibid. 
exlix, fol. 1155. 

77 A feoffment by Nicholas Boteler 
occurs in 1443 ; Final Conc. iii, 108-9. 

In 1423 an agreement was made 
between Nicholas Boteler of Rawcliffe 
and John son and heir of Sir Richard 
Boteler of Warrington for the marriage 
of John son and heir of the former and 


274 


two sons John and Nicholas,®° of whom the former 
proved his age in 1512.°! This John Boteler recorded 


Elizabeth si-ter of the latter; Dods 
MSS, liii, fol. 834. In 1451 Nicholas 
made a grant of moss and turbary to his 
son John ; ibid. 

An earlier deed (about 1430) records 
an agreement between Nicholas Boteler 
and John his son on the one side and Sir 
Thomas Radcliffe on the other for the 
marriage of John's son and heir-apparent 
Nicholas to Thomas’s daughter Alice, 
There are mentioned Sir John, the father 
of Nicholas, Margery his wife and Eliza. 
beth wife of his son John ; ibid. fol. 97, 

John and Richard, sons of Nicholas 
Boteler, were defendants in 1449; Pal. 
of Lanc. Plea R, 12, m, 2 

In 1467 William son of John Boteler 
of Rawcliffe received lands in Freckleton, 
and in 1502-3 John son and heir of 
William Boteler, on marrying Beatrice 
daughter of Richard Singleton, had lands 
in Esprick, Thistleton and Freckleton ; 
Dods. MSS, liii, fol. ro1—2. 

* Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. iii, no. 43, 
45. The descent is thus given: John 
Boteler the elder -s. Nicholas -s. John 
—s, James. 

From later pleadings it appears that 
the younger John married Elizabeth, one 
of the daughters and heirs of Robert 
Lawrence of Ashton, &c. 

29 The agreement was made 18 July 
1488 ; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 984. But 
in it James Boteler is styled ‘ esquire.’ 

30 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. ili, no, 109. 
The manor of Rawcliffe was held of the 
Earl of Derby by knight's service, James 
Boteler had in 1500 granted various mes- 
suages and lands in Freckleton, Warton, 
Tarnacre, &c., to trustees for Anne 
daughter of Sir Richard Shireburne and 
wife of his son John Boteler; in 1501 
James made a grantto his brother Richard, 
and in the same year another to his son 
Nicholas. At his death his son and heir 

ohn was fourteen years of age. 

Elizabeth Boteler, widow of James, died 
in Nov. 1508, and Richard Boteler io 
Oct. 1507; ibid. iv, no. 33. 

31 Ibid. no. 23. It was stated that 
John Boteler was born at Rawcliffe on 
16 Aug. 1489, and baptized at St. 
Michacl’s; John Rigmaiden and Mar- 
garet wife of John Kirkby of Thornton 
were sponsors. ‘A certain missal was 
shown, and in the calendar of the said 
book the day of birth of the sa! Joho 
Boteler was written by Richard Brid, a 
brother of the order of Preachers on the 
said Morrow of the Assumption... in 
these words: John Botcler son of James 
Boteler was born 1489.’ One witness 
remembered being sent by the father to 
announce the birth to Dame Anne 
Molyneux, who sent him back with a 
royal’ for the said John. . 

For a recovery of the manor in 1521 
see Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 132, m. 11d. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


a pedigree in 1533,” and died in 1534, leaving by 
his wife Anne Shireburne four daughters as co-heirs, 


viz. Elizabeth, who married 
James Standish of Duxbury ; 
Isabel, who married Thomas 
Radcliffe of Winmarleigh, and 
left a daughter Anne, after- 
wards wife of Sir Gilbert 
Gerard ; Eleanor, who married 
Henry Rishton of Rishton ; 
and Grace, who married Hugh 
Anderton of Euxton.* The 
manor of Rawcliffe, however, 
went with other estates to 
the heir male, the above- 


John. He died about 1555, 


leaving a son Richard, who was succeeded by his 
brother Henry, with whom the pedigree recorded 


in 1664 begins. 


32 Visit, (Chet. Soc.), 93. 

83 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. vii, no. 4. 
The manor is herein called Middle Raw- 
cliffe. John Boteler’s will is given, and 


it is recorded that he had begunachantry . 


and service in St. Michael's Church. The 
ages of the heirs are given : Daughters— 
Elizabeth, twenty-seven ; Isabel, twenty- 
five ; Eleanor, twenty-two ; and Grace, 
twenty-one. Brother—Nicholas, thirty- 
three, 

Anne the widow received dower in 
1534.3 Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 984. The 
daughter Eleanor was engaged to marry 
Henry son and heir-apparent of Richard 
Rishton in 15273; ibid. fol. 945. 

For the descent see Pal. of Lanc. Plea 
R. 172, m. II. 

3 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. x, no. 43 
the will of Nicholas Butler is recited, his 
two sons Richard and Henry being men- 
tioned, and daughters Elizabeth (wife of 
John Orrell), Alice and Catherine. There 
was a remainder to William Butler of 
Esprick and heirs male. Richard was 
fifteen years old at his father’s death. 
The manor of Middle Rawcliffe, with 
windmill, messuages, &c., was held of the 
Earl of Derby by knight’s service. Out 
Rawcliffe is separately named, but no 
tenure is recorded. For an inventory of 
the goods at Rawcliffe see Fishwick, 
St. Michael's (Chet. Soc.), 147. 

Nicholas Butler in 1538 obtained a 
dispensation from Archbishop Cranmer 
to enable him to marry Anne Bradshagh, 
widow ; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 944. His 
will (ibid. 915) mentions also a bastard 
son James and a son-in-law John Butler 
of Kirkland. 

Richard Butler, the heir, is said to have 
married Agnes daughter of Sir Richard 
Hoghton; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 98d. 
The date is wrongly given; perhaps it 
should be 31 Hen. VIII. 

35 Richard Butler in 1564 settled Raw- 
cliffe and Stalmine on himself for life, 
with remainder to his brother Henry ; 
Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 984; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 26, m. 253. In 1571 
an agreement respecting the Butler manors 
and lands was made by Gilbert Gerard, 
Anne his wife, Thomas Standish, Margaret 
his wife, James Anderton—these repre- 
senting John Butler—Richard Butler, 
Henry Butler and Anne his wife ; ibid. 
bdle. 33, m.79 3 Fishwick, op. cit. 1503 
Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 254. 


Butrer of Rawcliffe. 
Asure a cheveron be-~ 
tween three covered cups 
named Nicholas, brother of  9- 


ST. MICHAEL- 
ON-WYRE 


This family, like most of those in the district, 
adhered to Roman Catholicism at the Reformation, but 


appear to have attended the reformed services occa- 


sionally in order to avoid fines and sequestrations.™ 
Henry Butler, grandson of the above-named Henry,” 
lived through the Civil War period, and lost his son 
in the king’s service ; but, though his estates appear to 
have been sequestered by the Parliament, it was for 
‘delinquency ’ only. 
son of the foregoing, succeeded to the estates later,” 
and had a son Richard, who joined the Jacobites in 
1715, and was tried and condemned for high treason. 
He died in prison." 
forfeit,” and the manor of Rawcliffe was in 1729 ac- 
quired by Thomas Roe, an attorney, whose daughter 


Another Henry, great-grand- 


His estates were declared 


carried it in marriage to John France of Little 
Eccleston, and it descended in this family for a time.” 


recent times.** 


86 See the note on Kirkby of Upper 
Raweliffe ; also Fishwick, op. cit. 151-2. 

37 In 1591 William Burgh of Larbreck 
charged Henry Butler of Middle Rawcliffe 
with trespassing on his fishery in the 
Wyre, catching twelve salmon called 
mortes, worth 12s., twenty flukes (20d.) 
and 100 eels (6s. 8d.); Pal. of Lane. 
Plea R. 268, m. 9. 

The elder Henry Butler died at Middle 
Rawcliffe on 24 Feb. 1620-1 holding 
the manor of Middle Rawcliffe and Out 
Rawcliffe of the Earl of Derby by fealty 
and 6s. 8d. rent ; also two ferry-boats for 
the passage of the water of the Wyre in 
the said manor and a free fishery in the 
same river, with other manors and lands. 
Anne his widow died a week after him. 
William Butler, his son and heir, was sixty 
years of age; Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. 
xxvi, no, 36. 

The manor of Middle Rawcliffe, &c., 
was the subject of a settlement in 1632 
by William Butler, Henry his son, and 
William son of Henry; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 121, m. 1. 

William Butler died in 1639, his son 
Henry being then fifty-four years of age; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxx, no. 18, 
Various settlements are recited, from 
which it appears that William married 
Elizabeth daughter of Cuthbert Clifton 
of Westby, and Henry married Dorothy 
daughter of Henry Stanley (of Bicker- 
staffe). William had brothers named 
Nicholas (with son Richard), Thomas 
and Robert, and younger sons Cuthbert, 
Nicholas and John, The tenure of 
Rawcliffe was recorded as before; there 
were there sixteen saltcotes. 

38 Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 260-1. Henry 
Butler’s sequestration is just mentioned, 
His son Richard had left a widow 
Elizabeth, whose jointure lands had been 
in part sequestered for her ‘popery.’ She 
was dead in 1655, when Henry petitioned 
for the removal of the sequestration, the 
lands having reverted to him. 

The son named, Captain Richard Butler 
of Rawcliffe, had been taken prisoner at 
the capture of Liverpool in 1644, and 
died soon afterwards, apparently while a 
prisoner at Manchester; War in Lancs. 
(Chet. Soc.), 60. The same writer states 
that ‘— Butler, the young heir of Raw- 
cliffe,’ was killed at Brindle in the fight of 
1651. Dugdale, contrary to his custom, 
does not record these facts in the pedigree 


275 


Mr. Robert John France Aiston is said to be the 
present lord of the manor. Courts have been held in 


of 1664; Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 64. Two 
other members of the family, William 
and Edward Butler of Rawcliffe and 
Myerscough, have been noticed in the 
account of the latter place. 

The pedigree referred to gives : Henry 
Butler, aged eighty —s. Richard, d.y.p. —s. 
Richard, aged thirty-two —s. Henry, aged 
six. Henry Butler the elder died in 1667; 
Fishwick, op. cit. 154, where an abstract 
of his will is given. Richard Butler of 
Rawcliffe, with Henry and five other sons, 
were Preston burgesses in 1682 ; Preston 
Guild R. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 182. 

39 Henry Butler was vouchee in a 
recovery of the manor of Out or Middle 
Rawcliffe in 1708; Pal. of Lanc. Plea 
R. 488, m. 7. 

4” Richard Butler was vouchee in a 
recovery of the manor in 17143 ibid. 
501, m. 20, 

41 Gillow, Bidl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. i, 
364-5. Catherine the daughter and heir 
of Richard married Edward Markham 
and had Thurland Castle. See Lancs. and 
Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
1, 299 

It appears that Henry Butler, the father 
of Richard, was still living in 1720, when 
he ‘put in a claim to the estate for 
himself and Anne his wife, but as they 
were both Papists they were incapacitated 
and their interest declared void’; Fish- 
wick, op. cit. 155. Henry Butler, 
Catherine his daughter, and Mary the 
widow of Richard in 1717 registered 
their estates as ‘Papists’; Estcourt and 
Payne, Engl. Cath. Nonjurors, 145, 148-9. 

42 Rawcliffe was sold in 1723 to the 
Rev. Richard Cromleholme, John Leyland, 
Cornelius Fox and James Poole for 
£11,260 ; Fishwick, op. cit. 156. 

43 Op. cit. 156-7, where the succession 
is thus given: John France, d. 1774 
-s. John, d. 1817, having bequeathed to 
Thomas Wilson, who took the name of 
France and died in 1828 ~s. Thomas 
Robert Wilson France, d. 1853 —s. Robert 
Wilson France, d. 1858, having be- 
queathed Rawcliffe to his natural son, 
Robert John Barton Aiston, who assumed 
the name of Wilson France. ‘In the 
event of his death without issue, the 
property, subject to certain contingencies, 
will [1891] go to Greenwich Hospital.’ 

The manor of Out Rawcliffe was held 
by John France in 17753; Pal. of Lane. 
Feet of F. bdle. 393, m. 86. 

43a Fishwick, op. cit. qo. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


RAWCLIFFE HALL stands in a pleasant situation 
a little over a quarter of a mile to the north of the 
right bank of the Wyre, facing south, and is a two- 
story building of 17th-century date very much 
modernized and added to in recent years. It has, 
however, at one time been of considerable interest 
and yet retains some of its ancient features, though 
the disposition of the original plan is no longer easy 
to trace. The principal elevations face the south and 
west where the walls are covered with rough-cast and 
the windows modern. All the roofs are covered with 
blue slates. The greater part of the building appears 
to be of late 17th-century brickwork, but this only 
shows at the back where no rough-cast has been 
applied. The north side of the principal or south 
wing, however, retains its original timber construction 
facing a small courtyard abour 24 ft. by 21 ft, 
possibly a late 17th-century development of the 
original plan, the east and west walls having 
apparently been built up against the timber framing 
of the main wing. This timber work remains a very 
picturesque feature and may indeed be of Elizabethan 
date, or at any rate part of the ‘new buildings of the 
Hall of Rawcliffe’ which are mentioned shortly 
before 1619. The timber framing extends the 
whole height ot the building, but the lower part is 
filled in with 2} in. brickwork, including, however, a 
good door with traceried pancls. ‘The upper part 
has a long range of mullioned and transomed wood 
windows glazed with diamond quarries, and a plaster 
cove below the eaves, the framing under the 
windows being composed of two rows of square 
panels with quatrefuil and other fillings. The timber 
is without paint, and the work being generally very 
little ‘restored’ makes a very charming picture. 
The courtyard, however, has been encrvached upon 
on the west side, and has been altered on the north, 
from which side it was entered. At the north end 
of the west wing is a large room going up the full 
height of the building, now used as a billiard-room, 
but said to have been originally the chapel. The 
west front, though modernized, retains substantially 
its 17th-century lines, being well broken up with 
chimneys, one of which is incorporated in an 
embattled two-story bay window. The south front 
is uninteresting, although John France, who died in 
1774, left instructions in his will that this side of the 
house should never be altered. ‘It is questionable, 
however, whether the wish was observed, as the 
modernization seems to be later in date.’ There 
is a central porch going up both stories, but the roof 
runs the length of the front with overhanging eaves 
and a gable east and west. The entrance hall has 
the remains of an open fireplace, and there is a small 
oak staircase with dog gate. There are 18th-century 


additions on the north-east side and in other parts, 
and on one of the outbuildings to the north-west ie 
stone inscribed ‘Tho. Roe, Ano. Dni. 1734.’ On 
the lawn on the west side is a lead statue of a girl in 
haymaker’s costume commemorating one of the farm 
servants who lost her life under peculiar circum. 
stanccs. 

Apart from the Butler family there is little to 
relate of the township," but several Papists’ regis- 
tered estates in 1717." 

For the Church of England St. John’s was built in 
1838; the vicar of St. Michael's presents to the 
vicarage.” 

The Wesleyan Methodists built a chapel in 1844, 
but services were discontinued in 1873, the congre. 
gation having dwindled away.” 


GREAT ECCLESTON 


Eglestun, Dom. Bk. ; Eccliston, 1212; Ecleston, 
1285; Great Eccleston, 1296. 

This township has a considerable amount of low- 
lying land by the Wyre, which river forms the 
northern boundary ; but the Copp, which occupies 
the south-west quarter, rises to a height of 55 {t. 
above the sea level. On the northern slope of it 
is the village of Great Eccleston. The area is 
1,469 acres,’ and in 1go1 the population numbered 
583. 

The roads spread out from the village. Eastward 
goes one to St. Michael’s ; east and south, another to 
Inskip ; west, to Little Eccleston, in the parish of 
Kirkham, affording a way across the Wyre by Cart- 
ford Bridge ; south, through Copp hamlet to Elswick. 

The township is governed by a parish council. 

There have long been three cattle fairs—in March, 
April and November, held by custom. 

The soil is clay, and principally used for pasture 
land, but wheat, oats, barley and beans are grown. 
Rushes were formerly a staple commodity, and rush- 
lights were made. 

Thomas Barrow, a local portrait painter of some 
ability, was born at Great Eccleston in 1737 and 
buried at St. Michael’s in 1822.7 

A ghost story was connected with Cross House,’ 
formerly owned by the White family. 

In 1066 Earl Tostig held GREAT 

MANORS ECCLESTON, assessed as two plough- 
lands, as a member of his Preston lord- 

ship.‘ Later it is found to have been included in 
the Wyresdale or Garstang fee of the Lancaster 
family, and the immediate tenants in 1212 have 
been identified as Ralph de Eccleston and Walter 
son of Swain, lord of Carleton.’ In 1242 Adam de 


“4 Fishwick, St. Michael’ s-on-Wyre, 157. 
In a document drawn up by Henry Butler 
shortly before his death (24 Feb. 1620-1) 
the following places are mentioned in 
Rawcliffe Hall: ‘All the buildings on the 
south side of the gates, the chamber over 
the gates, the chappell, the east buttery 
with the chamber over it called the lower 
Heigh chamber, the closet in the same 
over the porch, the kitchen, the larder, 
the old rye barn, the slaughter house, the 
slaughter house barn, the old stable, and 
the kiln.’ Also the ‘chamber where my 
son William usually does lie.’ 

‘la Thid. 


* Fishwick, writing in 1891, says the 
east side was modernized and partly re- 
built ‘about thirty years ago.’ 

4 Geoffrey the Carpenter about 1247 
released to William de Eccleston an 
oxgang of land in the vill of Rawcliffe, 
Hugh the chaplain having been the 
tenant ; Dods. MSS. cxlii, fol. 57. This 
may refer to Upper Rawcliffe. 

6 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurors, 96, &c. Their names were 
Hilary Ashton, Philip Butler and Henry 
Curwen, in addition to the three Butlers 
above mentioned, 

‘7 Fishwick, op. cit. 95-6. 


276 


48 Ibid. 132. 

1The Census Rep. of gor gives 
1,467 acres, including 13 of inland water. 

? Fishwick, St, Michael's (Chet. Soc.), 
199. 

8 ¢Tt is said that strange and unaccount- 
able noises have been heard in the house, 
and on several occasions a lady dressed io 
white has appeared at a small window 
looking out of the attics into the garco 
below’ ; Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 
419. 

4 VCH. Lanes. i, 2882. 

5 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 2, 3- 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Eccleston held of William de Lancaster by knight's 
In 1347 it was found that in William de 
Coucy’s lordship of Wyresdale Sir Richard de Kighley 
held one plough-land by knight’s service, and the 
heir of William de Bartail or Bartle held another 
At other times Kighley and 


service.® 


plough-land similarly,’ 
Bartail were said to 


Carleton 


to Richard le 
Thomas de Bartail died in 1349 holding a third 
part of Great Eccleston.’ 
there is little to record,! 

; The Bartail manor, or part of the manor, was 
in $92 held by Thomas Eccleston of Henry Butler 


ST. MICHAEL- 
ON-WYRE 


Boteler about 1260.” 


Of the Boteler tenure 


hold two-thirds and 
one-third respectively. 

In the absence of 
evidence it is impos- 
sible to trace the lord- 
ships clearly, The 
Kighley manor seems 
to represent that of 
Adam de Eccleston in 
1242,° and to have 
been joined in practice 
with Inskip’; it de- 
scended to the Caven- 
dish family.”” The Earl 
of Derby is now said 
to be lord of the 
manor.’ The Bartail 
manor was held of 
Boteler of Rawcliffe, 


whose title came, in 


part at least, from a 
grant of the homage of 
William son of Uctred 


de Eccleston made by Walter son of Sir William de 


§ Lancs, Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 154. Adam de 
Eccleston was non-suited in a claim 
against William de Lancaster in 1246 5 
Assize R. 404, m. 5. 

Adam de Eccleston seems to have been 
living in 1258 ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, 
i, 212. His successors were perhaps the 
Roger and his son Richard of whom the 
Kighleys were later stated to have held. 

TIng. p.m. 20 Edw. III (2nd nos.), 
no. 63. 

8In 1285 Alice widow of Richard le 
Boteler acknowledged the right of Henry 
de Kighley and Ellen his wife to the 
manor of Inskip and two-thirds of the 
manor of Great Eccleston ; these were to 
descend to the heirs of Ellen, with rever- 
sion in default to the heirs of Alice ; 
Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 163-4. Alice was daughter of William 
de Carleton ; see Out Rawcliffe. Henry 
de Kighley and Ellen in 1296 purchased 
the third part of an oxgang of land in 
Great Eccleston from Roger de Kirkby 
and Margaret his wife; ibid. 181. 
Another half oxgang was acquired by 
Richard de Kighley in 1326, the vendors 
being John de Thurstinton and Maud his 
wife ; ibid. ii, 64. 

Richard de Kighley in 1323 made an 
exchange of land in Roscaldcarrfield with 
Richard son of Robert de Eccleston (see 
below) ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 87 (fol. 255). 

A moiety of the manor (14 oxgangs 
excepted) was settled by the Kighleys in 
13305 Final Conc. ii, 193. 

Gilbert de Kighley in 1357 granted 
his share of the stream and fishery of the 
Wyre—from Crossford to Skepulford—to 
Robert de Hornby, Margery his wife, 
and William their son ; Dods, MSS. cxlix, 
fol. 95. 

* Sir Henry Kighley in 1526 held the 
manor of Inskip with lands in Eccleston 


Great Eccresron: Raikes Roap 


of the heir of Richard Eccleston ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. vi, no. 44. Henry 
Kighley in 1567 was said to have held 
of the heir of Richard son of Roger de 
Eccleston ; ibid. xi, no. 10. 

10 See the account of Inskip. Lord 
Chesham was recently reputed lord of the 
manor, but see p. 281 below. 

1 Information of Mr. Windham E, Hale. 

1 Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 86; the tene- 
ment is described as § oxgangs of land 
and the third part of an oxgang. 

The tenant is elsewhere called William 
son of Uctred son of Swain, so that he 
may have been a relative of William de 
Carleton. He gave land in the field 
called Gaseflosland to Cockersand Abbey ; 
Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 190. To him 
Emma daughter of Roger de Eccleston 
sold atoft in Eccleston ; Dods. MSS. cxlii, 
fol. §9. 

William son of Uctred de Eccleston 
about 1240 granted his part of the fishery 
to his lord William de Lancaster, who 
gave it to Richard de Kirkby; Dods. 
MSS. cxlix, fol. 87, 876. 

William seems to have been succeeded 
by Robert de Eccleston, who occurs from 
1249 to 12973 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, 
i, 172, 297- 

William son of Robert de Eccleston 
gave his brother Richard, about 1304, all 
his right in 2 oxgangs of land in Great 
Eccleston ; Add. MS. 32106, fol. 2545. 

Robert son of Richard de Eccleston in 
1319 granted all his lands in the vill to 
his son Richard ; Dods. MSS. cxlii, fol. 53. 
This Richard son of Robert has been 
named above (note 8). 

William de Bartail summoned John de 
Bildeswath in 1330 to hold to a covenant 
respecting the third part of the manor of 
Great Eccleston; De Banco R. 283, 
m. 231d. He in 1331 secured the 
third part of the third part of the same 


277 


of Rawcliffe in socage, and descended to his son 


manor from Thomas de Eyvill and Mar- 
gery his wife; Final Conc. ii, 79. The 
said William soon afterwards purchased 
half an oxgang of land there; ibid. go. 
The Coucy inquest already cited shows 
that William de Bartail was dead in 1346. 

120 He held of the king (through escheat 
after the death of William de Coucy) by 
knight’s service. There were 24 oxgangs 
of land, worth 2s. ; a fishery (part), 4s. rent 
from a free tenant, also half an oxgang of 
land heid of Sir Richard de Kighley by 
the rent of a pair of gloves. John son 
of John Dautry was next of kin and heir, 
and six years old; Ing. p.m. 23 Edw. III, 
pt. ii (1st nos.), no. 112. 

By 1353 William de Tarleton and Mar- 


. garet his wife (in her right) had succeeded 


to this third part of the manor; Final 
Conc. ii, 137. In 1361 they claimed 
lands, &c., in Great Eccleston against 
Gilbert de Kighley and others, but did 
not prosecute; Assize R. 441, m. 1d. 
An agreement had probably been made ; 
Dods. MSS. cxlii, fol. 584. 

12b Richard son of Robert del Hall of 
Eccleston complained int 346 that Nicholas 
Boteler had taken a horse of his in the 
shortbutts at Westmeadowend. Nicholas 
said that he took it for rent due, the 
tenement being part of 54 oxgangs of 
land which he held of the king by paying 
12d. yearly and 35. 4d. to a scutage of 
4os.; De Banco R. 346, m. 22d. In 
1354 an agreement as to a fishery in the 
Wyre was made between Sir Richard de 
Kighley, Gilbert his son and William de 
Tarleton on one side and Sir Nicholas 
Poteler on the other; Dods. MSS. liii, 
fol. 975. The manor of Great Eccleston 
is named among the estates of Nicholas 
Butler in 1555, but the tenure is not re- 
corded ; Duchy of Lance. Inq. p.m. x, no. 4. 

13 Ibid. xvi, no. 38. Nothing is known 
of any connexion of this Eccleston famity 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Adam, then sixteen years of age.'4 Soon afterwards 
it was sold to Sir Richard Hoghton,!® and then 
acquired by Thomas Stanley,!® whose son Richard 
died in 1640 holding of William Butler the capital 
messuage called Eccleston Hall in the Fylde, a wind- 
mill and lands, and leaving a son and heir Robert, 
aged five years.’ Thomas, the father, died in 1641, 
and his grandson Robert following him about six 
weeks later, the heir was another grandson, Thomas, 
aged six.}® 

The Stanleys were Roman Catholics,!® but the 
youth of the heir probably saved his estates from 
sequestration during the Commonwealth period.*” 
‘Thomas Stanley recorded a pedigree in 1664,°! and 
left a son and heir Richard. He married Anne 
dauvhter and eventual co-heir of Thomas Culcheth 
of Culcheth, by whom he had a son Thomas, a 


Jacobite attainted in 1716, when the Eccleston Hall 
estates were forfeited.** The hall was advertised for 
sale in 1796, the owner at that time being James 
Greenhalgh of Heysham.?* It was in 1891 owned 
by the Misses Westby, but it does not appear that 
any manor is claimed. 

Among the minor families of the place were 
Heriz,"4 Peacock 7 and Whittingham” in earlier 
times, and Blackburne, Gaunt,®” Leckonby, Shire- 
burne,** White and others?9 later. The Blackburnes 
of Stockenbridge in Upper Rawcliffe °° were also land- 
owners in Great Eccleston ; their estates descended 
to the Leckonbys, another recusant family long resi- 
dent in Eccleston and Elswick, who were ‘ruined by 
the dissipation or extravagance of Richard Leckonby,’ 
a prisoner for debt in Lancaster Castle from 1762 to 
1783, when he died.*! 


with the earlier tenants. The father of 
Thomas was named William and died in 
or before 15633; Dods. MSS. cxlii, fol. 
564. A John Eccleston of London, 
grocer, obtained land in the township in 
1338 5 Add. AIS, 32906, mo. 326, 

Thomas Ecclest.n's estate spread over 
several neighbouring townships and in- 
cluded Singleton Grange. He purchased 
Eliis-n House in 1582 trom Henry 
Ellison, and acquired other land; Pal. of 
Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 44, m. 133 45, 
m. 443 51, m. 60; Add. MS. 32106, 
no. 958. 

A settlement of the moiety of the 
manors of Great Eccleston and Elswick, 
with various lands, &c., was made by 
Adam Eccleston in 1596; Dods. MSS. 
exlii, fol. 565. 

1° The sale took place in 1598 ; ibid. ; 
Pal. of Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 60, m. 359. 
In the following year Sir Richard Hoghton 
made a further agreement respecting a 
moiety of the manor with James Worth- 
ington and Anne his wife ; ibid. bdle. 61, 
no. 23, 328. It appears to have been 
sold or mortgaged in 1602, Sir Richard 
Molynet.x and Sir Richard Hoghton being 
detorciants ; ibid. bdle. 64, m.17. The 
real purchaser in 1602 was Sir Edward 
Brabazon ; Raines D. in Chet. Lib. 

s\ number of references to the estate, 
1593-1691, will be found in Ducatus 
Lane. ili, 282, &e. 

From the contemporary pedigree it 
appears that Anne Worthington wa: a 
daughter of Adam Eccleston and co-heir 
to her nephew Adam Eccleston; Dug- 
dale, Fis, of 1613 (Chet. Soc.), 126. 
From this the relationship of the two 
Adams is left obscure, but the elder was 
probably great-grandfather of the younger. 

16 Thomas Stanley was an illegitimate 
son of Henry fourth Earl of Derby 
(d. 1593). The purchase is recorded in 
Richard Stanley’s inquisition. Thomas 
Stanley was ‘of Eccleston’ in 1622; 
Preston Guild R. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), 79. He in 1631 compounded for 
refusing knighthood by a payment of 
£13 6s, 84.5 Vise. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and 
Ches.), i, 222. 

Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxviii, 
no. 733 the marriage settlement (1629) 
for Richard Stanley and Mary Tyldesley 
is recited. Thomas, the father, was still 
living at Eccleston in 1639. The lands 
were held of William Butler of Rawcliffe 
in socage, 

'S Tid. xxix, mo. 14, The lands in 
Eccleston were held of Heary Butler in 
socage, 


19 Fishwick, St. Michael’s (Chet. Soc.), 
18-, where there is a pedigree. 

” Mrs, Stanley, probably the widow of 
Richard, showed herself friendly to the 
Cavaliers ; #’ar in Lancs. (Chet. Soc.), 61, 
rh. 

2! Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 286 ; 
Richard the son of Thomas was three 
years of age. 

22 Fishwick, loc. cit. 3; Lancs. and Ches. 
Rec. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 175. 

In 1724 an annual charge of £30 on 
the lands in favour of Henry Stanley was 
operative, but the lands had passed to 
William Greenhalgh, The pedigree is 
thus given : Thomas Stanley -s. Richard, 
who married Anne Culcheth -s. Thomas 
and Henry ; Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), 
ili, 228, from R. ro of Geo. 1 at Preston. 
Henry was a priest, S.J. 

%3 Preston Guard. Loc. 
1273. 

4 In 1249-50 Mabel widow of Geoffrey 
Heriz claimed dower in 3 oxgangs of land 
in Eccieston, a fishery being appurtenant, 
against Richard Heriz; Curia Regis 
R. 137,m.16d., 17d. Again in 1314 
dower was claimed by Margery widow of 
Richard de Heriz in seven messuages, 
5 oxgangs of land, &c., in Great Eccleston 
against Henry de Croft the elder; De 
Banco R, 204, m. 3. 

2° In 1315 Anabil widow of Alan son 
of William de Eccleston obtained dower 
in half an oxgang of lund, &c., in Great 
Eccleston against John Pacok ; De Banco 
R, 211, m.48. John Pacok and John 
Pacok the younger occur in 1332; Exch. 
Lay Subs, (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
62. In 1369 Robert Pacok and Agnes 
his wife obtained an oxgang of land, &c., 
from John Pacok ; Final Conc. ii, 175. 

°° Geoffrey de Whittingham in 1297 
had a rent of 4s. from Eccleston 3 Lancs. 
Ing. and Extents, i, 283. Adam de Whit- 
tingham in 1401 granted to Robert de 
Urswick the younger two messuages and 
5 acres of land in Mickle Eccleston, which 
Thomas de Whittingham, grantor’s uncle, 
formerly had of the gift of Clemency 
sometime wife of Sir Gilbert de Kighley ; 
Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 924. 

# John Gaunt and Nicholas White were 
frecholders in 1600; Misc. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 232~3. 

Four messuages, &c., were in 1563 
held by John Lawson, Joan his wife, Joan 
Lawson, widow, Roger Gaunt and William 
Thornton ; the remainders were to Roger 
Gaunt, Isabel his wife, William Thornton, 
Joan his wife, to the right heirs of Joan 
wife of Jshn Lawson and Joan Lawscn, 


278 


Sketches, no. 


widow ; Pal. of Lanc, Feet of F. tdle. 25, 
m. 41. A moiety of four messuages, &<, 
was in 1594 held by John Gaunt; ibid, 
bdle. 56, m. 45. William Thornton had 
a son John ; ibid. tdle. 57, m. 163. See 
Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com), ii, 214. 

2 Robert Shireburne of Stonyhurst in 
1492 held land, &c., in Great Ecclesten 
of Sir Henry Kighley in socage ; Duchy 
of Lanc, Ing. p.m. iii, no. 93. 

Henry Beesley of Goosnargh and 
Jane his wife had land in Great Eccleston 
in 1578; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F, bdle. 
40,m. 81. Jane Beesley died in 1585, tut 
the tenure of her land was not recorded ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvi, no. 24. 
Francis Beesley in 1609 held of the heir 
of Henry Kighley ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 138-9. 

William Pleasington of Dimples held 
of the king in socage in 1621}; ibid. ii, 
240. This family had held lands as early 
as 1489; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 68, 
m. 6d. 

The tenure was not recorded in regard 
to the tenement of Richard Burgh of 
Larbreck, 1639; Duchy of Lane. Ing. 
p.m. xxx, no. 100. 

Thomas Taylor of Freckleton held land 
in Eccleston in 1640 of the king as of 
his duchy in socage 3 ibid. xxx, no. 15. 

3%9In 1579 Joan wife of William 
Thornton (named in a former note) was 
called daughter and co-heir of Richard 
Blackburne ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F, bdle, 
41, m. 179. 

A later Richard Blackburne held a 
cottage and land in Eccleston of Henry 
Butler in socage ; Duchy of Lane. Inq. 
p-m. xxix, no. 81. 

John Blackburne, who had sons Richard 
and Edward, had his estate sequestered for 
recusancy under the Commonwealth. After 
his death (about 1649), his son Richard 
being also a recusant, the younger son 
Edward, apprentice at York, applied to 
have a messuage and land which had been 
assigned to him by his father ; Royalist 
Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.}, 
i, 186-9. 

31 Fishwick, op. cit. 188-9, where a full 
pedigree is given, showing the descent 
thus: John Leckonby, d.1650 ~«. Richard, 
d. 1675 —8. John —neph. William (sor of 
Richard), d. 1729 -#. Richard, d. 1753 
~gd.-dr. Mary (da. of William), who 
married Thomas Henry Hele Phipps ¢! 
Leighton House, Wiits. ’ 

John Leckonby of Eccleston and Richard 
his son were burgesses of Preston in 1642, 
and other members of the family in 1662 ; 
Preston Guild R. 115, 148. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


The Whites can be traced back to the 14th 
century.” John White died in July 1557 holding 
a capital messuage, &c., in Great Eccleston of the 
heir of William Pleasington in socage by 4s. rent, and 
other property in Esprick and Upper Rawcliffe. His 
heir was a cousin Nicholas, son of William White, 
aged twenty-two.* The residence of the family was 
known as Cross House, and remained with them 
till about a century ago. 

Asmall piece of land was granted to Cockersand 
Abbey,®* but more considerable gifts were made to 
Dieulacres,” which, together with Rossall, were 
acquired by the Fleetwoods after the Dissolution.** 

Some sequestrations are recorded in the Common- 
wealth period,” and in 1717 several ‘ Papists’ regis- 
tered, estates. 

There are four places of worship in the township. 
For the Church of England, St. Anne’s, Copp, 
was erected in 1723, because, Elswick Chapel ‘ being 
never consecrated and in the possession of Dissenters, 
it was thought more proper to build a new chapel 
here than to seize upon that.’4' The vicar of 
St. Michael’s presents to this church. 

The Wesleyan Methodists, after holding meetings 
in a cottage, built a chapel in 1841.7 The Bapticts 
also have a chapel. 

As the chief resident families adhered to Roman 
Catholicism at the Reformation, it is probable that 
mass was said with comparative regularity during the 
times of proscription, but no connected story of the 
mission in the township can be given before 1700, 
soon after which there appears to have been a chapel 
of St. Lawrence at Raikes, rebuilt in 1760. The 
present church of St. Mary, in the village, was 
opened in 1835." 


ST. MICHAEL- 
ON-WYRE 


INSKIP-WITH-SOWERBY 


Inscip, Dom. Bk. ; Inskyp, 1246 ; Insckyp, 1285; 
Ineskyp, 1331. 

Sorbi, Dom. Bk. ; Soureby, 1256. 

This township has a total area of 2,9794 acres,! of 
which Inskip proper has 2,046, Sowerby 8684, and 
Carr House Green Common 65. ‘he north and 
east portions are flat and lie low, but the south-west 
quarter has two rather higher plateaux, 50 ft. above 
sea level, divided by a small valley running from west 
to east. On the more northerly of these elevations 
stands the village of Inskip ; the southerly contains 
Higham, Crossmoor lies on the western border ; 
Sowerby is in the lower land to the east. There was 
a population of 450 in Igor. 

The principal road goes north-west and west from 
Woodplumpton, through the village of Inskip to Els- 
wick and Singleton, with two branches going north by 
Sowerby and by Inskip to St. Michael’s, and another 
south-west through Higham to Wharles and Kirkham. 

There is a parish council. 

The soil is light and peaty, with subsoil gravel. 
Wheat and oats are grown. Rush wicks were 
formerly made in Sowerby. 

Though IJNSKIP, assessed as two 

MANORS plough-lands, is named in Domesday 
Book among the manors of Earl Tostig 

in 1066,’ its subsequent history is very obscure. In 
the 13th century it seems to have been held by the 
Carleton family,’ and to have been joined to their 
part of Great Eccleston. Walter son of Sir William 
de Carleton about 1280 granted his son William the 
homage and service of Sir Richard le Boteler for his 
tenement in Inskip and Eccleston. In 1285 Henry 


Richard Leckonby, described as ‘of 
Elswick,’ took arms against the Parlia- 
ment, and submitted at Greenhalgh Castle 
in 1645; he took the National Covenant 
and Negative Oath, and compounded for 
his estate ; Royalist Comp. Papers, iv, 76-7. 

The family afterwards became Roman 
Catholics, and in 1717 William Leckonby 
as a ‘Papist’ registered his estate at 
Eccleston and Elswick, subject to a rent- 
charge of £25 to Anne his wife ; Estcourt 
and Payne, Engl. Cath. Nonjurors, 132. 
Through this marriage the Leckonbys 
acquired the manor of Hothersall. The 
son Richard, named in the text, by his 
marriage acquired Stockenbridge and other 
estates; his wife was Mary daughter of 
William Hathornethwaite of Stonyhurst 
and in 1757 heir to her brother John ; 
Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), iii, 288, from 
R. 31 of Geo. II at Preston. For the 
bankruptcy see ibid. iii, 372, 380, 384. 

3? Roger the White contributed to the 
subsidy in 1332; Exch. Lay Subs. 62. 
John son of Roger the White had a dispute 
concerning land with Adam son of Roger 
the White and Adam son of Hugh de 
Elswick in 1348; De Banco R. 355, 
mM, 124. 

%3 Duchy of Lanc, Ing. p.m. xi, no. 55. 
A settlement of messuages, &c., in Much 
Eccleston and Tarnacre was made in 
1590 by Nicholas White and Isabel his 
wife; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F, bdle. 52, 
™. 119. 

Thomas White in 1560 claimed a 
capital messuage, &c., in Eccleston, Tarn- 
acre, Upper Rawcliffe and Charnley Eaves 
against Nicholas White ; Ducatus Lanc. 
Ny 235. In 1589 the tenure was in 


dispute, Robert Pleasington alleging that 
it was by fealty and a rent of 45. while 
Nicholas White asserted that it was in 
socage by a castle-guard rent of 6s. ; 
ibid. iii, 225. 

34 This was part of the rectory estate, 
having belonged to Battlefield College ; 
Fishwick, op. cit. 190. 

35 Tbid. 191-2. An account of a dis- 
pute as to a settlement by Thomas White 
in 1675 was printed in Preston Guard, 
Loc. Notes, 16 Feb. 1878. For the 
family, who were recusants, see Misc, 
(Cath. Rec. Soc.), v, 190. 

36 Cockersand Chartul. i, 190. 

37 Dieulacres Chartul. (Wm. Salt Soc.), 
324. Uctred son of Swain released to 
the monks Roger and Adam sons of Elsi 
of Great Eccleston, and William son of 
Uctred confirmed this grant, as he did 
also that of half an oxgang of land made 
by Adam son of Richard de Eccleston. 
The dates range from about 1210 to 1230. 

38 Pat. 7 Edw. VI, pt. ix ; Duchy of 
Lanc, Inq. p.m. xii, no. 2. 

39 See preceding notes. Two-thirds of 
a small tenement in Much Eccleston was 
sequestered for the recusancy of William 
Gurnall. He being dead in 1653, his son 
Robert, aged six, who was ‘a conformable 
Protestant,’ petitioned for the discharge 
of the sequestration, and it was granted ; 
Royalist Comp. Papers, iti, 137. 

40 Elizabeth Butler, widow ; Thomas 
Penswick, Alice Taylor and Joan Caton, 
widow ; Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurors, 105, 135, 141. 

4i Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 453-4. From correspondence printed 
in the notes ibid. it appears that the 


eat de) 


chapel was built by subscription and that 
Mr. France was the chief promoter. See 
also Fishwick, op. cit. 89-95, where a 
list of curates and vicars is given ; Hewit- 
son, Our Country Churches, 420. 

® Fishwick, op. cit. 133 3 Hewitson, 
426. 

43 Fishwick, op. cit.g6—-102 ; Hewitson, 
423. ‘The first resident priest known is 
William Caton, of a local family, educated 
at the English College, Rome, 1694- 
1701; Foley, Rec. S. J. vi, 445 3 Tyldesley 
Diary, 61, 109, 174. There is a short 
notice of the Caton family in Misc. (Cath. 
Rec. Soc.), v, 191. 

In 1774 there were confirmed 114 
persons, and ten years later thirty-seven. 
Belonging to the church are a portable 
altar-stone such as the missionary priests 
carried with them in the penal times, 
two early chalices, and another of Queen 
Anne’s time ; Fishwick, loc. cit. 

1 The Census Rep. of 1901 says that there 
are 2,984 acres, including 7 of inland 
water. 

2 V.C.A. Lanes. i, 2884. 

3In 1246 Richard de Whittingham 
and Hawise his wife claimed common of 
pasture against William de Carleton re- 
specting certain lands in Inskip, but were 
non-suited ; Assize R.404,m. 3. Robert 
son of Adam at the same time unsuccess- 
fully claimed certain pieces of land 
(cheviciae), about 2 acres in all, against 
William de Carleton ; ibid. m. 7. 

4 Dods. MSS. cxlii, fol. 83. Ellen 
widow of Robert de Stockport in 1275 
claimed from Richard le Boteler a third 
part of 2s. rent in Inskip; De Banco 
R. 10, m. 71d. 


A. HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


de Kighley and Ellen his wife obtained from Alice 
widow of Richard le Boteler the manor of Inskip and 
two-thirds of the manor of Great Eccleston.* Henry 
de Kighley was knight of the shire in 1297, 1298 
and 1301.° Sir Richard de Kighley in 1330 settled 
the manor of Inskip and other estates, with succession 
to his son Gilbert and his heirs by Clemency his 
wife.’ 

Gilbert de Kighley appears to have had a son 
Sir Henry,> whose three sons John, Hugh and 
Richard were in the remainder to ‘ Nicholas Manor’ 
in Tyldesley in 1385.° Of these Richard ° is prob- 
ably the knight who was slain at Agincourt, 1415," 
and was followed by a son Henry,” who occurs down 
to 1446.'% Then came another Richard, described as 
son and heir of Henry in 1467.4 Sir Henry 
Kighley ' died in 1526 holding the manor of Inskip 
with messuages and lands in Inskip and Eccleston of 
the heir of Richard Eccleston in socage by the rent 
of a barbed arrow. His grandson Henry Kighley, 
aged thirty, was his heir." The heir, who recorded 
a pedigree in 1533,” left a son Henry, who was dead 


in 1554, when his heir was a son also named 
Henry." This Henry Kighley proved to be the list 
of his name; he died in July 1567, leaving two 
daughters as heirs—Anne, aged four years, and 


Kicarey. Argent a Cavenpisn. Sable 
fesse sable. three stags’ head: ¢a- 
boshed argent, 


Katherine, aged four months." The former married 
William Cavendish, ancestor of the Dukes of Devon- 
shire, and the latter married Thomas Worsley of 
Booths.” On partition the manor of Inskip was 


5 Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 163-43 should Henry and 
Ellen die without issue the manors were 
to revert to Alice. In 1296 the same 
Henry and his wife acquired a further 
part of Gr-at Eccleston and the manor 
of Bedford in the parish of Leigh ; ibid. 
1581-2. The surname is derived from 
Keighley in Yorkshire, where Sir Henry 
de Kighiey held six plough-lands in 1303 ; 
Kirkhy’s Ing. (Surtees Soc.\, 192-3. 

® Pink and Beaven, Parl. Repre. of 
Lanes. 11, 12. 

* Final Conc. ii, 1933 the other estates 
were a moicty of the manor of Great 
Eccleston and the manor of Keizhley. 
The trustee in the settlement was Thomas 
son of Henry de Kighley. Ni-holas le 
Boteler put in his claim. The manor of 
Bedford was at the same time settled on 
Giver: and Clemency ; ibid. >7. Robert 
and John, apparently other sons of the 
same Richard, had land in Eccleston in 
1326; ibid. 64. Sir Richard de Kighiey 
was in 1346-7 engaged in disputes with 
Sir Nicholas le Botelerasto the manor of 
Tnskip ; De Banco R. 347, m. 2174. ; 
349, m. 118d. He, with others, acted 
in 13518 surety for William de Balders- 
ton, clerk ; Assize R. 431, m. rd. 

> Gilbert de Kichley was in 1353 con- 
cerned in a dispute as to a mill in Bed- 
ford; Assize R.435, m. 5, 32. In 1356 
he attested a Sowerby deed; Add. MS. 
32106, no, 3. 

Henry son of Gilbert de K:chley was, 
together with Roger de Braishagh of 
Westleigh and others, charged in 1375 
with wrongfully imprisonin: Adam son 
of Robert de Buckley the elder at Pen- 
nington ; De Banco R. 4:~, m. 34d. 

Henry de Kighley of Leigh was named 
in a recognisance of debt in 1378; Add. 
MS. 32108, no. 1657. 

Gilbert’s brother was Nicholas de 
Kighlev, who was executor of Sir Richard’s 
will (1366-70); De Banco R. 423, 
m. 3185 4338, m. 344. Nicholas de 
Kighley and Joan his wife transferred in 
1378 various messuages and lands to 
Rotert [?de Urswick ]; they were situated 
in Inskip, Great and Little Eccleston and 
Elswick ; Final Conc. iii, 4. See the 
account of Hapton in Whalley. 

* Fiaal Cone. iii, 26. 

" Richard son of Sir Henry de Kighley 


in 1396 obtained the manor of Lightshaw 
(ibid. 49), which descended like Inskip. 

Richard de Kighley is named in writs 
in 1409 and 14113 Add. MS. 32108, 
no. 1595, 1533. 

Sir Richard de Kichley and Katherine 
his wife, widow of Sir Peter Mauleverer, 
oceur in 14103 Final Cone. iii, 69. 

"Nicolas, Agincourt (ed. 
CCXXxil, COXXXVI. 

12 Lancs. Inj. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 116. 
The lands in In-kip were said—no doubt 
wrongly—to be held of the heir of Sir 
Wiliam Boteler (of Warrington). Henry, 
the heir, was twenty-four years old. 

Henry, as executor of his father, 
rendered account of sums expended in 
the Agincourt campaign; Army Accts. 
Exch. K.R.} dle 44,no. 29. Sir Richard 
had taken in his retinue fifty Lancashire 
bowmen at 64. a day. One of them was 
William Tailor of Inskip, who died at the 
sieze of Harfleur. 

A contemporary, Sir John Kighley, 
was bailitf of Rouen in 1420, and is 
otherwise mentioned ; Dep. Keeper's Rep. 
xo, App. 388, &c. Sir Gilbert Kighley 
a:so occurs ; ibid. xliv, App. 579. 

18 Henry Kighley was a trustee in 
1432 and 1446 ; Final Cone. iii, 99, 113. 
In 1473 the executors of the will of 
Henry Kighley were Constance the 
widow and James, Ralph and Christopher 
Kighley ; Pal. of Lanc. Writs of Assize, 
bdle. 13. 

‘4 Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 10153 in a 
bond of £40 to abide by an arbitration 
as to disputes with John Kirkby of Raw- 
cliffe. Richard Kighley, esq., was plaintiff 
respecting a tenement in Great Eccleston 
in 14593; Pal. of Lanc. Writs of Assize, 
bdle. 5 (37 Hen. VI). He was a juror 
in 14643 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 77. 

1) He was made a knight by Lord 
Stanley during the Scottish expedition of 
1482 ; Metcalfe, Bk. of Knights, 7. 

16 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. vi, no. 44. 
The heir was son of Richard son of Sir 
Henry. The other Lancashire estates 
were the manor of Lightshaw, with lands 
in Golborne and Pemberton ; also others 
in Bedford. 

7 Visit. of 1533 (Chet. Soc.), 92 3 his 
wife was Cecily daughter of Thomas 
Boteler of Bewsey, and his son Henry 


280 


1827), 


had married Elizabeth daughter of Sir 
Alexander Osbaldeston. 

: as Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. x, no. 49; 
it is noteworthy that the manor of Inskip, 
called Inskip Hall, was stated to be in 
the vill of Eccleston, The inquisition 
recites the provision made by Henry the 
father on his son’s contract of marriage 
(1523) with Elizabeth Osbaldeston. His 
father’s widow was named Isabel; she 
had married Nicholas Tempest before 
1552. Part of the younger Henry's will 
is given, naming daughters Margaret and 
Anne. Of these the former married 
William Hulton. 

In 1552 an annuity of £30 was 
settled on Isabel Tempest for life; Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 14, m. 97. 

19 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xi, no. 10 ; 
the manor of Inskip, or Inskip Hall, 
with messuages and lands in Eccleston 
and Cross Moor, was held of the heir of 
Richard son of Roger de Eccleston by 
the rent of a barbed arrow. 

The will of Henry Kighley, 1567, 
is printed in Richmond Wills (Surtees 
Soc.), 198. He desired to be buried 
in St. Michael’s Church near the place 
where his father was buried. Mary 
his wife, Anne his daughter, Isabel 
Tempest (widow of Henry Kighley his 
grandfather) and Mr. Justice Carus his 
father-in-law are named. He left ‘to 
every one of my servants and to every 
one of my mother’s servants at Light- 
shaw one whole year’s wages.’ 

Elizabeth Kighley of Lightshaw, widow, 
was a recusant in 1577 ; Gibson, Lydiate 
Hall, 215, 217. : 

2 A moiety of the manor of Inskip, 
with view of frankpledge, &c., was in 
1585 held by William Cavendish and 
Anne his wife; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 47, m. 133. The other moiety was 
in 1589 held by Thomas Worsley and 
Katherine his wife ; ibid. bdle. 51, m. 13- 
An agreement seems to have been made 
in 1593; ibid. bdle. 55, m. 161, 180. In 
1594-5 Thomas Worsley and Katherine 
sold messuages in Inskip and Cross Moor 
to John de Cardenas and Nicholas and 
Wiliam Thompson ; ibid. bdlet. $6, 
m. 1223 $7, m. IL. ; 

John de Cardenas sold his land to 
Sir Richard Shuttleworth in 1596 and it 
descended with the Gawthorpe estatet} 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


allotted to the former,” and descended in the main 
line until 1819, when it was given to a younger 
branch,” and so descended to the trustees of the 
Earl of Burlington, who, with the Hon. Charles 
Compton Cavendish, in 1843 23 sold it to the thirteenth 
Earl of Derby, whose successor is now lord of Inskip 
Manor courts are held. 

A manor of Inskip was claimed by the Cliftons of 
Westby.” This appears to have been the tenement 
of the Whittingham family” which about 1308 passed 
to the Shireburnes of Stonyhurst.” 


and Great Eccleston. 


Fishwick, op. cit. 303; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 59, m. 210. Cross Moor 
belonged to the lords of Inskip in 1580 ; 
Exch. Dep. (Rec. Soc. Lanes. and 
Ches.), 2. 

31 William Lord Cavendish had Inskip, 
&c., in 1614; Pat. 12 Jas, I, pt. xxvi. 

® See the account of Brindle. Inskip 
was among the manors of the Right Hon. 
William Cavendish in 17473 Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R. 567, m. 6. 

38 Fishwick, op. cit. 19. 

% Information of Mr. Windham E. 
Hale. 

% In 1514 it was found that William 
de Clifton about 1300 had had the 
homage and service of Richard Shireburne 
for his manor of Inskip as parcel of the 
manors of Clifton and Westby, and that 
this had descended to Cuthbert Clifton, 
who died in 1512; Duchy of Lance. Ing. 
pm. iii, no. 3. Similar statements are 
made later ; ibid. ix, no. 6. 

36 Richard son of Warine de Whitting- 
ham gave 2 acres in Inskip to Cocker- 
sand Abbey ; Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 184. 
In 1246 Geoffrey de Whittingham ob- 
tained an oxgang of land, &c., trom Richard 
de Whittingham and Hawise his wife ; 
Final Conc. i, 99. Richard de Whitting- 
ham gave an oxgang of land in Inskip to 
Roger de Wharles with his daughter 
Alice in exchange for an oxgang in 
Elswick, and Roger and Alice afterwards 
released it to John lord of Whittingham, 
son of Richard; Towneley MS. DD, 
no. 1906. John son of Richard de 
Whittingham in 1279 claimed land 
against Walter de Carleton and William 
his son ; De Banco R, 31, m. 32. John 
son of John de Whittingham in 1305 
claimed a messuage, 2 oxgangs of land, 
&c., in Inskip against his father and his 
brother William, with whom was joined 
Adam de Lever; Assize R. 420, m. 6. 
There are two charters relating to it in 
Kuerden fol. MS, (Chet. Lib.), 330 (68), 
331 (96). 

37 The Shireburne abstract book at Lea- 
gram affords the following notes: John 
de Whittingham to John his son, ail his 
lands in Sowerby (s.d.). John de Whit- 
tingham of Sowerby to John son of 
Nicholas de Sowerby, all iands in Great 
Sowerby which he had from Sir Henry 
de Kighley (s.d.). William son of John 
de Whittingham to Robert de Shireburne, 
homages and services in Elswick, Inskip 
and Sowerby (Inskip, 1308). 

In 1354 John the Chapman of Preston 
claimed against Alice widow of Robert 
de Shireburne two messuages, 100 acres 
of land, &c., as nephew and heir of John 
ton of Nicholas de Sowerby, being son of 
John’s sister Margery. The land had 
been granted to Roger de Sowerby, but 
his son and heir (John) had died without 
issue, Alice alleged that Roger was a 
bastard, so that his lands escheated to 
her, but the jury found for the claimant ; 


7 


the records.” 


fee, 


A family sur- 


Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 3, m. vd. 
Margery widow of Nicholas de Sowerby 
occurs in 1292; As ize R. 408, m. 36. 

Sir Adam de Howick in 1358 pur- 
chased messuages, &c., in Inskip from 
John the Chapman of Preston, William 
le Grigour and Alice his wife; Final 
Conc. ii, 159. 

Inskip is named among the Shireburne 
estates in the later inquisitions, but the 
tenure is not recorded. It can only be 
gathered from the Clifton inquisitions 
cited already, 

28 Adam de Inskip to his son Thomas 
land on Moorbreck (perhaps in Upper 
Rawcliffe), for which 3d. rent was due to 
Lytham Priory ; Kuerden fol. MS. 188. 

Richard de Inskip granted to Richard 
le Boteler the waste pertaining to 1 ox- 
gang of land in Inskip, also part of the 
windmill ; Kuerden MSS. iv, S 4. 

About 1226 William de Carleton 
released to Dieulacres Abbey his right in 
Richard son of Richard son of Alan de 
Inskip ; Dieulacres Chartul. (Wm. Salt 
Soc.), 352. 

An agreement was made in 1271-2 
between Richard son of Geoffrey de 
Chipping and Gilbert son of Paulinus de 
Wedacre and Godith his wife as to land, 
&c., in Inskip and the twelfth part of the 
mill; Anct. D. (P.R.O.), C 1912. 

Adam de Catterall in 1397 held a 
messuage, &c., of the duke in socage ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 66. 

James Anderton of Clayton and 
Dorothy his wife had an estate here in 
1602; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 64, 
m. 233. In the inquisition he is said to 
have had 20s. rent from Inskip ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvii, no. 56. 

30 Chartul. i, 184. 

31 Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 375- 

32 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 288a. There is 
nothing to show whether this refers to 
Great and Little Sowerby or to one 
portion only, 

33 Ingram de Gynes held Sowerby in 
1324; Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 39d. 

84 The Banastre of Bretherton estate 
was probably derived from the Singletons. 
In 1346-8 John Trussell and Petronilla 
his wife were claiming her dower in 
various messuages and lands in Sowerby 
against Robert de Haldeleghs and his son 
John; De Banco R. 347, m. 1653 
354, m. 300. 

In 1521 the Banastre estate was held 
by Thomas Radcliffe of Winmarleigh and 
Thomas Earl of Derby ; Duchy of Lane. 
Ing. p.m. v, no. 3 (and later), 68. The 
tenures in Sowerby are not recorded 
separately from the rest of the Balderston 
estate. 

In 1563 Edward Earl of Derby acquired 
land in Great and Little Sowerby and in 
Myerscough from John Osbaldeston and 
Jane his wife ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 25, m. 104. 

In 1662 a rent of 16s, 8d. for the 


281 


ST. MICHAEL- 
ON-WYRE 


named Inskip** and a few other landowners occur in 


Cockersand Abbey ® and the Knights Hospitallers # 
had lands in the township. 

SOWERBY was in 1066 assessed as one plough- 
land, and, like Inskip, formed part of Earl Tostig’s 
Afterwards Great Sowerby was part of the 
Wyresdale lordship, and the chief owners appear to 
have been the Banastre“ and Hoghton® families. 
The Earls of Derby have long been lords of the 
manor,” and courts are held.” 


manor of Sowerby was due to Moore of 
Bankhall, Kirkdale ; Pat. 14 Chas, II. 

35 John the Chapman of Preston in 
1356 granted to Sir Adam de Hoghton 
all his messuages and lands in the hamlet 
of Great Sowerby in the vill of Inskip ; 
Add, MS. 32106, no. 3. From a pleading 
above cited it appears that the grantor 
was heir of a John de Sowerby. Maud 
Chapman, widow of John, was living 
sixty years later, releasing her dower 
right in the vill of Sowerby to Sir Richard 
de Hoghton in 14173; ibid. no. 670. 
Sir Richard de Hoghton in 1387 demised 
his lands, &c., in Great Sowerby to 
William de Hornby the younger for life ; 
ibid. no, 64 (2). 

Sir Adam de Hoghton in 1358 com- 
plained that Sir Nicholas Boteler had 
seized certain cattle of his in the vill of 
Inskip in a place called the Highfield in 
Great Sowerby. Sir Nicholas replied 
that his tenant John Chapman, who 
should pay 6s. 8d. a year, was in arrears ; 
but the jury found that the place of 
seizure was outside Boteler’s fee, and he 
was fined 4od.; Assize R. 438, m. 9. 

Sir Richard Hoghton in 1415 was 
found to have held of the heir of Adam 
de Winkley; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 146. In later Hoghton inquisi- 
tions the tenure is recorded as of the 
king by knight’s service ; e.g. Duchy of 
Lance. Ing. p.m. v, no. 61. A fishery in 
Sowerby mere is named in 1519; ibid. 
no. 66. 

36 The rental of the Earl of Derby in 
1522 (in possession of the Earl of 
Lathom) shows that from Great and 
Little Sowerby and Myerscough 
£27 14s. 2d. was received from Sir 
Henry Kighley, who farmed the estate, 
and that the following free rents were 
paid: To the heirs of James Boteler, 345. 5 
Richard Hoghton, 15s. ; the chaplain of 
St. Michael-on-Wyre, 14s; Hugh 
Shireburne, 62s. 10d.3 and the heirs of 
John Lawrence, 33s. 4d. For the 
Balderston lands 46s. 8d. was paid, of 
which one half went back to the Earl 
of Derby and the other to Radcliffe and 
Osbaldeston. Thomas first Earl of 
Derby had purchased lands belonging to 
Roger Birewath and — Hyde producing 
33s. 8d. a year. 

It does not appear that the Earls of 
Derby, though they must have owned a 
large part of the land, claimed any manor 
at that time, but in 1665 the manors of 
Great and Little Sowerby were held by 
Charlotte Dowager Countess of Derby and 
in 1678 by William Earl of Derby, 
while in 1708 they were among the 
Derby estates in the hands of John Earl 
of Anglesea and Henrietta Maria his 
wife ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdles. 175, 
m. 1433 201, m. 373 260, m. 533 
267, m. 75. : 

87 Information of Mr. Windham E. 
Hale, 


36 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


The distinction between Great and Little Sowerby 
was often ignored, and the same families appear to 
have held lands in both hamlets, so that much con- 
fusion results. Among the owners were the 
Carleton and Ellel families? the latter adopting 
Sowerby as a surname, and later the Botelers of 
Rawcliffe,” Lawrences,’ and others.” Except perhaps 
the Sowerby and Charnley families, none of these 
was resident. 

One or two sequestrations in Sowerby are recorded 
in the Commonwealth period,® and two Inskip 
« Papists’ registered estates in 1717.“ 

Before the Reformation there was a chapel at 
Inskip,* but it disappears afterwards, being probably 
claimed by the Kighleys as private property. 

In 1848 St. Peter’s was consecrated for the services 
of the Church of England. The vicar of St. Michael’s 
is patron.“ 

A Baptist congregation, due to a division in 
Elswick Chapel, was formed in 1794 and met in 
Inskip ; the chapel was built in 1817.47 

In 1680 Thomas Tomlinson of Crossmoor was 
presented to the Bishop of Chester for keeping 
conventicles of Quakers in his house." 


ELSWICK 


Edeleswic, Dom. Bk. ; Etleswhic, 1202 ; Ethelis- 
wyck, 1242. Elleswyk, xv cent. 

Exceptional forms are Eckeleswyk, Etheneswyk, 
and Echemeswyk, 1292. 


This is the smallest township in the parish, having 
an area of 1,036 acres'; the population in 1901 
was 227. The eastern half is occupied by com- 
paratively high land, 50 ft. above sea level ; the west 
is low and flat. 

The village of Elswick stands on the higher land, 
centrally placed ; the Leys and the Grange are to 
the south of it. 

The principal roads cross at the village, going east 
to Inskip, north to Great Eccleston, west to Thistleton 
and Singleton, with a branch north to Little Eccleston, 
and south to Roseacre and Wharles. 

The soil is clayey ; wheat, oats, barley and beans 
are grown. 

The township has a parish council. 

Several cannon balls have been found near Elswick 
Grange ; they are supposed to be traces of the passage 
of the Earl of Derby and his troops in 1643. 

In 1066 Earl Tostig held, as member 
of his Preston fee, ELSWICK, assessed 
as three plough-lands.’ Afterwards it 
was included in the lordship or barony of Penwortham, 
and in part at least was given by Richard Bussel to 
Richard Fitton. This gift was probably surrendered, 
there being no indication that the heirs of the Fittons 
had any share in Elswick. Before 1212 it had been 
given to the lord of Freckleton to be held by knight's 
service.! It was then assessed as two plough-lands, 
of which a fourth part was in 1242 held in demesne, 
while a plough-land was held by Warine de 
Whittingham and the other half plough-land by 


MANORS 


88 William de Carleton was defendant 
in a plea respecting a tenement in 
Sowerby in 1246; Assize R. 404, m. 7. 
Ten years later Wimark daughter of 
Adam released to Walter de Carleton 
2 oxgangs of land in Sowerby and 
20 acres in Plumpton, receiving other 
land in Sowerby ; Final Conc. i, 128. 

89 Walter de Ellel son of Grimbald 
gave Adam son of Henry the rector of 
Bolton 34 acres in the Balgerfield and 
other land in Fourlands (apparently in 
Sowerby) ; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 1004. 
Richard de Sowerby and Roger White of 
Eccleston attested. 

“ Walter de Ellel granted Sir Richard 
le Boteler the wardship and marriage of 
his eldest son Richard with his inheritance 
in Ellel and Sowerby ; Dods. MSS. liii, 
fol. gos. Hugh de Sowerby, with the 
assent of Henry his son and heir, gave 
certain land in Sowerby to John son of 
Richard le Boteler ; ibid. fol. 1004. 

In 1284 Richard de Sowerby com. 
plained that Alice le Boteler had disseised 
him of a tenement in Sowerby which he 
had demised to William son of Richard 
le Boteler for eight years. William had 
granted it to his brother Edmund, and he 
to Alice ; Assize R. 1265, m. 21; 1268, 
m.12. William son of Walter de Carleton 
was Joined in the defence. 

John Butler in 1534 was found to have 
held of the king in socage ; Duchy of 
Lane. Ing. p.m. vii, no. 4. 

‘1A fourth part of the manor of 
Sowerby was in 1340 settled by Robert 
de Washington the elder and Agnes his 
wife upon Robert de Washington the 
younger and Margaret his wife; Final 
Conc. ii, 113. 

This is probably the same fourth part 
as that held by Robert Lawrence in 1450, 
the tenure being of the king as duke by 
the rent of a grain of Pepper 5 Lancs. Ing. 


yom. (Chet. Soc.), ii, §7; also 122, 131. 
The Lawrence inheritance became much 
divided. Thus Thomas Rigmaiden of 
Wedacre in 1520 held lands in Carleton 
and Sowerby of the king as of his duchy 
by the tenth part of a knight’s fee; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, no. 65. 
Richard Skillicorne of Preese also had a 
shire, which was in 1557 described aa 
140 acres of land held in socage by a rent 
of 1d. yearly ; ibid. vii, no. 3; x, no. 25. 
Evan Haughton in 1608 held part by 4d. 
tent; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 125-6, 

4? Sir Richard Shireburne died in 1513 
holding land in Sowerby of the Earl of 
Derby in socage ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. 
p-m. iv, no. 46. A similar statement is 
made in later inquisitions. 

George Newsham, who died in 1585, 
held his land in Sowerby of the Earl of 
Derby in socage ; ibid. xiv, no. 88. 

Alexander and Thomas Charnley had 
disputes with John and George Newsham, 
1547-60; Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), 
ii, 94, 222, 230. Robert Charnley of 
Myerpool was a freeholder in 1600 ; Misc. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 232. 
John Charnley in 1636 held a capital 
messuage called Myerpool in Inskip with 
Sowerby of the Earl of Derby, lands in 
Woodplumpton, &c. His heir was his 
son Robert, aged thirty ; Towneley MS. 
C8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 244. 

Norton Abbey in Cheshire had an alms 
of £1 tos. yearly from ‘Sawarby,’ perhaps 
this township; Ormerod, Ches. (ed. 
Helsby), i, 686. 

In 1596 there was a suit between 
Thomas Farington and Brian Jackson 
respecting lands in Sowerby, late of the 
Earl of Derby; Axch, Dep. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), 8. 

48 Dorothy Grant of Sowerby had two- 
thirds of her estate sequestered in 1653 


282 


for ‘Popery’ ; Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 92. 

Bartholomew Jackson, for alike reason, 
had two-thirds sequestered, but part of 
the estate had not been surveyed, and 
this led to further inquiries ; ibid. iv, 23-8. 

Richard Parkinson of Sowerby, refusing 
to abjure his religion in 1653, likewise 
had two-thirds of his estate sequestered ; 
Cal. Com. for Comp. i, 656. 

41 Thomas Eccles registered a house 
called Gradwell’s ; Estcourt and Payne, 
Engl. Cath, Nonjurors, 101. The other 
was Christopher Medcalfe ; ibid. 106. 

It is named in a description of 
boundaries —‘ straight upon Inskip chapel’ 
—in a Clifton rental first compiled ia 
1509; Towneley MS. OO, For its 
equipment see Fishwick, op. cit. 170-1. 
In 1650 its existence was remembered 
by the people; Commonw. Ch. Surv. 
(Rec. Soc, Lancs, and Ches.), 148. The 
inhabitants were ‘often debarred from, 
church by water and moist ground,” 

46 Fishwick, op. cit. 95 ; Hewitson, 
Our Country Churches, 427. : 

47 Fishwick, op. cit. 133 ; Nightingale, 
Lancs. Nonconf. i, go ; Hewitson, 431- 

45 Visit. Ret. 

1 The Census Rep. 1901 gives 1,038 
acres, including § of inland water. 

71°.C.H. Lancs. i, 2884. 

3 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 3743 dated 
between 1159 and 1164. 

4 Lancs. a, and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 34. In 1202 land 
in Elswick was included in the agreement 
between Roger de Freckleton and 
William de Winwick and Maud his wife, 
noticed under Freckleton ; Feet of F. 
Yorks. 4 John, no. 45. ; 

ie won of Roger de Freckleton 
gave an oxgang of land in Elewick to bis 
son Richard on his marriage ; Kuer 


MSS. iv, F 13. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Alan de Singleton. These subdivisions were in- 
creased by later grants, and in 1322 the holders 
were Ralph de Freckleton, 4 oxgangs of land ; Adam 
son of William Banastre, 3 oxgangs; Thomas de 
Bradkirk, 4 oxgang; Orm Travers, § oxgangs ; 
and William son of Ellen } oxgang, rendering the 
service due where eight plough-lands make one 
knight’s fee. 

The Freckleton demesne descended like the chief 
manor? to Huddleston and the Earls of Derby, whose 
estate was augmented by a share of the Singleton 
portion. In 1603 the manor of Elswick was sold 
with other estates to a number of purchasers and 
probably subdivided. The demesne lands were 
afterwards the property of the Leckonbys of Great 


ST. MICHAEL- 
ON-WYRE 


Eccleston, whose estates were dispersed in 1762, this 
portion being purchased by Edward Rishton ; from 
him it descended by marriage to Alderman King of 
Manchester (18g1)." 

Another part of the Freckleton share seems to 
have been held in the 15th century by Dicconson, 
who sold to Clifton." A Molyneux family had some 
lordship,” Swarbrick,'’ Ballard“ and Turner” all 
holding of William Molyneux in the time of James I. 
Other lands were held of the Crown" and of Butler 
of Rawcliffe.” 

The Whittingham moiety of the manor became 
subdivided.’® Bradkirk'’—to whom in part succeeded 
Goosnargh ®—and Travers”! seem to have been the 
chief participants in 1322, but others who took the 


‘ 


5 Lancs, Ing. and Extents, i, 152. 

6 Ibid. ii, 135-6; some of the tene- 
ments are calculated. In the accounts 
of the Penwortham fee in 1341-2 the 
following tenants of Elswick are named : 
Adam Banastre, 4 oxgang of land; 
Thomas de Bradkirk, the same ; William 
son of Ellen; Mins. Accts. bdle. 1ogr, 
no, 6. 

” Ralph de Freckleton held the demesne 
of Elswick in 1271; Kuerden MSS. iii, 
F 3. 

the Singleton part of the manor 
descended like Little Singleton to 
Banastre, Balderston and their heirs. 

William Banastre was in 1323 found 
to have had the reversion of a messuage 
and 3 oxgangs of land held of Adam 
de Freckleton by paying 224d. towards a 
scutage of 40s.—i.e. by three sixty-fourth 
parts of a knight’s fee; Lancs, Ing. and 
Extents, ii, 159. Sir Thomas Banastre 
had lands in Elswick in 1379; Lanes. 
Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 14. 

Elswick was in the time of Henry VIII 
enumerated among the Balderston lands 
in the inquisitions of Edmund Dudley, 
Radcliffe of Winmarleigh, the Earl of 
Derby and Sir Alexander Osbaldeston. 

The Coppull of Coppull family had 
land in Elswick, and this was probably 
part of the estate sold to the Stanleys ; 
Pal, of Lanc. Plea R. 20, m. 14. 

Lord Derby’s rental in 1522 shows 
Tors. 3d. rents of the tenants at will, and 
a few other payments. 

9 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 65, 
no. 69 ; Thomas Lord Ellesmere, Alice 
his wife and others were deforciants, 

10 See the account of Great Eccleston, 
rn Fishwick, St. Michael’s (Chet. Soc.), 
189, 

4 In 1489 John Dicconson and Cecily 
his wife held land in Elswick of Richard 
Huddleston (of Freckleton) ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Chan. Misc. bdle. 1, file ro. In 
the same year they sold to James Clifton ; 
Final Conc, (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), 
ill, 142. 

Cuthbert Clifton died in 1512 holding 
in Elswick of Thomas Earl of Derby ; 
Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. iv, no, 12. 
The later inquisitions of the Cliftons of 
Westby give a similar record. 

2A William Molyneux of West- 

houghton occurs in 1600; Misc. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 248. 
‘ 38 William Swarbrick of Roseacre died 
in 1619 holding land and a corn-mill in 
Elswick of William Molyneux in socage 
by tod. rent ; also another piece of land 
of the king as of his honor of Clitheroe. 
John, his son and heir, was twenty years 
of age; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Chea.), ii, 138. 


It is stated that early in 1643 the Earl of 
Derby ‘stayed at Elswick whilst his com- 
pany plundered Mr. William Swarbrick’s 
books’ ; War in Lancs. (Chet. Soc.), 28. 
The victim was not a mere student, 
but shortly afterwards raised soldiers for 
the Parliament, having the rank of 
captain, and took part in the campaign ; 
ibid. 42, 49, 50. He was the son of 
John Swarbrick of Roseacre, and his sister 
Ellen married Cuthbert Harrison, the 
founder of Nonconformity after the Res- 
toration ; Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. 
i, 81. 
M John Ballard held a messuage and 
land by rod. rent, and at his death in 
1619 was succeeded by his son Thomas, 
aged forty ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), 
ii, 141. 

Thomas Ballard died in 1635 holding 
a messuage, &c., in Elswick of Richard 
Molyneux and land in Tarnacre of the 
king as of the manor of East Greenwich. 
He left four daughters as co-heirs— 
Janet, Ellen, Anne and Dorothy—their 
ages ranging from seventeen to eight 
years; Towneley MS. C 8%, 13 (Chet. 
Lib.), 60. 

13 Edward Turner of Goosnargh in 
1604 held 12 acres and left a son Chris- 
topher, aged fifty in 16203; Lancs. Ing. 
pom. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 191. 

William Turner died in 1632 holding 
a messuage, &c., in Elswick of the king 
as of his manor of Clitheroe. Thomas, 
his son and heir, was fifty years of age ; 
Towneley MS. C 8, 13, p. 1190. 

16 William Butler of Hackinsall in 
1586 held land in Elswick of the queen 
as of her duchy in socage; Duchy of 
Lance. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 47. See also 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), i, 241. 

John (son of William) Bell died in 
1625 holding land and a mill in Elswick 
of the king; his heir was William his 
son, aged twenty-five ; Towneley MS. 
C 8, 13, p. 66. 

Thomas Noblett died in 1636 holding 
a messuage, &c., of the king as of his 
duchy in socage. Edmund, his son and 
heir, was twenty years of age ; Duchy of 
Lance. Ing. p.m .xxx, no. 67. 

In some cases, as those of Eccleston 
and Stanley of Great Eccleston, the 
tenure has not been recorded. 

7 John Wilkinson of Little Eccleston 
so held in 1628 ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13, 
pp. 1311-12. 

18 John de Whittingham gave to his 
friend Thomas Banastre of Bretherton a 
rent of 2s. from an oxgang of land in 
Elswick in 13013 Dods, MSS. cxlix, 
fol. 4.6. 

19 Adam de Bradkirk (before 1226) 
gave to Richard son of Alan in marriage 


283 


with Amabil his daughter 3 oxgangs of 
land in Elswick, which had been given by 
Warine de Whittingham ; Whalley Couch. 
(Chet. Soc.), ii, 459. Amabil granted 
one of the oxgangs to John de Elswick, 
another to Adam son of Lewe, and the 
third to Robert son of Hugh ; ibid. She 
was afterwards known as Amabil de 
Sowerby ; ibid. 462. 

20 Adam son of Adam de Bradkirk 
gave land to Randle de Goosnargh son of 
Robert, viz. one of the oxgangs which 
Warine de Whittingham had given Adam 
his father and which Adam son of Lewe 
had released. A rent of 2s. was to be 
paid to cover the rent payable to Warine 
de Whittingham. This charter was en- 
rolled because the wax fell off when in 
the hands of the justices in eyre; Assize 
R. 408, m. 44. 

Alice widow of Randle de Goosnargh 
in (292 claimed dower in half an oxgang 
of land in Elswick against Adam son of 
Henry son of Ulf and Agnes his wife ; 
ibid. m. 24. In 1316 Maud widow of 
Alexander de Goosnargh claimed dower 
in 1 oxgang of land against Henry de 
Carleton and Godith his wife ; De Banco 
R. 216, m. 194. 

About the same time Hugh son of 
Randle de Goosnargh released to Thomas 
de Bradkirk his claim in 2 oxgangs of 
land with a messuage in Elswick formerly 
his brother Alexander’s, of which 1 ox- 
gang was formerly held by Adam son of 
Roger, while the other was then held 
by Henry de Carleton and Godith his 
wife for life; Kuerden fol. MS. 154. 
Hugh also gave his sons Richard and 
Thomas a chief messuage in Withington 
(Weeton) and the reversion of the lands 
held in Elswick by Maud widow of Alex- 
ander de Goosnargh and Godith daughter 
of Randle; ibid. The said Godith, as 
widow, gave the 2 oxgangs of land to 
Thomas son of Adam de Bradkirk in 
1320-1 and her whole right in 3 
oxgangs ; ibid. 

21 Paulin de Preston, who had sons 
William and Adam, held an oxgang of 
land in Elswick in 12923; Assize R. 408, 
m. 24, 76. Earlier than this he had 
granted an oxgang of land there to his 
son William; it had been purchased 
from Adam son of Richard de Elswick ; 
Add. MS. 32108, no. 70. In 1295 
Thomas Travers obtained a meseuage 
and the third part of an oxgang from 
Hugh son of Paul de Preston and Alice 
nis wife ; Final Cone. i, 178. 

Alice widow of Thomas Travers 
claimed dower in 1317 in Elswick and 
Thistleton against Robert son of William 
Cowdray and Margaret his wife; De 
Banco R. 219, m. 131d. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


surname of Elswick™ had shares. William de Elswick 
gave his lands to the Singletons in return for 
maintenance.™ 

Whalley * and Cockersand * Abbeys and the Priory 
of St. John of Jerusalem had lands in Elswick,” 
represented later probably by the estates of Fleet- 
wood,” followed by Hulton,” Eccleston ® and Shire- 
burne.” Other of the neighbouring landowners also 
had lands in this township. 

An apportionment of the pasture was made in 
1305, when Thomas Travers, Dame Joan Banastre, 
Walter de Goosnargh and Roger son of Adam de 
Elswick were lords. By it the holder of an oxgang 
of land was allowed to send four oxen, four cows, 
four young beasts, two horses or mares, ten sheep, 
and four geese with one gander at the close time. 
There was also a horse-mill in the township, and for 
its maintenance five horses or mares might be sent 
to the common pasture.” 

Apart from the Leckonby family the sequestrations 
by the Commonwealth authorities do not seem to have 
affected this township. In 1717 several ‘ Papists’ 
registered estates.” 


During the Commonwealth period the inhabitants 
built a chapel on the waste or Leys, and had an 
allowance of {50 a year from the Committee of 
Plundered Miinisters.** After the Restoration this 
stipend would cease, and it is said that the Prayer 
Book services were occasionally used in it™; but the 
vicars of St. Michael’s, perhaps themselves indifferent 
or finding no support from the people and land- 
owners, do not seem to have made any serious attempt 
to gain it. It was therefore used as a school until 
the brief indulgence of 1672, when it was licensed for 
Congregationalists.*° From before the Revolution “ 
it has been regularly used by this denomination, and 
from it many other churches have sprung. It was 
rebuilt in 1753, and succeeded by the present church 


in 1873-4. 


WOODPLUMPTON 


Plunton, Dom. Bk.; Plumpton, 1256; Wode- 
plumpton, 1336. 

The prefix Wood distinguishes this township from 
Field Plumpton, Great and Little, in Kirkham. The 


* Amabil daughter of Adam de Brad- 
kirk, as widow, granted to Robert son of 
Hugh de Elswick the oxgang of land 
which Richard the Dispenser had when 
he took his way to the Holy Land, at 2s. 
rent, and this was confirmed by her 
brother Adam de Bradkirk and her son 
Richard de Sowerby ; Whalley Couch. ii, 
460-2. Toa grant by the same Robert 
son of Hugh de Elswick the following 
were witnesses: Adam son of Hugh de 
Elswick, Stephen his brother, Adam son 
of John de Elswick and Alexander de 
Elswick, clerk ; ibid. 456. Richard son 
of Adam de Elswick confirmed a grant by 
Robert his uncle ; ibid. 458. William 
de Elswick released lands to his brother 
Robert ; ibid. 463. Alexander de Els- 
wick, clerk, granted land in Sowerby to 
his son Richard ; Kuerden MSS. iv, S 3. 

William son of Alexander the clerk in 
1292 called upon Adam son of Henry de 
Elswick to fulfil an agreement made in 
1280 that William’s son and daughter 
should respectively marry Adam's daughter 
and son, but the decision was adverse ; 
Assize R. 408, m. 93 d. 

Robert son of Alexander de Elswick 
obtained half an oxgang of land in 1298 
from Adam son of Ulf and Agnes his 
wife ; Final Conc. i, 184. 

Some other early tenants occur, In 
1304 Cecily widow of Alan de Warlowes 
(Wharles) claimed dower in a tenement 
(including 1 oxgang of land) in Elswick 
against John de Fulborne and Joan his 
wife, and William Banastre was summoned 
to warrant; De Banco R. 151, m. §d.; 
154, m. 28d. Cecily, called widow of 
Alan de Faisacre, gave all her right in 
Elswick to William Banastre; Dods. 
MSS. cxlix, fol. 54, 

William son of Ellen de Haighton was 
in 1326 found to have held, in conjunction 
with Alice his wife, 44 acres of arable 
land in Elswick of the king in chief as of 
the honour of Lancaster, by knight’s 
service and a rent of 3d. to the castle ; 
Chan. Ing. p.m. 19 Edw. II, no. 51. 

Richard Southworth of Gressingham 
and Alice his wife had lands in 1413; 
Final Conc. iii, 72. The tenure of John 
Southworth’s lands in 1484 was not 
known; Lancs. Ing. pom. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 113. 


Nicholas son of Robert Mythop in 
1413 released to Robert Taylor all right 
in lands in Elswick and Great Eccleston 
held of him by Robert ; Dep, Keeper's 
Rep. xxxvii, App. 174. 

28 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, ii, 138-9. 
William had granted three messuages, a 
horse-mill and 2 oxgangs of land to 
Thomas de Singleton and Joan his wife, 
who in return bound themselves to pro- 
vide him with sustenance like that of the 
free men in their household, a cloak at 
Christmas, and 4s. 6d. for shoes at 
Michaelmas. The inheritance having in 
1322 descended to Adam Banastre, a 
minor, William found himself deprived 
of his sustenance. Order was thereupon 
made that it should be restored to him. 

34 Robert (son of Hugh) de Elswick 
granted to Stanlaw Abbey half an oxgang 
of land (excepting that part already given 
to Cockersand) ; the monks were to pay 
12d. a year to Adam de Bradkirk, he 
paying the same to the heirs of Whitting- 
ham ; /fhalley Couch. ii, 457. The gift 
was confirmed by others interested (ibid. 
463-4), anda toft was added ; ibid. 454-5. 

The lands of the abbey were described 
about 1400 as eight ‘lands’ in the Page 
Croft (next land of John Southworth), a 
broadland on the Tunstead, a headland 
in the Wadfurlong that shot upon the 
Tunstead (next land of John Coppull), 
land shooting into the Trathorne (next 
Henry Marshall’s land), and a toft called 
the Granger yard ; ibid. 465. 

2 Warine de Whittingham gave an 
acre; Richard son of Roger de Freckleton 
gave a messuage, &c.; and Robert son of 
Hugh de Elswick gave land for a barn; 
G@ockersand Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 187-8. 
Among the field-names are a selion 
called Cock and Hen, Turmurfurlong and 
Smerebrook. 

For the tenants 1451-1537 see ibid. iii, 
1266-9. John Southworth and his heirs 
were among them. 

6 Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 375. 

2% The grant to Thomas Fleetwood in 
Elswick was said to be of lands formerly 
of Whalley Abbey ; Pat. 2 Mary. Els- 
wick is named in the inquisition after his 
death, along with Great Layton, and was 
to go to his younger son William ; Duchy 
of Lanc, Ing. p.m. xii, no. 2. 


284 


38 William Fleetwood sold to Joho 
Hulton and John Hodgson in 1596; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 59, m. 
320. 

John Hulton of Darleys died in 1606 
holding lands in Elswick of the king by 
knight’s service ; Lancs. Ing, p.m, (Rec. 
Soc.), i, 68. Richard Hodgson of Layton 
died in 1630 holding land there of the 
king ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13, p. 514. 

39 The tenure is not recorded, but the 
land in Elswick was probably acquired 
with Singleton Grange. 

50Duchy of Lanc, Ing, p.m. xxvi, 

no. 4. 
31 Dods. MSS. exlix, fol. 34. There 
were 16 oxgangs of land in the vill, 
each containing 24 acres of land and 
meadow. 

52 Elizabeth Hoole, John Turner, 
William Smith and John Clarkson; 
Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath, Non- 
jurors, 105, 125, 134-5. 

33 Commonw. Ch. Surv, (Rec, Soc. 
Lance. and Ches), 148. No minister had 
then (1650) been approved. The order 
for £50 a year (out of Lord Derby's 
estates) was made in Dec, 1649, and 
about a year later William Bell, a ‘godly 
and orthodox divine,’ was‘ settled minie- 
ter’ there; Plund, Mins, Accts, (Rec. Soc, 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 83, 89, 103, 235- 

84 ‘Divine service was performed in 
this chapel in the memory of several now 
[1722] living,’ was the vicar of St. 
Michael’s statement ; Gastrell, Noritia 
Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 452. 

35 Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. i, 83-92 
where a full account may be read ; a view 
of the present church is given. Cuthbert 
Harrison, curate of Singleton till 1662, 
is said to have been minister at Elswick 
in 1672. ae 

36 From ‘King James's Toleration, 
according to the vicar of St. Michael’. 
In 1689 Elswick Chapel was certified 
“for John Parr and his congregation; 
Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 231+ 
The first minister recorded by Mr. Night- 
ingale is Jonathan Nightingale, 1703-5. 
There is supposed to have been a lapte 
into Arianism about 1760, The registers 
are at Somerset House. aa 

The chapel of 1753 is described io 
Hewitson’s Our Country Churches, 415-18 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


surface on the whole rises steadily from the low level 
of the more northerly parts of the parish. Thus 
the so-ft. level crosses it from east to west when 
about a third of the length of the township has been 
traversed, and the 100-ft. level when the second third 
is reached going south. ‘Two brooks flow through 
it, mainly to the north-west, towards the Wyre ; 
that to the north comes from Barton through Hollow- 
forth ; that to the south is called Blundel Brook in 
Broughton, but here Woodplumpton Brook, for its 
course takes it through the centre of the township. 
The village of Woodplumpton lies on its northern 
bank, with Bartle to the south and Ambrose Hall to 
the north. Swillbrook and Catforth lie to the north- 
west, on the westerly side of the brook, and Woods- 
fold near the northern boundary, with Lewth to the 
east of it and Eaves to the north. The area is 
4,9704 acres,! shared by the four hamlets thus : 
Woodplumpton, 949; Bartle, 1,341; Catforth, 
1,828; and Eaves, 8523. In 1901 there was a 
population of 1,208. 

The two principal roads meet near Woodsfold. 
One of them comes from the south, passing through 
Bartle and Catforth ; the other from the south-east, 
passing Ambrose Hall, Moorside and Lewth. These 
are connected at the south by a cross-road from 
Bartle through Woodplumpton to Ambrose Hall. 

The township is governed by a parish council. 

Woodplumpton was visited by plague in 1631.? 

The land is largely in pasture. The soil is clayey. 

Henry Foster, R.N., born at Woodplumpton in 
1796, being son of the incumbent, attained dis- 
tinction as a navigator and astronomer, and was 
elected F.R.S. in 1824. He took part in Parry’s 
Polar expeditions of 1825-7 and did exploring work 
in the South Seas. He was accidentally killed in the 
River Chagres, near Panama, in 1831. There is a 
memorial tablet in Woodplumpton Church.? 

Mag Shelton, the Singleton witch, is supposed to 
have been buried at Woodplumpton. A boulder 


ST. MICHAEL- 
ON-WYRE 


stone, known as the Witch’s Stone, marks the grave 
in the churchyard. Her spirit had to be ‘laid’ by 
A priest.4 

In 1676 there were said to be 646 inhabitants, of 
whom 46 were ‘ popish recusants’ and 3 Dissenters.5 
A more elaborate return in 1755 is as follows :— 


Protestants Dissenters Quakers Papists 
Plumpton 147 — — 56 
Bartle 112 I — 78 
Catforth. . 313 7 — 65 
Eaves 2. .) 114 _— 7 69 


or 969 persons in all.° 


Earl Tostig held MOODPLUMP- 
MANORS TON in 1066 as part of his Przston fee. 
It was assessed as five plough-lands.’ 
Afterwards it was held of the Crown or of the 
honour of Lancaster in thegnage by a family whose 
pedigree seems to connect them with the pre-Conquest 
owners. Raghanald, the earliest of them on record, 
must have lived about the time of the Conquest, for 
his son Ravenkil attested the grants made in 1094 
by Count Roger of Poitou to the abbey of Sées,8 
and Roger son of Ravenkil, who gave Linacre to the 
Knights Hospitallers,® occurs from 1130 to 1171.10 
His son Richard, the founder of Lytham Priory, 
lived in the time of Henry IJ and Richard I, holding 
by knight’s service Kirkby, Argarmeols, Kellamergh 
and Bryning, and in thegnage Woodplumpton, 
Lytham, Carleton, Bootle and part of Formby.4 
Richard son of Roger left five daughters as co- 
heirs,2 but ultimately the inheritance became divided 
between two—Maud, who married Robert de Stock- 
port, and Amice, who married Thomas de Beetham. 
Woodplumpton appears to have gone entirely to the 
former,}® and as early as 1256 Robert de Stockport 
was sole lord, allowing John de Lea common of pas- 
ture on Bartle Moor.44 The manor, which rendered 
175. 4d. a year to the Earl of Lancaster in 1297,}5 
descended regularly to the Warrens of Stockport and 


1 The Census Rep. 1901 gives 4,986 
acrea, including 18 of inland water. The 
area was increased about 1882 by the 
addition of a small detached part of 
Broughton lying within Woodplumpton. 

2 Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 47- 

3 Fishwick, St. Michael’s (Chet. Soc.), 
87, 78; Dict. Nat. Biog. 

4 Fishwick, op. cit. 200 ; Gillow, Hay- 
dock Papers, 41. 

5 Visit. Ret. to the Bishop of Chester. 

§ Ibid. 

1 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 2882. 

8 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. 290, 296. 

® See the account of Bootle in V.C.H. 
Lanes. iii, 31. 

10 Roger son of Ranchil owed 30 marks 
in 1129-30 for an agreement with the 
Count of Mortain respecting lands between 
Ribble and Mersey ; Farrer, op. cit. 1. 
He was surety in 5 marks for a pardon 
in 1169-71 3 ibid. 16, 20, 2 

N Ibid. 44. In 1176 Richard son of 
Roger paid 5 marks in order to obtain an 
inquiry as to the manor of Kirkby, which 
had been taken into the king’s hands 
because he had married his daughter and 
heir without the king’s licence, and he 
had to pay £100 to recover his lands ; 
ibid, 31, 42-3. The payment of several 
instalments is recorded in the Pipe Rolls. 
In 1194 he incurred a further penalty for 
having shared in Count John’s rebellion ; 
ibid. 90, 92. The Priory of Lytham was 


founded by him between 1189 and 1194 3 
ibid. 346-9. 

In 1199 Maud Banastre made a claim 

respecting sisters’ portion against Richard 
son of Roger and Margery his wife (her 
sister), who put Robert de Stockport in 
their place ; Rot. Curia Regis (Rec. Com.), 
i, 359. Plaintiff was perhaps the Maud 
de Hastings who had then another dispute 
with Richard son of Roger; ibid. 227, 
301; Excerpta ¢ Rot. Fin. (Rec. Com.), 
i, 87. 
a The three not named in the text were 
Quenilda wife of Roger Gernet, Margaret 
wife of Hugh de Moreton and Avice wife 
of William de Millom. 

13 Tt was probably the marriage of Maud 
with Robert de Stockport in 1176 which 
created the trouble above referred to. 
Robert de Stockport in 1200-1 paid a 
part of the 200 marks and five palfreys 
which he had offered the king on suc- 
ceeding to the lands of Richard son of 
Roger ; Farrer, op. cit. 130. 

Robert de Stockport died before 1206, 
when his widow, as Maud Banastre, having 
adopted her mother’s surname, proffered 
20 marks and a palfrey for freedom from 
acompulsory marriage and for a reason- 
able share of her father’s and mother’s 
lands. At the same time others of 
Richard’s daughters are noticed ; ibid. 
2033 Rot. de Finibus (Rec. Com.), 352+ 

From the inquest of 1212 it appears 


285 


that the heirs of Richard son of Roger 
held nine plough-lands in thegnage by a 
rent of 4 (?3) marks, of which 8s. 10d. had 
been remitted on the foundation of 
Lytham Priory ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 46. From 
later inquests it appears that the proportion 
due from Woodplumpton was 17s. 4d. or 
17s. 6d. The assessment seems to have 
been reduced from five to four plough-lands. 
Maud de Stockport appears to have been 
unmarried in 1216-22, when she held 
lands worth 2 marks yearly ; ibid. 117. 
Robert de Stockport, apparently the 
son of Maud, released certain lands (?in 
Woodplumpton) to Adam son of Swain 
and his heirs ; Add. MS. 32106, no. 805. 
M4 Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 123. This Robert de Stockport 
was the grandson of Maud. His father 
Robert in 1242 held shares in other parts 
of the inheritance of Richard son of 
Roger in conjunction with Gernet and 
Beetham ; Lancs, Ing. and Extents, i, 149, 
153-4. The younger Robert succeeded 
in 1248, being of full age ; ibid. 175, 184. 
The king received the homage of Robert 
son and heir of Robert de Stockport in 
May 1248; the relief was 345. 10d. 3 
Excerpta e Rot. Fin, ii, 332 On the death 
of Quenilda Gernet in 1252 a further 
share of the inheritance accrued to him ; 
Lancs. Ing. and Extentsy i, 191 
15 [bid, 289. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Poynton,’ but these, though among the great families 
of Cheshire, took little part in Lancashire affairs.™ 
Sir John Warren '® died in 1386 holding the manor 
of Woodplumpton of the Duke of Lancaster by a 
rent of 17s. 6¢, and was succeeded by his son 
Nicholas,!° whose son Lawrence held it in 1418. 
In later times the tenure was described as by 
knight’s service.2!_ Thus John Warren, who died in 
1474,22 was said to have held the manor. He had 
in 1445 granted various messuages and land in 
Woodplumpton to trustees for Isabel daughter of 
Robert Legh of Adlington, and other messuages, 
&c., in 1471 to Eleanor, who married his grandson 
Sir John Warren.”* This Sir John was aged thirty-six 
in 1506, and died in 1518 holding the manor of 
Woodplumpton, with fifty messuages, lands, meadow, 
wood, turtar, and moss of the king by the fifth part 


of a knight’s fee and the rent of 175. 6d. Lassrence, 
his son and heir, was thirty-three years of age.™ 
The tenure was recorded in the same terms in the 
inquisition after the death in 1540 of Sibyl widow of 
Lawrence, when his son Edward, aged thirty-five, 
was found to be the heir.*® 

Sir Edward Warren, made a knight during the 
Scottish expedition of 1544,°" died in October 1555 
holding the manor of Woodplumpton as before, and 
leaving as heir his son Francis, aged twenty-four.%7 
Francis had, however, been disinherited by his 
father,°§ and so his brother John succeeded, and his 
grandson, another John Warren, mortgaged the manor 
to Sir Robert Banastre for £4,000, and, failing to 
pay, forfeited it.-? | Woodplumpton remained for 
some time in the hands of the Banastre family,” 
but in 1667 was recovered by Edward and John 


16 The history of the family was told 
in detail by John Watson, rector of 
Stockport, in his Memoirs of the s1ncient 
Earls + Warren and Surrey (Warrington, 
1782) ; and there are later pedigrees, &c., 
in Earwaker, East Ches. i, 3433 ily 
286-9 ; and Ormerod, Cfes. (ed. Hels>y), 
iii, 795-6, 685-7; i, 626. The 
following outline shows the descent of 
the manor of Woodplumpton, 

Robert de Svockporr, d. 1205 —8. Robert, 
d. 1248 -s. Robert, d. oc. 127g —s, 
Richar!!, d. 1292 —da. Joan, d.c. 1331, who 
marrie| Nicholas de Eton of Rotley —s. 
Robert, d. c. 1350 —8. Richard ~s. Richard 
~sister Isiiel, d. 1369 -cos. John Warren 
(s. Cecity, da. of Joan de Eton), d. 1386 
—4. Nicholas, d. 1413 -s. Lawrence, d. 
1444-5. John, d. 1474 -gdson. John 
(s. of Lawrence), d. 1518 -s. Lawrence, 
d. 1530 —s. Edward, d. 1558 -s. Francis 
(disinherited) -bro. John, d. 1587 —s. 
Edward, d. 1609 -s, John, d, 1621 —s. 
Edward, d. 1687 -s. John, judge of 
Chester, d. 1706 -s. Edward, d. 1718 —s. 
John, d. 1729 —bro. Edward, d. 1737 ~s. 
George, d. 1801 —da. Elizabeth Harriott, 
d. 1826, wite of Thomas James Viscount 
Bulkeley (who d. s.p. 1822). 

The heiress bequeathed Woodplumpton, 
&c., to the second Lord de Tabley, heir of 
her family, being descendant of her great- 
aunt Anna Dorothea sister of Edward 
Warren, who married Sir Daniel Byrne 
of Timogue, —s. John, d. 1742 —s. Peter, 
who assumed Leicester as a surname, 
d. 1770 ~8. John Fleming, cr. Lord de 
Tabey, 1826, and d. 1827 -s. George, 
who took the surname of Warren in 
1832 and d. 1887, having sold the 
manor of Woo !;lumpton. 

The Warren family has occurred pre- 
viously in the accounts of Blackburn 
Hundred and Goosnargh. 

V7 A claim for common of pasture was 
in 1274 made by Adam de Acton 
(Aighton) against Robert de Stockport ; 
De Banco R. 6, m, 2. In the following 
year Ellen widow of Robert claimed a 
third part of the manor of Plumpton as 
dower against Richard de Stockport; 
ibid. 10, m. 71d. 

Nichslas de Eton held the manor of 
Woodplumpton in 1324 by the rent of 
175. 6d.; Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 394. 
John de Davenport the younger (as 
trustee for Eton) held (four) plough-lands 
in Woodplumpton in 1346, rendering 
17s. 6d. ; Survey of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 52. 

1° In 1382 the escheator was ordered 
to g.ve seisin of the manor of Wood- 
piumpton to Sir John de Warren, son of 
Cecily sisver of Robert son of Nicholas de 


Eton. <A feoftment of the ‘manor had 
been made by John son of Sir John de 
Davenport to the said Robert de Eton 
and Isabel his wife, with remainder to 
John brother of Robert, &c.; Dep. 
Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 354. 

19 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 25, 
34,47- In 1382 Sir John de Warren 
had granted this manor to John de 
Davenport and others ; after his death a 
dispute ensued between the Duke of 
Lancaster and these trustees as to the 
custody of the manor, lasting from 1387 
to1392 3 Dep. Keeper's Rep. xl, App. 525. 

20 Margaret the widow of Sir John de 
Warren (Waryng) afterwards married 
John Mainwaring, but had the manor 
of Woodplumpton for her life, with 
remainders to Nicholas and Margaret, Sir 
John’s children. Parcel of the manor 
was in 1396 given to Nicholas de 
Warren on his marriage with Agnes, who 
had a son Lawrence. To him a parcel 
of the manor was granted in 1415. 
Margaret his grandmother died in 1418 
holding the manor of the king as of his 
duchy by a rent of 175. 6d.; ite clear 
value was £6; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 131-3; Dep. Keeper's Rep. 
xxxiii, App. 16 3 Final Conc. iii, 76. For 
the Worsley claim appearing in this fine 
see Watson, op. cit. ii, 237. 

Agnes Warren in 1421 received 
£9 tos. as farmer of Woodplumpton ; 
Add. MS. 32105, GG 2652. 

21 Sir Lawrence Warren of Stockport 
was in 1431 said to hold the manor of 
Woodplumpton by the service of one 
knight’s fee ; Feudal Aids, iii, 95. In 
1445-6, however, his knight's fee included 
not only the four plough-lands_ in Wood- 
plumpton but the lands in Bryning, &c., 
which had anciently been held by knight’s 
service ; Duchy of Lanc. Knights’ Fees, 
bdle. 2, no. 20. 

22 Ches. Ing. p.m. 14 Edw. IV, no. 6. 
The Lancashire inquisition quoted below 
gives 1480 as the date of death. 

%3 Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. iii, no. 86. 

One John Warren was made a knight 
at Ripon in 1487; Metcalfe, Bh. of 
Knights, 18. 

*4 Duchy of Lane. Inq. p.m. iv, no. 89. 
In a recovery of the manor in 1525 
Lawrence Warren was the defendant ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 141, m. 3. 

2% Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. viii, 
no. 15. Sibyl Warren had had the 
manor granted to her for life. Edward 
Warren, the son, had granted certain 
messuages and lands to Francis, his son 
and heir, and Mary his wife, daughter of 
Sir Edward Fitton. 


286 


26 Metcalfe, op. cit. 77. 

37 Duchy of Lane. Inq. p.m. xi, no, 66. 
By a fine of 1557, therein quoted, the 
manor of Woodplumpton, a fourth part 
of the manor of Formby, with messuages, 
water-mill, &c., in those townships and 
in Liverpool and Didsbury, were by Sir 
Edward and his son Francis settled on 
the younger son John Warren and hie 
heirs, with remainders to other sons, 
Lawrence and Peter. The fine is Pal. 
of Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 17, m. go. 

38 Watson, op. cit. ii) 131. The reason 
is not given. Francis died without issue 
in 1576. 

John Warren and Margaret his wife 
made a settlement of the manor of 
Woodplumpton in 1582; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 44, m. 172. Edward 
Warren and Anne his (second) wife had 
four messuages, &c., there in 15913 
ibid. bdle. 53, m. gt. Again in 1598 a 
settlement of the manor and various 
lands was made by Edward Warren and 
Susanna his wife ; ibid. bdle. 60, m. 38. 
Another settlement was made in 1613 
by John Warren, Anne his wife and 
Margaret widow of John Warren ; ibid. 
bdle. 81, no. 68. 

Edward Warren was M.P. for Liver- 
pool in 1589; Pink and Beaven, Parl. 
Repre. of Lancs, 184. 

From entries in the Woodplumpton 
registers it appears that the Warrens 
resided there about 1604-6. 

29 Cal. S. P. Dom. 1637, Pp» $45- 
Edward Warren, son of the mortgager, 
stated that his father had been im- 
prisoned for debt and there died, leaving 
petitioner in ward to the king. He had 
sought to regain the manor, but Sir 
Robert Banastre, who at first appeared 
willing, alleged that he had so settled 
it at the marriage of his son that he had 
no power. 

30 A feoffment of the manor was made 
in 1634 by Sir Robert, Lawrence and 
Henry Banastre; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F. bdle. 122, no, 6. 

Sir Robert Banastre of Passenham, 
Northants, was made a knight in 1605 ; 
Metcalfe, op. cit. 155. He died in 1649. 
His daughter and heir Dorothy married 
William second Lord Maynard (d. 1698), 
and bore him two sons anda daughter. 
The eldest son, Banastre, born in 1642, 
succeeded his grandfather and his mother 
at Woodplumpton in 1649, and in 1651-4 
made claims for the discharge from 
sequestration of tenements in Wood- 
plumpton which had been held by re- 
cusants ; Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 275'- 
In 1662 in a fine concerning tue manor 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Warren from Banastre Maynard and Elizabeth his 
The manor descended, with other Warren 
estates, to Lord de Tabley, but was sold to the 
Birleys of Milbanke, Kirkham, and became the pro- 
perty of Charles Birley of Bartle Hall, who died in 
The eldest son, Charles Addison 
Birley, succeeded, and at his death in 1908 was 
followed by his son Mr. Charles Fair Birley, the 
Courts leet and baron 


wife.2 


1891, leaving issue. 


present lord of the manor. 
were held annually till recently.*? 


sold to Dr. Thomas Calvert, Warden of Manchester 


1823-40.°3 


In 1542 there arose disputes as to the wastes,*4 
and an agreement as to the division of parcels of the 


William Lord Maynard was plaintiff 
and Nicholas Banastre deforciant; Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 169, m. 76. 
In another fine, 1665, Thomas Banastre 
was plaintiff and Banastre Maynard 
deforciant; ibid. bdle. 175, m. 41. 
Banastre succeeded his father as third 
Lord Maynard, and died in 1718; 
G.E.C. Complete Peerage, v, 277. 

31 Pal. of Lanc, Feet of F. bdle. 179, 
m. 24. In a later fine (1710) Edward 
Beresford was plaintiff and the following 
were deforciants—Anne Warten, widow 3 
Edward, Hugh and John Warren, esquires; 
Edward and Talbot Warren, gentlemen ; 
ibid. bdle. 265, m. 53. Again in 1761 
the deforciants were Sir George Warren 
and Jane his wife; ibid. bdle. 366, 
m. 66. Thomas James Viscount Bulke- 
ley and Harriet his wife were in posses- 
sion in 1802 ; Pal. of Lanc. Lent Assizes, 
42 Geo. III, R. 8. 

Sir George Warren (K.B. 1761) repre- 
sented Lancaster in Parliament 1758-80 
and 1786-96 ; Pink and Beaven, op. cit. 
126-7. 

33 Fishwick, St. Michael's (Chet. Soc.), 
25. The court baron is mentioned in 
1601 ; Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), iii, 436. 

88 Raines in Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 455. 

4 Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), ii, 69. 

A list of the charterers, with the 

~ acreage of their separate ‘inlands,’ is ap- 
pended. The queen had 26 acres. 

36 Robert de Stockport, lord of Plump- 
ton, leased land in the manor to Thomas 
Banastre in 1287; B.M. Add. Charter 
20149. In 1300 Joan widow of Thomas 
Banastre claimed dower in a messuage 
and land in Woodplumpton against 
Gilbert de Grimsargh ; De Banco R. 133, 
m.127. Thomas Banastre had in 1296 
demised to Gilbert (for life) various lands 
held by gift of Richard de Stockport ; 
Kuerden MSS. ii, fol. 256. 

In 1346-8 John Trussell and Pernell 
his wife (widow of Adam Banastre) 
claimed dower in ten messuages, &e., 
against Edmund de Dacre and Ellen his 
wife ; De Banco R. 347, m. 1653 354, 
m. 300. Robert de Singleton appeared 
as plaintiff in 1369 against Robert son of 
Edmund de Dacre and Godith his wife ; 
Final Cone, ii, 177. 

Later lands, &c., in Woodplumpton 
appear as portion of the Balderston 
estates (ibid. iii, 165) in the possession 
of Edmund Dudley, Radcliffe of Winmar- 
leigh, Alexander Osbaldeston and the Earl 
of Derby, as appears by the inquisitions 
pm. It should be noted, however, that 
im 1521 the Woodplumpton land of 
Thomas Radcliffe was not placed among 
the Balderston inheritance, but was de- 
clared to be held of Lawrence Warren by 


168.35 


The hall was 


ST. MICHAEL- 
ON-WYRE 


commons and waste lands within the manor was made 
in 1573 between John Warren, lord of Wood- 
plumpton, and the various charterers. 
preserved in Christopher Towneley’s MS. numbered 
OO ; the lord received 210 acres and the charterers 


The details are 


The Singleton family or families had lands in 
the township, those of the senior branch descend- 
ing in the usual way,®® and those of the Chingle 
Hall,?7 Brockholes ** and Staining branches *® ap- 
pearing in their inquisitions. 


Others of the neigh- 


bouring landowners also appear in the records,‘° 


arent of 2s.; Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. 
v, no. 3. Similar statements are made 
in later inquisitions, but in 1593 Plump- 
ton was included with other Balderston 
lands ; ibid. xvi, no. 2. 

37 They held a windmill, three mes- 
suages, &c., of the Warrens in socage; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. vi, no. 3235 
viii, no. 9; xiii, no, 16. 

Belonging to a minor family of the 
district was John Singleton, whose will 
of 1545 is printed in Richmond Wills 
(Chet. Soc.), 57. 

38 Robert Singleton in 1§25 held land, 
&c., in Woodplumpton of Lawrence 
Warren in socage; Duchy of Lane. Inq. 
p-m. vi, no. 4. In 1573 what was pro- 
bably the same estate was described as 
‘in Newsham,’ which was within the 
lordship of Woodplumpton ; ibid. xii, 
no. 34. In a later inquisition the tenure 
was said to be of the queen by knight’s 
service ; ibid. no. 30. 

39 In 1551 George Singleton was said 
to hold in Woodplumpton of George 
Newsham in socage; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. ix, no. 17. The tenure is not 
stated in later inquisitions. 

40 The tenure of John Newsham of 
Newsham in 1515 was not known, and 
in 1585 the whole estate in Newsham 
and Woodplumpton was combined, as 
held of John Warren in socage ; ibid. iv, 
no. 75; xiv, no. 88. 

The lands of Alexander Goosnargh of 
Stalmine were in 1524 said to be held of 
the king by a rent; ibid. v, no. 55. 

George Hesketh of Poulton in 1571 
died holding land, &c., of John Warren 
by a rent of 6s. 8d.; ibid. xiii, no. 15. 
It was held similarly in 1622 of Sir 
Robert Banastre ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 363-6. 

Anthony Pickering of Catterall in 1613 
held land, &c., in Catforth and Wood- 
plumpton of John Warren by ros, rent ; 
ibid. i, 242-3. 

Alexander Rigby of Goosnargh in 1621 
held of the heirs or assigns of John 
Warren, marking the transition to 
Banastre ; ibid. iii, 457-9. 

Thomas Gregory in 1622 held of Sir 
Robert Banastre by a rent of 2d.; ibid. 
iii, 403-4. 

William Haydock of Cottam held of 
the same in 1624; Towneley MS. C8, 
13 (Chet. Lib.), 529. 

In some other cases no tenure has been 
recorded, 

41 Richard Beck died in 1585 holding 
a messuage, &c., of John Warren in 
socage by a rent of 4s.; Roger Beck, the 
son and heir, was nineteen years of age ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 46. 
Roger Beck was in possession in 1590 ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 52, m. 506. 


287 


with minor local families such as Beck,*! Billing- 
ton,*? Duddell,4? Gregson,44 Harrison,#® Mason,‘¢ 


The property seems to have been sold to 
Duddell, as below. 

# Anthony Billington by his will 
of 1575 desired to be buried in the 
‘parish church’ of Woodplumpton. He 
names his sons John and Thomas; Fish- 
wick, op. cit. 193. A later Anthony 
Billington died in 1631 holding of Robert 
Banastre. John his son and heir was 
nineteen years old ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
p-m. xxvii, no. 17 3 Xxx, no. 70. 

43 In the case of George Duddell (1589) 
the tenure is not recorded, but his son 
William in 1613 was said to have held 
in part of the king as of his duchy by the 
fiftieth part of a knight’s fee and in part 
of John Warren by 6s. rent 3 Lanes. Ing. 
p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 13-15. The estate 
included purchases from Roger Beck and 
Thomas Harrison, and was bequeathed to 
his nephew George (son of John) Duddell 
of Clifton, and in default of male issue to 
another nephew, William (son of Richard) 
Duddell, &c. George Duddell, the next 
heir, was seventeen years old. 

Thomas Harrison and Ellen his wife 
sold to William Duddell in 1558; Pal. 
of Lance. Feet of F. bdle. 20, m. 105. In 
1563 they sold to William Ambrose ; 
ibid. bdle. 25, m. 119. The Duddells 
took the Parliamentary side in the Civil 
War. Captain Duddell, eldest son of 
George, raised a company for service, and 
was killed at the capture of Bolton in 
1644 ; War in Lancs. (Chet. Soc.), 42, 50. 

44 Robert Gregson died in 1613 holding 
a messuage, &c., of John Warren by 
4s. 4d. rent, and 6 acres (from the waste) 
of the king as of his duchy by the 
hundredth part of a knight’s fee. John 
Gregson, the son and heir, was seven years 
of age; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), i, 
257+ 

"rahe Gregson was a ‘delinquent’ during 
the Civil War time, having assisted the 
forces raised against the Parliament. 
In 1650 he compounded by a fine of 
£513 Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 128. 

45 The will of James (son of Thomas) 
Harrison of Catford, 1587, shows that he 
had land in Woodplumpton and Bils- 
borrow. His sons were James and 
Andrew ; Fishwick, op. cit. 194. James 
Harrison, who died in 1612, held his land 
of John Warren by 5s. rent ; his son and 
heir John was aged seventeen 5 Lancs, 
Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 6. 

46 Robert Mason, who died in 1599, 
held of Sir Edward Warren by a rent of 
3s. 4d. He left three daughters and co- 
heirs, viz. Alice widow of Richard Am- 
brose, and aged fifty in 1623 ; Elizabeth 
wife of Robert Lache, forty-seven ; and 
Jane wife of John Larrimer, forty-four ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 155. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Richardson 7 and White ‘®; but the chief residents 
in the 1gth century and later seem to have been the 
Ambrose family of AMBROSE HALL*® and Cat- 
Their estates passed by sale in 1650 to 
Richard Shaw, and about 1870 to Charles Birley. 
C.ATFORTH, called a manor, was held by the Shire- 
burnes of Stonyhurst,°! and BARTLE gave a surname 
to a local family who in the 14th century had part 


forth, 


47 William Richardson and Anne his 
wife in 1590 gave two messuages, &c., to 
William Waring ; Pal. of Lanc, Feet of 
F. bile. §2, m. 219. 

Thomas son of William Richardson, 
who died at Myerscough in 1637, held 
three messuages, &c., in Woodplumpton 
and other lands in Claughton, Bils- 
borrow and Sowerby, and left a son and 
heir William, one year old. The re- 
mainder in default of heirs male was to 
trustees for the maintenance of a school- 
master at Garstang; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. xxviii, no. 76. 

48 Anthony White acquired a messuage, 
&c., in 1582 from Nicholas White; Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 44, m. 132. 
Anthoay White died in 1606 holding in 
socage and leaving as heir a daughter 
Margaret wife of Henry Singleton and 
twenty-nine years of age ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc.), i, 100. 

4° William Ambrose the elder settled 
messuages, &c., in Woodplumpton, 
Kirkham, Goosnargh, Garstang and 
Lancaster in 14213 Final Cone. iii, 79. 
The remainders appear to have been to 
his son William, and in default of issue 
to Joan, Ellen and Margaret sisters of a 
Nicholas (?) Ambrose. About the same 
time a William Ambrose is found acting 
as arbitrator in Furness; West, Furness 
(ed. 1805), 264. 

Nicholas Ambrose in 1448 complained 
of trespass by John Hestholm, Joan his 
wife and others; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 
11, m. 24, 

Richard Ambrose in 1478 made a 
feoffment of lands, &c., in Kirkham and 
Woodplumpton ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13 
(Chet. Lib.), A rrr. 

Alexander Ambrose in 1492 obtained 
licence to agree with Agnes and Margery 
daughters of Richard Walton concerning 
their holding in Woodplumpton, News- 
ham and Upper Rawcliffe; Pal. of 
Lance. Plea R. 78, m. 4d. Richard son 
of Richard Walton and Agnes his wife 
occur in 1474; Pal. of Lanc. Writs 
Proton. file 15 Edw. IV. 

The lands of William Ambrose were 
estimated for the subsidy of 1523-4 at 
30s. a year; Fishwick, op. cit. 9. 

In 1541 Nicholas Ambrose of 
Plumpton sold to William Eccleston a 
messuage with appurtenances in Wood- 
plumpton ; Add. MS. 32106, fol. 337d. 
In 1548 a settlement of Ambrose Hall, 
with ten messuages, lands, &c., in Wood- 
plumpton, Penwortham, Goosnargh and 
Winmarleigh, was made by Nicholas 
Ambrose, the remainder being to his son 
and heir William ; but three messuages, 
&c., the dower of Elizabeth Ambrose, 
widow, were to goto Thomas Singleton ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 13, 
m. 149. In 1555 Nicholas appears to 
have sold a further part of his estate in 
Woodplumpton and Charnley Eaves to 
William Eccleston ; ibid. bdle. 16, m. 128. 
These, however, were re-sold to William 
Ambrose in 1559, a tenement in Little 
Eccleston being given for them; Add. 
MS. 32106, fol. 199. 


given.®4 


Witliam son and heir of William 
Ambrose made a feoffment in 1564 ; Pal. 
of Lance. Feet of F. bdle. 26, m. 212. In 
1577 he made a settlement of the whole 
or part of his estate, which included a 
water-mill, with contingent remainders 
to his brothers Thomas, Ewan and George 
and to Richard and Leonard sons of 
William Ambrose of Catforth Hall ; 
ibid. bdle. 39, m. 58. 

A pedigree was recorded in 1567 show- 
ing the descent thus: Richard Ambrose 
-s. William -s. Nicholas -sons William, 
Thomas, Henry, Roger, Ewan, George, 
and da. Ellen ; Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 46. 

Thomas Ambrose claimed a capital mes- 
suage in 1595 against Thomas Richardson 
and Isabel his wife (widow of Roger 
Ambrose) as heir of his brother William ; 
Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), iii, 409. 

Roger Ambrose had died in 1585 hold- 
ing a messuage called Little Blacklache 
of John Warren by 12d. rent; this and 
another piece of land held by knight's 
service were parts of William Ambrose’s 
estate (then deceased), and Roger had also 
acquired a further parcel from John 
Singleton of Chingle Hall, held of the 
queen as of her duchy by knight's 
service. His son and heir William was 
seven years of age; Duchy of Lance, 
Inq. p.m. xiv, no. 62. 

William died unmarried in 1641 and 
the estate went by a deed of 1607 (in 
possession of William Farrer) to the 
allied family of Catforth Hall For 
confirmation Richard Ambrose of this 
place obtained in 1612 a royal grant of 
Ambrose Hall for himself and his heirs ; 
Pat. 10 Jas. I, pt. xv. In 1650-1 
William Ambrose of Catforth, Elizabeth 
his wife and Richard his son and heir 
mortgaged Ambrose Hall to William 
Shaw of Preston, who eventually became 
the owner; W. Farrer’s Deeds, and 
Fishwick, op. cit. 183-5, where pedigrees 
will be found. William Ambrose of 
Catforth had succeeded his father Richard 
by 1631 ; W. Farrer’s Deeds, 

5° Fishwick, loc. cit. 

51 Cat‘orth was called a manor in 
14223; Dunkenhalgh D. The deeds 
noticed in the Shireburne abstract book 
at Leagram Hall begin with a grant by 
Sir Robert de Stockport to Richard de 
Newsham of land in Woodplumpton to be 
held by a rent of 12d. Afterwards the 
land seems to have passed to the Fishwick 
family (1366 to 1522), and in 1575 
Thurstan Southworth sold messuages, 
&c., in Woodplumpton to Sir Richard 
Shireburne, while Robert Midghalgh and 
George his son and heir in 1591 sold 
land in Newsham called Ravenshawhalgh 
(or Rainshalgh) to the same. 

Though these deeds are silent, it appears 
that Sir Richard Shireburne in 1508 gave 
the manors of Aighton and Catforth, with 
various lands, &c., to his executor to 
fulfil the trusts in his will, and that 
Catforth was held of Sir John Warren in 
socage; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iv, 
no. 46. Similar statements were made 
in later inouisitions, but the abstract 


288 


of the manor of Great Eccleston."? In this part of 
the township is Moor Hall, which has for a long 
time been held by a branch of the Threlfall family, 
Isolated references are all that can in most cases be 


George Nicholson of Woodplumpton in 1631 paid 
£10 on declining knighthood.’ Several sequestra- 
tions for religion or politics marked the Common- 


book shows that part of the demesne was 
in 1546 sold to Elizabeth (or Elen) 
Rodes by Sir Richard Shireburne and 
Maud his wife ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F, 
bdle. 52, m. 299. Probably the other 
parts were also alienated, and in 1594 the 
Shireburne estate in Catforth was not 
called a manor, 

Gilbert de Catforth attested some early 
charters. 

52 See the account of Great Eccleston. 

58 Information of Mrs, Charles Threl- 
fall, Edward Stanley acquired land, &c., 
in 1588; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle. 50, m. 23. In his will, dated 1587, 
he names his nephew Thomas Threlfall ; 
Fishwick, op. cit. 196. In 1595 Thomas 
Threlfall claimed a messuage, &c., in 
Woodplumpton against William Richard- 
son and Anne his wife; Ducatus Lane, 
iii, 387. It was probably the same who 
was chapel-warden in 1610; Fishwick, 
op. cit. 231. 

54 Some examples may be recorded, 

In 1310 John de Cottam and Denise 
his wife claimed dower in three mes- 
suages, &c., in Woodplumpton against 
Richard son of William de Rediford ; 
De Banco R. 181, m. 224d, John son 
of Robert de Rediford claimed a messuage, 
&c., in 1333 against Robert son of Ralph 
de Dardeslow. It appeared that John de 
Rediford, grandfather of plaintiff, gave 
to Joan his daughter, but she died 
without issue. The defendant said that 
the gift was to his father Ralph and his 
heirs ; ibid. 293, m. 91 3 295, m. 58d. 

Henry son of Richard Russel of Wood- 
plumpton and Cecily his wife in 1336 
acquired three messuages, &c., from John 
son of Jolin son of Simon de Howick ; 
Final Cone. ii, tot. 

Sir John Tempest and Alice his wife 
were plaintiffs in 1352; Duchy of Lane. 
Assize R.2,m.1. Margery de Nettleton 
claimed against Robert de Newsham and 
Alice his wife in 13593 ibid, 7, m. 1. 
John son of Robert de Rainford and 
Agnes his wife appear in 1361; Assize 
R. 441, m. 1d. Robert de Newsham 
and Joan his wife had lands in 1388; 
Final Cone. iii, 30. 

Robert Lache of Bartle and James his 
son and heir in 1522 granted a windmill 
and land to William Braboner of Goos- 
nargh; Add. MS. 32107, no 393-5- 
See Ducatus Lanc., iii, 63. 

The Subsidy Roll of 1545-6 shows the 
following owners of land: Nicholas 
Ambrose, Henry Charnley, Thomas 
Henryson, George Kighley, William 
Latus, John Newsham and the wife of 
John Richardson ; Fishwick, op. cit. 10. 
Some other rolls are given ibid. 

Christopher Hudson made a purchase 
from John Fell in 15553 Pal. of Lane. 
Feet of F. bdle. 16, m. 113. Richard 
Hudson had land, &., in 1582; ibid. 
bdle. 44, m. 102. 

85 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lanes. and Ches), 
i, 222. A later namesake was 2 bene- 
factor of the poor. Alice Nicholson of 
Bartle, widow, founded the shoo! st 
Catforth, 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


wealth period, while a number of ‘Papists’ regis- 
tered estates in 1717.7 
The piety of Richard son of Roger 
CHURCH makes it probable that a chapel existed 
in his demesne before 1200. Though 
this is confirmed by remains in the building, there 
seems to be no direct documentary evidence™ of the 
chapel till 1552, when its ‘ornaments’ were seized 
for the king. About the same time it was locally 
styled a ‘church.’ There was no endowment, but 
the vicar of St. Michael’s allowed (£4 a year to the 
curate," and service there appears to have been main- 
tained after the Reformation. In 1650 the minister 
had an allowance of £50 a year from the Committee 
of Plundered Ministers. The certified income in 
1717 was only £3, but further endow- 
ments were procured about that time,® 
and the net value is now given as 
£193." 

The church of ST. ANNE stands at 
the south end of the village, near the 
edge of the higher ground before its fall 
to Woodplumpton Brook, and consists of 
chancel and nave with north and south 
aisles forming a parallelogram measuring 
internally 72 ft. 6 in. long by 47 ft. 6 in. 
wide, with north-east vestry and small 
western tower with octagonal lantern. 
The oldest part of the building is the 
western half of the north aisle wall, in 
which there are a window ofc. 1300 and 
a door of about 100 years later, the east 
part of the wall, together with the east 
wall of the aisle, being either of 15th or 
early 16th-century date, or an older wall 
restored with later windows inserted. 
The north and south arcades belong to 
the late 15th or early 16th-century 
period, but the rest of the structure, 


10 


141 Century 
15 Century 
188 CENTURY 
C-) Moprrn 


ST. MICHAEL- 
ON-WYRE 


40 ft. long by 16 ft. wide. This may have been 
extended eastward in the late 1Sth or early 16th 
century and a south aisle added, and later again in 
the 16th century a further aisle added on the south 
side, the first aisle then becoming the nave. The 
evidence for this is, however, far from being conclu- 
sive, the chief reasons in support being the nature 
of the walling at the west end of the north aisle, the 
width of the aisle itself, which is greater than that of 
the nave, and the difference of detail of the two 
nave arcades, which seems to point to that on the 
south being later in date, though perhaps at no great 
interval of time, than that on the north. The naveand 
aisles are under three separate and continuous gabled 
roofs, that over the south aisle and the north slope of 


Q__10 30_40 _30 


comprising the whole of the west and 


ie T t 
coor 


south walls and the east wall as far as the 
north side of the chancel, was rebuilt or 
refaced in the 18th century, probably in 
1748,%* at which time the tower was 
also erected. The development of the plan is not 
clear from the evidence of the building, but the 
present north aisle may represent the nave of a 14th- 
century building which would be perhaps about 


56 Edward Browne of Bartle, ‘adhering Green ;_ ibid. 


31555 


SCALE OF FEET 
Pran of WooprLtumrpron Cuurcu 


the north aisle being covered with stone slabs and 
the others with modern blue slates. The older 
masonry is of red and yellow sandstone intermixed, 
but the 18th-century walling consists of squared 


3174; Royalist 51 Commonw. Ch. Surv. (Rec. Soc. 


to the forces raised against the Parlia- 
ment,’ had his lands sequestered, but took 
the National Covenant, &c., in 1646 
and was allowed to compound ; Royalist 
Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), 
i, 251-5. 

Jane Brewer, widow, had two-thirds 
of her estate sequestered for recusancy, 
‘conformed’ in 1648, but had in 1651 
failed to secure discharge of her land. 
She then seems to have renounced Pro- 
testantism, for she petitioned in 1654 to 
be allowed to contract for the seques- 
trated part under the Recusants Act ; Cal. 
Com, for Comp. iv, 2886. John Ward’s 
Case, 1652, appears to be of the same 
Kind ; ibid. 2991. 

Other recusants were William Beesley 
and his wife, both dead in 1653, when 
Peter Blackburn and Katherine his wife 
(heir of Henry son of William Beesley) 
petitioned for discharge, and George 


7 


Comp. Papers, i, 172. 

57 Francis Almond of Lawton House, 
Edmund Baine of Catforth, Elizabeth 
Billington, William Billsborough, Richard 
Clarkson (steward for Sir N. Shireburne), 
Perpetua Clarkson, Anne Crichlow, Robert 
Kellet, William Kitchen, Richard Latus 
and Thomas Willasey; Estcourt and 
Payne, Engl. Cath, Nonjurors, 91, 103, &c. 

58 The house of Gilbert the chaplain of 
Plumpton is named in a Sowerby charter 
about 12403; Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 245. ‘Of Plumpton’ may be a 
surname. The chapel is not named in 
the grant of St. Michael’s to Battlefield. 

59 Fishwick, op. cit. 76. 

60 As in wills quoted ibid. Ellen Top- 
ham, widow, in 1556 left 20s. to the 
church of Woodplumpton (where she 
desired to be buried), and 6s. 8d. to 
Nicholas Lawrenson to pray for her soul ; 
Richmond Wills, 88. 


289 


Lancs. and Ches.), 147. 

® Ibid. 148; no minister is named. 
The £50 was given in 1646 out of T. 
Clifton’s sequestered estates;  Plund. 
Mins. Acces. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), 
i, 26. The chapel was vacant ; ibid. 32. 

63 Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. ii, 454-5. 
The chapel was ‘duly served by a curate.’ 

6 Manch. Dioc. Dir. 

64a Among the briefs collected in the 
parish of Ryton, co. Durham, is one for 
‘Woodplumpton Chapel in Com. Lanc.’ 
received 12 June 1748. The charge was 
£1,246; Proc. Soc. Antig. of Newcastle, x, 


345 A local tradition that the early 
window and door in the north aisle were 
brought to Woodplumpton from a place 
not named and inserted during the 19th 
century would, if true, destroy the argu- 
ment for the supposed early r4th-century 
date of part of the north wall. 


a7 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


blocks of gritstone with sandstone dressings. The 
south wall is a fairly good piece of classic work with 
semicirculay-headed windows and doorways and 
angle pilasters and entablature, above which, however, 
the embattled parapet of the earlier wall has rather 
unfortunately been set. The doorways have moulded 
imposts and blocked keystones with a straight moulded 
weathering on blocked corbels above, and the windows 
have plain jambs and heads with blocked imposts 
and keystones. At the east and west ends the walling 
is of plainer character. 

The church seems to have been repaired and re- 
roofed in 1639, that date being on one of the 
principals of the north aisle, and was later filled with 
square pews; but there seems to have been no 
adequate restoration in modern times till the year 
1900, when the interior was stripped of many coats 
of whitewash which covered the wal's and the 
masonry laid bare, the old square pews removed and 
new seating erected, the chancel re-arranged, new 
quire stalls and other fittings being inserted, and the 
vestry enlarzed by being extended westward. In the 
course of this latter work various fragments of an 
earlier church were discovered, including two por- 
tions of shafts with scalloped capitals, indicating the 
existence of a building here in the 12th century, 
some bits of 14th-century tracery, and a red sandstone 
slab with floreated cross. All these fragments are 
now built into the vestry wall. 

The chancel and nave are without structural 
division, the chancel, which is inclosed by modern oak 
screens and is 27 ft. 6 in. by 14 ft., occupying the 
first and half the second bay from the east, a 6-ft. 
length of plain wall forming the original 15th- 
century sanctuary at the east end. The east window 
is a modern pointed one of four lights with per- 
pendicular tracery, and the roof, together with those 
of the nave and south aisle, is also modern. The 
north arcade consists of five pointed arches of two 
chamfered orders on octagonal piers, 20 in. in 
diameter, with moulded caps and bases, 6 ft. in 
height to the top of the caps, the arches all being of 
equal width. On the south side the arcade differs 
somewhat in the setting out, though the number of 
bays is the same and the detail somewhat similar. 
The work, however, is rather more rough in cha- 
racter and the piers are 6in. more in height. There 
is a 4-ft. length of straight wall at the west end, and 
the two outer arches, east and west, are less, and the 
second one from the east greater, in width than 
those in the north and the remaining arches on the 
south side. The north ais'e is 16 ft.in width and 
is lit at the east end by a three-light window with 
low four-centred arched head and external hood 
mould, and at the west by a new four-light square- 
headed Gothic window inserted in the 18th-century 
wall. The north side had originally three windows, 
but the easternmost one was removed when the vestry 
was enlarged, the reveal alone remaining as a recess. 
Next to this, about the middle of the aisle, is a late 
two-light square-headed opening, and further west 
the interesting early 14th-century window already 
mentioned, of two pointed trefoiled lights with 
a rounded trefoil in the head and segmental rear 
arch. The north door, which may be c. 1400, has 
a pointed arch with plain sunk chamfered jambs and 
head on which are carved symbolic paterae, including 
three four-leafed flowers, a rose, fish, and the initial 


m (twice). The north wall has apparently been 
raised about three courses, probably in the 17th 
century, when the roof was renewed, and is built in 
the lower part of blocks of red and yellow sandstone 
3 ft. to 4 ft. long, but of less size above, and is 
strengthened by two buttre-ses each of two stages. 
The roof retains some of the 17th-century oak 
principals, but is otherwise new, and has overhanging 
eaves, and on the south slope is pierced by two dormer 
windows of six lights each. 

The south aisle is 13 ft. wide, with a two-light 
segmental-headed window at each end and four 
windows and two doors on the south side. The 
west tower, or campanile, measures 6 ft. squarc 
inside, and is set towards the north side of the 
nave gable, to the height of which it is carried up 
square, finishing with a moulded cornice, above 
which is an octagon lantern with an open arch on 
each face, surmounted by a small stone dome with 
ball and fish weather-vane. The lower part of 
the campanile, which is open to the church with 
a modern arch filled in by a modern oak screen, has 
a round-headed west window with keystone and 
blocked jambs, and on the south side is an old 
disused clock-face. 

The font now in use is a modern one (1901) of 
red sandstone. An old round font, found some years 
ago at the back of the church, fell into the hands of a 
local mason, by whom it was re-cut, re-chiselled and 
reduced to octagon form, all vestiges of its original 
character being destroyed. It now stands outside, to 
the north of the turret. 

Many of the old 18th-century oak pew ends, carved 
with various initials and dates between 1716 and 
1746, have been used as panelling round the walls, 
and at the east end of the south aisle is the 17th- 
century oak communion table with the initials ‘WA’ 
and the date 1635. 

There are two bells, one dated 1596 and the other 
1837, but without other inscription or founders’ 
name. 

The plate is all modern and comprises a chalice, 
paten and flagon of 1859, given by Mr. Charles 
Birley of Bartle Hall; a paten of 1896, ‘The gift of 
Gertrude Emily Birley, Easter 1896’; and a small 
flagon of 1897, given by Richard Marsden in memory 
of his son James Marsden. There are also two 
chalices, two breadholders and two flagons of pewter, 
all inscribed ‘I. Woods and R. Parker Churchwardens 
1822.’ 

The register of burials begins in 1603 and those 
of baptisms and marriages in 1604, from which 
year they are complete with the exception of gaps 
between 1625 and 1628 and between 1648 and 
1653. The first two volumes (1614-59) have 
been printed.% 

The churchyard lies principally on the south and 
west sides. There is an octagonal stone shaft sur- 
mounted by a sundial, the plate of which is dated 
1657, and on the south wall are traces of a large 
painted sundial with the motto ‘Sic transit gloria 
mundi’ on the architrave. Near the entrance on the 
south side are the remains of the stocks, on one pillar of 

Se AB 
which is cut rs 

66 Lancs. Parish Reg. Soc. Publ. xxvii (1 906). Transcribed by 
Henry Brierley. 


290 


i 


' Alt 


Woopp.tumpton Cuurcu: Tue Nave, tooxinc East 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


The incumbents, styled vicars, are appointed by 
the vicar of St. Michael’s. The following is a list of 


them 7 :— 
oc. 1552-62 Nicholas Lawrenson 
oc. 1604-13 John Hollinworth 
oc. 1614 R... Lomax” 
oc. 1621 Roger Farrand 7 
oc. 1629-30 John Dugdale 
oc. 1637-41 John Gregge 
oc. 1646-7 Peter Jackson “4 
oc. 1650 John Wright 76 
- 1651 John Haydock 78 
oc. 1669 Robert Wayte 7” 
oc. 1676-80 John Harrison 
1684 Thomas Kirkham, B.A.78 
c. 1695 Thomas Cockshutt, B.A.”° (Pembroke 
Coll., Camb.) 
1700 Timothy Corles, B.A.8° (Emmanuel 
Coll., Camb.) 
1704 Ralph Loxam, B.A.®! (Jesus Coll., 
Camb.) 
1708 Robert Butterworth 
oc. 1735 Matthew Worthington 8 
1797 Charles Buck, M.A.® (St. John’s Coll., 


Camb.) 


GARSTANG 
1803 Henry Foster 
1836 Isaac Mossop ®! 
1884 William Henry Ramsbottom ® 
1889 Ernest Turner Millard 


A free school was founded at Catforth in 1661-6.88 

Roger Kitchen’s house in Woodplumpton was 
licensed in 1689 as a meeting-place for Noncon- 
formists,®” but the congregation does not seem to have 
continued, 

The Wesleyan Methodists have a chapel at Wood- 
plumpton, erected in 1819 8; the Primitive Metho- 
dists appeared at Catforth in 1815, and soon afterwards 
a chapel was built there, replaced in 1863 by the 
present one.®9 

St. Andrew’s Roman Catholic church, at the south 
end of the township, is known as Cottam Chapel, as 
representing the old mission maintained by the Hay- 
dock family at Cottam Hall, close by. This had to 
be given up in 1717, on the estate passing into the 
hands of Protestants, but a new chapel was soon after- 
wards opened in Woodplumpton. It was destroyed 
in 1746, after the defeat of the Young Pretender, and 
again in 1768 by mobs from Preston. The present 
church succeeded it in 1793.9 St. Robert’s, Catforth, 
was opened in 1877.° 


GARSTANG 


NETHER WYRESDALE NATEBY CATTERALL 
HOLLETH GARSTANG CLAUGHTON 
CLEVELEY (Parr) KIRKLAND BILSBORROW 
CABUS BARNACRE-WITH-BONDS PILLING 
WINMARLEIGH 


The parish of Garstang has an area of 28,881 acres, 
and the population in 1901 numbered 5,896,} 
employed for the most part in agriculture, though 
there are some scattered factories. 

The northern boundary is peculiar, Holleth being 
quite detached from the main body of the parish and 
having a small part of its area within the parish of 
Cockerham, in which also is contained about three- 
fourths of Cleveley. Some evidences of the Roman 
occupation have been found.? Before the Conquest 


only three manors existed—Garstang, Catterall and 
Claughton—and these three, with the addition of 
Bilsborrow, were all the townships existing in 
1327-41.3 It was only slowly that the other town- 
ships became separate. In 1624 the.county lay was 
apportioned as follows: Garstang, £10 §5. 340. ; 
Catterall, £1 135. 7$¢.; Claughton, 18s. 93d. ; and 
Bilsborrow, £1 45. 64¢., making a total contribution 
of £14 25. 3d. towards the £100 levied upon the 
hundred. The older fifteenth was of similar pro- 


87 Much of the list is due to Col. Fish- 
wick, who gives biographical notices, op. 
cit. 80-8. It will be seen that the 
curates changed very frequently, the 
chapel being often vacant, until the 18th 
century. 

8 His name occurs in the inventory of 
church goods and in the visitation lists of 
1554 and 1562; Chet, Misc. (new ser.), 
i, 10. 

% His name appears in the registers. 
He was ‘no preacher’ ; Hist. MSS. Com. 
Rep. xiv, App. iv, 8. 

In 1619 the name occurs as George 
Lomas; he was presented to the Bishop 
of Chester for making clandestine 
marriages ; Visit. records at Dioc. Reg. 
He seems to have moved to Broughton. 

71 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 69. Afterwards at Broughton. 

Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xxii, 70. 

73 Misc, (Rec. Soc.), iy 124. 

7 Registers, 


75 Plund. Mins. Accts. i, 235. 

6 Ibid. 236. Haydock was still there 
in 1654.3 ibid. 140. 

77 Afterwards of Bispham. The curacy 
was vacant in 1674; Visit. Papers at 
Chester. 

78 Visit. Papers at Chester, 1686. 
Kirkham was curate and ‘conformable’ 
in 16893 Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. 
iv, 230. In 1691 he was at Garstang 
and in 1693 at Melling. 

79 The church papers in Chester Dioc. 
Reg. begin with this curate. 

80 Afterwards of Longton. 

81 Afterwards rector of North Meols. 

82 Afterwards vicar of Childwall. 

8 He had been vicar of St. Michael’s, 

& For the church in his time see A. 
Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 59. 

85 Formerly a solicitor, 1877-80. Went 
to South Africa, 1890. 

8 Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. ii, 455 3 End. 
Char. Rep. From the visitation present- 


291 


ments at Chester (Dioc. Reg.) it appears 
that George and Robert Boulton were 
teaching school, unlicensed, in 1622. 

87 Hist. MSS. Com, Rep. xiv, App. iv, 
232. 

88 Fishwick, op. cit. 132; Hewitson, 
op. cit. 554. 

89 Fishwick, loc. cit.; Hewitson (op. 
cit. 551) states that it originated in a 
camp meeting at Great Eccleston. 

90 Gillow, Haydock Papers, 53-6, 76, 
&«.3 Liverpool Cath. Annual ; Hewiteon, 
op. cit. §5. A priest was labouring in 
the district in 1653, as appears by the 
story of John Baines of Woodplumpton, 
admitted to the English College, Rome, 
in 1674; Foley, Rec. S. J. v, 425. 

91 Liverpool Cath, Annual. 

1 This does not include any in Cleveley. 

2 Pal. Note-Bk. v, 15. 

8 Subs. R. of 13323 Lng. Nonarum, 37. 

4 Gregson, Fragments (ed. Harland), 


23. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


portions. The townships had by that time become 
distinct,® and Bishop Gastrell in 1717 reckoned them 
as eleven, arranged in four quarters—Garstang, 
Claughton, Barnacre and Wyresdale ; Pilling was in 
the first-named quarter.’ 

Garstang is midway between Preston and Lan- 
caster, on the ancient road to Scotland, and has thus 
witnessed many stirring events, such as the devas- 
tating raid by the Scots in 1322,° but ancient remains 
are scanty.” 

There was a visitation of the plague in 1349-50.” 
In 1444 William Marsden and others were charged 
with having broken into a fulling mill at Garstang 
and stolen forty ells of woollen cloth called russet. 
value 40s., the goods of John Ingoll,” 

Leland, journeying north about 1535, says: ‘ After 
I rode over Brock water, rising a vi miles off in the 


Garstang out of the hills on the right hand and 
cometh by Greenhalgh, a pretty castle of the lord of 
Derby’s, and more than half a mile thence to Garstang 
in Amounderness. Some saith that Garstang was a 
market town.’? 

The district was hostile to the Reformation ® and 
favourable to the king’s cause in the Civil War, 
though some companies were raised for the other 
side." Greenhalgh Castle was one of the two impor- 
tant fortresses remaining till 1645 to give trouble to 
the Parliamentarians. Their historian gives the 
following account of its surrender : — 

Colonel Dodding with his regiment, with Major Joseph 
Rigby’s companies, laid close siege to Greenhalgh Castle, keep- 
ing their main guard at Garstang town, into which [castle] 
were gotten many desperate Papists. Their governor was one 


Mr. Anderton. They vexed the country thereabouts extremely, 
fetching in the night time many honest men from their houses, 


A 


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Moss ee, “Halls wrt sdSforth JS | NX 
Pebad *. NATE BY df oe with -y: WS 
a : Bowers? foges BONDS £47 OX. 
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hills on the right hand and goeth at last into Wyre. 
Calder rising about the same hills, goeth also into 
Wyre; I rode over it. By the town’s end of 
Garstang I rode over a great stone bridge on Wyre 
ere I came to it. Wyre rises a viii or ten miles from 


making a commodity of it. They sallied out oft upon the 
Leaguers and killed some. They stood it out stoutly all that 
winter. The country was put to extraordinary charges in 
maintaining the northern men, who made a prey without pity, 
such abundance of provision they weekly destroyed, The 
Leaguers had thought to have undermined the castle and blown 


° Gregson, Fragments (ed. Harland), 
19 ; Garstang paid £6, Catterall 19s. 8d., 
Claughton 115., and Bilsborrow 14s. 4d. 
towards the hundred’s total of £56 4s. 8d. 

® A schedule of tenants in the manor 
of Nether Wyresdale in 1604 names 
Barnacre and Bonds as separate town- 
a Fishwick, Garstang (Chet. Soc.), 
47-0. 

7 Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 409. 

§ John the Tailor of Kirkland, flying 
from the Scots, complained of being 
robbed near the Lostock in Leyland ; 
Coram Rege R. 254, m. 42. 

® Fishwick, op. cit. 2-4. 

0 Engl. Hist. Rev. v, 526, 528. The 


archdeacon of Richmond alleged that 2,000 
had died, but the jury allowed only £3 
out of his claim for £13 for probate dues. 

‘| Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 6, m. 225, 

2 Itin, v, 97. 

18 The patent rolls of the early years of 
James I show a number of sequestrations 
for recusancy in the parish, e.g. Oliver 
Cottam in Barnacre and Bilsborrow ; 
Pat. 6 Jas. pt. xxi. 

In 1630-2 the following compounded 
by annual fines for the two thirds of their 
estates liable to sequestration for recu- 
sancy: Barnacre—John Bee £2, Robert 
Layfield £3; Catterall—Robert Shire- 
bume £20; Kirkland—John Butler 


292 


£3 6s. 8d. ; Pilling—John Bradshaw (for 
his wife) £5, Thomas Dalton £3 6:. 84.5 
Winmarleigh—Thomas Moiyneux £5 ; 
Wyresdale—William Baines £2, Thomas 
Parkinson £3, Wolliam Parkinson 
Lo 133. 4d. 5 Trans. Hist. Soc. (new sets 
xxiv, 175, &c. 

Large numbers refused to sign the Pro 
testation of 1641; Fishwick, op. cit. 
264-72. For the case of William Capes 
see Cal. S. P. Dom. 1638-9, pp- 155, 171- 

4 ¢Mr. Fyfe that dwelt at Woodacre, 
Mr. Christopher White of Claughton, 
Mr. Whitehead of Garstang town ; these 
raised their comfaiie: within Garstang 
parish ' ; War in Lancs. ‘Chet. Soc.) 42- 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


it up with gunpowder, and great cost was spent about it to 
pioneers, but to no effect ; the ground was so sandy it would 
not stand. At last this Anderton died, and them there within 
being thereby discouraged, they were glad to come to a compo- 
sition to deliver it up upon conditions—which were, that they 
might go to their own houses and be safe. It was ordered that 
the castle should be demolished and made untenable and all the 
timber taken out of it and sold, which was done. And so it 
lies ruinated. . . . It was very strong, and builded so that it 
was thought impregnable with any ordnance whatsoever, having 
but one door into it, and the walls of an exceeding thickness and 
very well secured together.}5 


Celia Fiennes, who passed through this ‘little market 
town’ about 1700, was here ‘ first presented with the 
clap bread which is much talked of, made all of oats.’ '* 

In the Jacobite rising of 1715'’the town clerk, Roger 
Muncaster, joined their forces, as did several others of 
the district. Muncaster was executed at Preston, and 
three of the local men at Garstang on 14 February 
1715-16." Though Prince Charles Edward and his 
army passed through in 1745," it does not appear 
that they secured any adherents in this parish. 

A century ago the district was famous for its 
cattle, which were of a peculiar breed, ‘of a smaller 
size than the Lancashire, of elegant shape and beauti- 
fully curled hair, with wide spreading horns and 
straight backs.’ The Wyre then supplied the inhabit- 
ants with plenty of fine soft water, and afforded 
good diversion to the angler as abounding with trout, 
chub and gudgeon and in springtime with smelts.” 

The following table ™* shows the manner in which 
the agricultural land is now employed :-— 


Arable | Permanent Woods and 
land grass plantations 
ac. ac. ac. 

Barnacre-with-Bonds 94 3,8044 394 
Bilsborrow . . . 43 821 — 
Cabus joa OS 1,285 174 
Catterall . 2. 67 1,082 2 
Claughton 48 3,138 298 
Garstang ig a —_— 423 — 
Holleth . . . . 59 285 15 
Kirkland . “ 48 839 30 
Nateby . . . 8414 1,183 43 
Pilling 2,874 2,248 33 
Winmarleigh . 604 1,234 604 
Nether Wyresdale . 10 2,8534 157 
4,733 19,196 1,050 


The church of ST. HELEN” stands 
CHURCH on the south side of Churchtown village, 
close to the right bank of the River 


18 War in Lancs, (Chet. Soc.), 60. The who joined were 


John Leyburne of 


GARSTANG 


Wyre, about 14 miles to the south-west of the town 
of Garstang, and consists of a chancel with north and 
south aisles and north vestry, clearstoried nave with 
north and south aisles, south chapel, south porch, 
and west tower.” 

The earliest parts of the building are the pier and 
responds on the north side of the chancel and the 
piers of the nave arcades, which are of 13th-century 
date, indicating a church at that period of about the 
same length and width as at present. This early 
building, however, would probably be without 
clearstory, and would terminate at the west end with 
a gable, from a window in which the nave would be 
lighted. The chancel may have been originally 
without a south aisle, but there is no evidence of this, 
as the arcade on that side is of later date, probably 
work of the 14th century, to which period the chancel 
arch belongs. The chancel was most likely entirely 
reconstructed at this period and a south aisle added, 
the pier and responds on the north side being re- 
tained perhaps by reason of the beauty of the work, 
which is unusually good for this part of the country, 
or possibly for merely structural reasons. In the 
15th century,” and again in the 16th century,” the 
church was largely rebuilt, the whole of the outside 
walls belonging to these periods, a chapel added on the 
south side of the south aisle of the nave and a tower 
erected at the west end, the building assuming in a 
large measure its present appearance. ‘The windows 
are all of this last date with perpendicular tracery, 
with the exception of those at the west end of the 
nave aisles, which are of r4th-century date and may 
have been originally in the south quire aisle. The 
small irregularly-shaped two-story vestry at the 
north-east corner of the building is apparently of 
16th or early 17th-century date, and a gabled hearse- 
house against the west side of the porch was probably 
erected in the middle of the 18th century. In 1746 
an inundation of the Wyre overflowed the church- 
yard and so much injured the church that it was 
thought that it would be necessary to take it down 
and entirely rebuild it, but on inspection the building 
was found to be structurally sound, so that restora- 
tion alone was necessary. 

In 1811 the walls of the nave and chancel were 
raised and a clearstory erected in place of the gabled 
dormer windows which had before existed, and the 
whole of the building was at the same time re-roofed 
and ceiled. A more thorough restoration took place 
in 1865-8," when the square pews and galleries 
which had been erected in the previous century were 
from Bd. 


20a Statistics of Agric. 


date of surrender is not given, but it was 
in or after May 1645. The defender 
was Capt. Nicholas (son of James) 
Anderton of Clayton ; Castlemain, Cath. 
Apology; Foley, Rec. S. J. iii, 779. 

16 Through England ona Side-saddle, 156. 
Kuerden’s account of his tour through 
this part of Lancashire notices the water- 
mill and the ‘fair stone bridge’ at the 
entry into Garstang ; Loc. Glean. Lancs. 
and Ches, i, 217. 

The Highland army passed through 
the ‘small market-town’ on 9 Nov. ; 
Patten, Hist. of Rebellion (ed. 1745), 79. 

8 Fishwick, op. cit. 70-3. Mun- 
caster was executed at Preston on 27 Jan.; 
those at Garstang were Joseph Wadsworth 
and Thomas Goose of Catterall and 
Thomas Cartmell of Claughton, Others 


Nateby, Edward Sykes of Nether Wyres- 
dale and Thomas Walmesley of Bils- 
borrow. The place of execution is 
uncertain ; one tradition gives it as Stocks 
Lane End in Catterall, but another as 
Lancaster Lane, about half a mile north 
of Garstang; Hewitson, Our Country 
Churches, 4.74. 

19 Advancing 27 Nov., retreating 
13 Dec. At the former date the 
treasure chest is said to have been stolen 
by some of the people, but was restored 
after a threat to put all the inhabitants to 
the sword ; Hewitson, loc. cit. 

20 Cooke, Lancs. (1805), 122-3. 
‘Drunken Barnaby’ thus notices the 
local cattle: 

©Veni Garstang, ubi nata 
Sunt armenta fronte lata,’ 


293 


(1905). 

21 So called circa 1200 (note 30). 

22 Cf. Glynne, Lancs. Churches (Chet. 
Soc.), 243; Hewitson, Our Country 
Churches, 449-62 ; Whitaker, Richmond- 
shire, ii, 4.53. 

23 In 1403 the king ordered the chief 
forester of Myerscough to deliver four 
*keisnes’ to the parishioners of Garstang 
for the repair of the church ; D. of Lance. 
Misc. Bks. xv, 51d. (pt. ii). 

24 Thomas Graystock in 1561 left 
6s. 8d. towards the building of the new 
aisle; Richmond Wills (Surtees Soc.), 
I5l. 

5 A restoration committee was formed 
in 1864.... It took about five years 
to complete the work’ ; Hewitson, North- 
ward, 44. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


removed, the nave re-seated, and the roofs opened 
out, the intcrior then assuming its present appearance. 

The walls are of rubble masonry with ashlar 
dressings, finishing with a plain ashlar parapet to the 
aisles and chapel, but the chancel and nave roofs, 
which are of flat pitch, have overhanging eaves. The 
chancel roof is slightly lower than that of the nave, 
and their east gables being unmarked by a cross 
or other apex stone, an appearance of flatness is pro- 
duced. The external appearance of the church has 
no doubt lost much of its distinction by the removal 
of the old higher-pitched roofs. 

The chancel is 36 ft. g in. long by 19 ft. 3 in. 
in width, and has a five-light pointed window with 
perpendicular tracery, moulded jambs and head, and 
external hood mould with carved terminations. The 
line of the 15th-century roof shows on the exterior 
of the gazle, the east wall of the 1811 clearstory 


io J O 10 20 


walling. The north aisle, which is 12 ft. to in, 
wide, is the full length of the chancel, and is lighted 
by two three-light pointed windows with Perpendicular 
tracery on the north side and a similar one at the 
east end. Below the east window, close to the floor 
level, is a square-headed opening, now built up, 
19 in. high by 64 in. wide, splaying to 2 ft. 9 in. 
inside, the sill of which is 2 ft. 4 in. above the 
ground on the outside, the purpose of which is 
not clear. On the south side of the chancel is 3 
6 ft. length of wall containing a piscina with trefoil 
head and projecting bowl moulded on the underside, 
and beyond an arcade of two pointed arches of two 
chamfered orders springing from an octagonal pier with 
moulded capital and base, and from semi-octagonal 
responds. On the east wall to the south of the 
chancel window is a moulded corbel or bracket, 
11 in. deep, square on plan, with a four-leaved flower 


30 


Scole_of Feet 
N 


Pian or Garsranc Cuurcu 


being simrly built above it. The wall on the north 
side of the chancel for a distance of 13 ft. from the 
east end is of 15th-century date, with a pointed 
doorway to what was probably a vestry built at the 
east end of the original shorter aisle, but which is 
now part of the aisle itself. West of this is an arcade 
of two pointed arches of two chamfered orders spring- 
ing from a central eight-shafted pier with moulded 
base and carved capital, and from a respond of similar 
detail at the east end. At the west end the arch 
dies into the wall, stopping with a four-leaved flower, 
but the 13th-century respond still remains set back 
within the later masonry. The detail of the pier 
and responds is very good, the bases having the water 
moulding, and the caps, which are 12 in. deep, being 
carved with stiff-leaved foliage. The capital of the west 
respond is 3 ft. lower than the others, the height of 
which to the top of the capitals is 8 ft. 3 in., it having 
probably been mutila:ed and built up in the later 


ornament, § ft. above the floor. The south chancel 
aisle, which is 13 ft. 4 in. wide and has a pointed 
south door with moulded jambs and head, is about 
9 in. less in length than the chancel, and, like the 
north aisle, is lighted by two three-light pointed 
windows with perpendicular tracery on the south 
side and one at its east end. The chancel is sepa- 
rated from the aisles by modern oak screens, and has 
two clearstory windows, similar to those of the nave, 
on either side. The roof is a modern timber one 
of four bays and the floor is tiled, the aisles being 
paved with flags. 

The chancel arch is of two orders each with the 
wave moulding, springing from similar responds 
having modern caps, but retaining their original 
moulded plinths, which are mutilated, on either side 
for a former screen. In the pier south of the 
chancel arch facing east is a segmental-headed door- 
way with hollow-chamfered jambs and bead, which 


294 


GarsTanc CHurcH FRom THE NorTH-EAsT 


Garstanc Cuurcu: THe Nave, Lrooxinc Easr 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


led formerly to a stone staircase, the underside of 
three of the steps of which are still visible above 
the opening. The lower steps have been removed 
and a skew passage-way cut through the masonry to 
the nave, the pier having been rebuilt and the stair- 
case done away with. Previous to the restoration of 
1868 the south aisle was blocked from floor to 
ceiling by a large stone ‘vault,’ and a faculty had to 
be obtained for its removal, the materials being used 
in the restoration of the church. 

The nave, which is 55 ft. 6 in. long by 21 ft. 9 in. 
wide, has an arcade of five pointed arches of two 
chamfered orders on each side, springing from circular 
piers 2 ft. in diameter, with plain moulded capitals and 
bases. On the north side the height of the piers to the 
top of the capitals is 10 ft. 3 in., but on the south 
the height is 6 in. less, and the top member of the 
cap is octagonal in plan instead of circular as in the 
north. The north-east respond is half-octagonal, 
but the others are of the same type as the piers, 
those at the west being something less than halfa 
circle, and the westernmost pier on the north side 
leans badly to the west. ‘The arches are of later 
date than the piers, belonging probably to the 15th- 
century rebuilding. All the stonework of the arcade, 
both of piers and arches, has been re-chiselled. There 
are three square-headed clearstory windows of three 
pointed lights on each side, and the roof, which is 
of five bays, is modern. The north aisle is 13 ft. 3 in. 
wide, and has two pointed three-light windows, with 
perpendicular tracery on the north side and a pointed 
doorway in the second bay from the west, of two 
hollow-chamfered orders and external hood mould, 
above which is a niche with a crocketed canopy, 
now much worn. ‘The west window is of red sand- 
stone, with three trefoiled lights and straight bar 
tracery and quatrefoils in the head, but without a 
hood mould. At the west end of the south aisle, 
which is 12 ft. wide, is another pointed sandstone 
window of three cinquefoiled lights, with quatrefoil 
tracery, the mullions crossing in the head ; both these 
windows, which, as already mentioned, are of 14th- 
century date, have plain chamfered details. The 
south aisle is open to the chapel at its eastern end 
by two wide pointed arches of two chamfered orders 
springing from an octagonal pier and responds, to 
the west of which and 13 ft. from the west wall is 
the south doorway, with segmental head and square 
splayed jambs. The chapel, formerly the chantry ot 
the Blessed Virgin, is 33 {t. 3 in. by 12 ft. 8in., the 
floor being raised two steps above that of the nave. 
In the south wall is a piscina with trefoiled head and 
wide chamfered jambs, and the roof is the original 
flat one of oak divided into seven bays by moulded 
beams, with intermediate moulded pieces, forming 
in all twenty-one squares. On the south wall are 
stone corbels, lower than the crown of the window 
arches, carrying portions of an older beam moulded 
on the edges, above which, carved along the wall- 
plate, is the inscription ‘saNcTA MARIA ORA ® NOBIS 
DEMON SCRIBIT IBI CVNCTA LOCVTA SIBI A° DN 
M°D°XXIX HOC OPVS AGITAT IN TEMPLO GENTES 


ae In 1836 the vestry underwent some _ is 
repairs, and over the ceiling was dis- 
covered a small room. In it were some 
of the brasses now on the church walls’ 
(Fishwick, Hist. of Garstang, 92). A list 
of the mural tablets and inscriptions 


1610. 


given by Fishwick. 
chiefly of 17th and 18th-century date. 
The earliest brass commemorates George 
Ainsworth, who was vicar from 1575 to 


27 Yt was given by the contractor for 


GARSTANG 


CAVEANT SIMVL ESSE LOQVENTES.’ ‘The chapel has two 
pointed windows of three trefoiled lights, and with 
perpendicular tracery and external hood moulds on 
the south side, and on the east a window of later 
date, with four-centred arch and three plain pointed 
lights. 

The porch is 12 ft. 10 in. by 8 ft. 6 in. wide, 
with a stone seat on each side, and open outer arch 
of two chamfered orders 6 ft. wide by 10 ft. high, 
with plain gable above set between the higher wall 
of the south chapel and the wider gable of the hearse- 
house, which is flush with it. 

The west tower, the centre line of which is about 
2 ft. to the south of that of the nave, is 11 ft. square 
inside, and has a projecting vice with stone spirelet 
in the north-east corner, and diagonal angle buttresses 
on the west side of six stages going up to the string 
immediately below the belfry windows, which are of 
two trefoiled lights under a square labelled head. 
The embattled parapet has been rebuilt apparently 
in the 18th century and is poor in detail. There 
is a clock on the north side towards the village, but, 
except for a small square-headed window to the 
ringing chamber, the north and south walls below 
the belfry are quite plain. The west door has a 
pointed arch of two hollow-chamfered orders and 
external label, and the window above is a pointed 
one of three trefoiled lights with perpendicular 
tracery. The tower arch is of two chamfered orders, 
the outer one dying into the wall at the springing. 

The north-east vestry is built of large blocks of 
squared stone, in contrast to the rubble masonry of 
the rest of the building, and is entered from the 
north chancel aisle by a four-centred arched doorway. 
It measures internally ro ft. 6 in. square, with a bay 
window 3 ft. 6 in. deep on the east side, and is now 
open to the roof, the original upper floor having 
been removed.” 

The pulpit is of oak, dated 1646, with a new 
stem and top mould, and is a good piece of Jacobean 
woodwork with square moulded panels. At the east 
end of the north quire aisle are preserved portions of 
oakwork said to have been originally round the stalls, 
bearing the inscription ‘Bona consuetudo excutiat 
quod mala extruxit. Minus semper dicito qua facias.’ 
The stalls themselves have been restored, four of the 
six on each side having carved misericordes. There is 
a good 18th-century brass chandelier in the nave,” 
but the font and the rest of the fittings are modern. 

There is a ring of six bells by T. Mears of London, 
1828. 

The plate consists of a chalice 8 of 1658 inscribed 
‘Garstang,’ with the maker’s mark T C linked ; a 
chalice inscribed ‘Garstang 1690’ without date letter, 
but with the maker’s initials R M thrice repeated ; a 
paten of 1719 without inscription ; two flagons of 
1795, both inscribed ‘The gift of Isabella Pedder, 
wife of John Pedder, vicar of Garstang, for the use 
of that church, 1795’; and a paten of 1872-3 
without inscription. 

The registers begin in 1567, but there are gaps 
from January to June 1601, January to March 1609, 


the 1746 restoration ; Baines, Lancs. (ed. 
1836), iv, 460. 

28 The churchwardens in 1680 gave a 
report on the state of the church and its 
furniture. There were a silver chalice and 
two pewter flagons, Visit. Ret. at Chester. 


They are 


295 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


September to December 1653, and from April 1659 
to December 1660.” 

The churchyard, which lies principally on the north 
and south side:, is entered from the village at the 
north-west corner, and is bounded on the west and 
south-east by a line of beech trees. On the south 
side are the base and octagonal stump of a cross, the 
latter 2 ft. 6 in. high, and further west an 18th- 
century pedestal sundial, the plate dated 1757, with 
the name of John Miller, Preston, and the motto 
‘Pereunt et imputantur.” On the east side is a stone 
slab, much mutilated and worn, with the raised full- 
length figure of a man with hands clasped. 

The advowson of the church of 

ADVOWSON Garstang was held by the Lancaster 
family as appurtenant to their manor 

or fee of Nether Wyresdale, and in 1204-5 Gilbert 
Fitz Reinfred and Helewise de Stuteville were able 
to prove their right against the rector of St. Michael’s, 
who alleged that Garstang was a chapelry to which 
he should appoint.*’ Gilbert afterwards granted the 
advowson to Cockersand Abbey,” and the canons 
held the church and rectory down to the Dissolution. 
Queen Mary, in refounding the Savoy Hospital in 
1556-8, included the advowson of Garstang, and 
the master of the hospital in 1558, immediately 
after Elizabeth’s accession, demised it to Christopher 
Anderton of Lostock for ninety-nine years." After- 
wards the advowson appears to have been acquired 
absolutely, and was in 1679 sold by Sir Charles 
Anderton of Lostock to Silvester Richmond, a Liver- 
pool physician,“ whose son and namesake in 1740 


sold to Richard Pedder of Preston.* It has since 
descended in this family, the present patron being the 
vicar, the Rev. John Wilson Pedder.” 

The rectory was in 1291 valued at £26 135. 44. 
a year, but after the incursion of the Scots in 1322 
this was reduced to £10" ; an increase to Lia wa 
recorded in 1341." The valuation of 1535 was 
only £19." After the Dissolution the Crown leased 
the rectory out apart from the advowson,” and in 
1604-5 sold it to Lawrence Baskervill.’ It appean 
to have been purchased by Robert Bindloss of Bor- 
wick,” who also acquired the lessees’ interest,® and in 
1622 the tithe corn was farmed for a gross sum of 
£274." Arent of £40 was paid to the Crown, and this 
was part of the queen’s income.* The main portion 
of the rectory passed to Standish of Standish by 
marriage, and has since descended with this manor.“ 

A vicarage was ordained in 1241 by John Romaine, 
then Archdeacon of Richmond. The vicar was to 
have the tithes, &c., of Claughton, which included 
the hamlets of Douansargh and Heyham, the obla- 
tions of the entire parish at Christmas, Easter and 
the patronal feast, with mass pennies and other dues. 
The vicar was to be responsible for the due celebra- 
tion of divine service, the payment of the arch- 
deacon’s dues, Peter’s pence, &c. A residence was 
allotted to him at Philiptoft, by the churchyard, also 
an oxgang of land in the town fields of Garstang 
exempt from tithes.” The vicar’s income was in 
1291 taxed as £13 65. 8d. reduced after 1322 to 
£5. In 1535 the gross value was estimated as 
£Li4 8s. 8¢.,% by 1650 this had advanced to (60, 


29 Some extracts are given in Fishwick’s 
Garstang (Chet. Soc.), 127-40. The 
vestry books go back to 1734 ; ibid. 125. 

5% Gilbert (who was grandson of Rein- 
fred) said that the advowson of the church 
of St. Helen of Garstang belonged to his 
wife Helewise, who had not been sum- 
moned. She was the daughter and heir 
of William de Lancaster by Helew'se (de 
Stuteville), the other defendant to the 
claim on behalf of St. Michael's. This 
Helewise said she claimed nothing except 
as dower, and calied Gilbert and Helewise 
his wife to warrant her; Assize R. 1039, 
m. 3. The date is known by an entry 
in the Pipe Roll, stating that Matthew 
the Physician owed 10 marks for the 
summoning of a jury to decide whether 
the church of Garstang was a chapel of 
St. Michael’s or not; Farrer, Lancs. 
Pipe R. 192. The jury stated that 
St. Helen's had always been regarded 
as a mother church, and pointed out 
that it had never been regaried as in 
the king's gift (as St. Michael’s was, in 
inquiries made in the time of Henry II 
and of John himself when Count of 
Mortain ; Curia Regis R. 32, 36. 

3 Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 
278; the gift was made for the souls 
«! Kings Henry and Richard, also of 
King John, the grantor and his wife, 
with the consent of William de Lancaster 
his heir. The date is about 1215, in 
which year King John ratified it ; ibid. 
46. Helewise de Stuteville also con- 
curred ; ibid. 279. William de Lancaster 
confirmed his father’s gift and added 
4 oxgangs of land ; ibid. 280. 

William Archdeacon of Richmond 
approved the gift, reserving the right to 
ordain a vicarage ; ibid. 281. Gregory IX 
confirmed it in 12323 ibid. 25. 

The Avbot of Cockersand was rector 


in 1246, when he claimed an oxgang of 
land as the free alms of his church and 
not the lay fee of Jordan son of Thorfin ; 
Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 106. Jordan relinquished his claim ; 
Cockersand Chartul. i, 276. 

$7 Anderton D. (Mr. C, J. Stonor). 

3 Ibid. The list of vicars shows that 
Christopher Anderton presented in 1559. 
In 1650 another Christopher Anderton, 
‘a Papist delinquent,’ was patron ; Com- 
monw. Ch, Surv, (Rec. Soc. Lance. and 
Ches.), 149. 

Fis. wick, op. cit. 83, citing Pedder 
D. An account of the Richmond family 
is given ibid. 83-6. % Ibid. 86, 

36 The descent is thus given: Richard 
Pedder —gth 8. James (vicar, 1755-72) 
-8. John (vicar, 1794-1835) ~s. James 
(vicar, 1835-56) -bro. John (vicar, 
1856-9) —bros. Thomas and Richard, of 
whom the latter survived; he was of 
Preston and Finsthwaite House, Ulvers- 
ton, d. 1891 —bro. Wilson (vicar, 1859- 
g1) and his son John Wilson, present 
vicar, who has afforded the editors this 
and other information. 

57 Pope Nich. Tax. (Rec. Com.), 307, 327+ 

38 Ing. Nonarum (Rec. Com.), 37. The 
contribution of Garstang was recorded as 
£9 6s. 8d, Claughton £1 135. 44, 
Catterall £1 6s. 8d. and Bilsborrow £1 ; 
the glebe also produced £1 6s, 8d.; a 
total of £14 135. 4d. Waste due to the 
destruction made by the Scots accounted 
for the £12 reduction. Claughton (and 
Frerhaps also the glebe) appertained to the 
vicarage. 

89 Valor Eccl. (Rec. Com.), v, 261. 

1. and P. Hen. VIII, xiv (1), 609 ; 
a grant by the Court of Augmentations 
in 1539. A lease for twenty-one years 
was made to Edward Turner in 1588; 
Pat. 30 Eliz. pt. xv. 


296 


| Pat, 2 Jas. I, pt. xvii. 

12 Though it does not appear that the 
lay rector was in any way responsible for 
the church services, complaint was made 
in 1621 that Sir Robert Bindloss refused 
to keep a curate in the rectory of Gar- 
stang which he had purchased, so that six 
hundred persons were destitute of services ; 
Cal. S. P. Dom. 1619-23, p. 283. 

Sir Robert Bindloss of Borwick and 
Rebecca his wife made settlements of the 
rectory of Garstang, &c. in 1650 and 
1660; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F, bdle. 
149, m. 38; 165, m. 4. 

43 Fishwick, op. cit. 88, citing ‘Exch. 
Bills and Answers, Jas. I,’ no. 156, 

{4 Ibid. 89. 

45 Pat. 2 Chas. I, pt. iv (14 Mar.). 

46 Fishwick, op. cit. go. About 1717 
“Lady Standish, a Papist, [ was] impro- 
priator of six townships and Mr. Butler 
of the other four’ ; Gastrell, Notitia Cestr. 
(Chet. Soc.), 409. 

47 Cockersand Chartul. i, 282-3. 

% Pope Nich. Tax. 307. 

49 Valor Eccl. v, 263; the manse and 
demesne lands were worth 24, clea‘, 
tithes of grain £8 135. 4d. and of wool, 
&c., £1 135. 4d., other small tithes and 
dues as in the Easter roll £4. The vicar 
was liable for synodals 2s, and procura- 
tions 31. $d. : 

In 1571 the vicar was alleged to claim 
“plough pence’ and ‘house mirey, 
otherwise called smoke money or smoke 
pence,’ belonging to the rectory ; Fishwick, 
op. cit. 88. 

59 Commonw. Ch. Surv. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), 149-50; the vicarage- 
house and 3 acres of glebe were worth £3 
a year, Stout House, on the glebr, worth 
£13 6s. 8d. but then detained by John 
Greenwood of Lancaster under a .ease from 
Dr. Wildbore ; tithes of Claughton LAs. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


and by 1717 to £73 10s." At the present time the 


net value is £266 a year.” 


The names of some of the early rectors are known, 


GARSTANG 


Robert occurring about 1190-1206," both singly 
and in conjunction with Henry; also William 
somewhat later. 


The following have been vicars :— 


Instituted Name 

oc. 1277-8 . Benedict * at od 
29 May 1281 Roger de Cockersand ” 
0c. 1330. - 
oc. 1341. 6 
oc.1347- + « 

c.1356. - Richard Pacock™® . . . 
21 Oct. 1380 Richard de Preston® . 
oc. 1385... . Roger Pacock®. 2... 
16 Mar. 1395-6 Thomas de Green“ 

P7410. Robert Lancaster 


16 Nov. 1421 
Roger Garnet 


William We Sipton oy cs 
William de Lonersale® . . 2, 
William de Caton® . . . . 


Robert Carrington. . . 


Patron Cause of Vacancy 


Archbishop of York . . 


Cockersand Abbey . . 


PPT 


Cockersand Abbey . . 


Cockersand Abbey d. R. Lancaster 


3 Aug. 1422 be LSE A og ‘9 

14 Feb. 1422-3 Robert Overton . 2. . . 44 F res. R. Garnet 
2") Sept. 1.429 Thomas Hoton® . . . . . e ‘ res. R. Overton 
oc. 1461 (2). Henry Pee ane aaa lah Agha te. By 
oc. 1481. . John Bradford®* . . . 1 1, —. — 
oc. 1500. John Woods” ae fay ee — — 
oc. 1508 . . « Thomas Bowland** . . 2. 2. = axial 
c.1515 . . . John Lancaster® . 2. 2. 2... —— — 
oc. 1535 . . James Dugdale® . 2. 2. 2... 


Oct. 1545 
18 Jan. 1558-9 
28 July 1562 


51 Gastrell, Notitia, ii, 408 ; glebe £14, 
tithes of Claughton £46 10s. modus 
for tithe hay £1, Easter reckonings £5, 
and surplice fees £7. This value had 
increased to over £80 a year by 1725 ; 
ibid. 409. The glebe land measured 16 
or 17 acres. A terrier of 1736 is in the 
Visit. Ret. 

The glebe is situated partly in Kirkland 
(the vicarage, &c.), but chiefly in Garstang 
(Stout House).  *? Manch. Dioc. Dir. 

53. R. de Garstang was a surety to the 
monks of Wyresdale for the chaplain of St. 
Michael’s between 1194 and 1199 ; Farrer, 
Lancs, Pipe R. 338. He is no doubt the 
Robert de Garstang who attested a 
Conishead charter about 1190 ; ibid. 361. 
Robert rector of Garstang and Paulin his 
brother also occur ; Cockersand Chartul. i, 
291. See also Lanc. Ch. (Chet. Soc.), i, 
573 li, 387 (dated 1205-6). 

Paulin was perhaps the ancestor of 
Edmund de Wedacre living in 1340; De 
Banco R, 321, m. 294. 

5 Robert and Henry, rectors of 
Garstang, made an agreement as to the 
tithes of Bilsborrow with Robert the Clerk 
of Preston, the latter releasing his claim ; 
Cockersand Chartul. i, 334. 

55 Lanc, Ch, ii, 362 (dated 1230), 429. 
William de Lancaster (III), sending 
greeting and sincere love to William 
rector of Garstang, directed him to render 
his homage and service for land in Nateby 
to Gilbert the Clerk ; Dods. MSS. cxlix, 
fol. 77. About 1260 one William was 
‘chaplain’ of Garstang; Cockersand 
Chartul. i, 292. 

56 Benedict vicar of Garstang attested | 
Claughton charters; Add. MS. 32104, 
No. 933, 1309. In 1278 he complained 
of a ditch in Garstang, made by John le 
Tailor, but died about that time 3 Assize 
R, 1238, m. 313 1239, m. 39. Also 
Dep. Keeper's Rep. xlvi, App. 166. 

” York Reg. Wickwane (Surtees Soc.), 
1195 collated by reason of the archbishop’s 
visitation, He was a priest. 


7 


Richard Preston, M.A... 
James Anderton” . . 


Hugh Anderton, B.C.L.? So 


Roger vicar of Garstang in 1292 made 
a claim against Henry de Haydock and 
William the White, executors of the will 
of Adam de Brockholes, and recovered 
40s.; Assize R. 408, m. 98. He may 
be the Roger afterwards Abbot of 
Cockersand ; Chartul. i, p. xxii. 

58 He claimed 50s. as owing by John 
de Bardsey, Thomas de Southworth and 
Gilbert de Howath ; De Banco R. 283, 
m. 280d. 

59 John de Pleasington in 1341 com- 
plained that William de Lonersale, vicar 
of Garstang, had broken down his hedges 
and trespassed in his corn and grass there ; 
De Banco R. 327, m. 151. 

60 Ibid. 352, m. 537d. 

61 Complaint was made that he kept 
greyhounds and dogs for hunting foxes 
and hares, to the hurt of the deer; 
Duchy of Lanc. Forest Proc. bdle. 1, 
no. 20, m. 3. 

6 This and some later institutions are 
taken from Whitaker, Richmondshire, ii, 
453, citing Torre’s MSS. 

Richard de Preston was vicar in 1382 ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 1468. 

68 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, gt. 

64 Thomas Green became Abbot of 
Cockersand in 14103 Chartul. i, p. xxil. 

6 In 1444 a monition was issued 
against the vicar of Garstang for non- 
residence; Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.), 
xxii, 373. Thomas Hoton as vicar in 
1467-8 witnessed the last will of Roger 
Dugdale, who left one of his animals for 
the repair of Garstang Bridge ; Richmond 
Wills (Surtees Soc.), 5. 

66 Kuerden MSS. iv, G4. 
is erroneous. 

66a Cockersand Chartul. iii, 1133, &c. 
He was a canon of the abbey and vicar as 
late as 1497. 

6 Ibid. 1144. He also was a canon 
of Cockersand, 

67a Named in a settlement by Ralph 
Catterall recited in Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
p-m. iy, no. 4. 


The date 


297 


‘ John Kechyn . . . 
. . . Christopher Anderton 
The Queen. < 


d. last inc. 
d. last inc. 
res. J. Anderton 


68 Ina return made to the king in 1527 
it was stated that Garstang Rectory, 
appropriated to Cockersand Abbey, was 
worth £20 a year and the vicarage £10. 
The latter had been held by John Lancas- 
ter, one of the canons of the house, for 
twelve years and more; Duchy of Lane. 
Rentals, bdle.5,no.1§. In 1524 Lancas- 
ter had some dispute with John Brock- 
holes, John Rigmaiden, Robert Pleasing- 
ton the elder and Richard Cottam ; the 
award was that, after anyone died, his rep- 
resentatives should give the vicar, ‘for the 
solemn singing,’ 1d. if unable to give the 
rector a mortuary, 2s. if able to give a 
mortuary, and 3s. if a gentleman; Add, 
MS. 32105, no. 823. 

In 1520 Robert Walhill was ‘parish 
priest,’ or curate in charge; Fishwick, 
op. cit. 217. In 1524 Adam Astley was 
‘curate’; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. vy, 
no. 62. 

69 Valor Eccl. v, 263. 

70 Act Bks. at Chester, 1502-76, fol. 
236. In 1538 the Abbot of Cockersand 
granted the next presentation to Sir 
William Poulet and John Kechyn ; Church 
Papersin Dioc. Reg. Chester. The Church 
Papers and Act Bks. have supplied the 
later vicars, where no other references are 
given. Accounts of the various incum- 
bents will be found in Fishwick, op. cit. 
145-200 ; Baines, Lancs. (ed. Croston), v, 
421-4. Richard Preston was still vicar 
in Sept. 15573 Catterall D. (W. Farrer); 
also in 1558-9, according to Piccope, 
Wills (Chet. Soc.), iii, 74; but there 
must be a mistake in the date. 

71 In old pedigrees ¢ James Anderton, 
priest,’ is named as a brother of Peter 
Anderton of Anderton; e.g. Harl. MS. 
1549, fol. 22. In the Visit. List of 1562 
he was said to be at Oxford, but the entry 
(though James is named) may refer to the 
next vicar. 

72 Of this vicar nothing seems to be 
known except that he joined with Chris- 
topher Anderton, the patron, in granting 


38 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Instituted 
to Mar. 1574-5 
2 Feb. 1609-10 
17 Feb. 1620-1 


Apr. 1645 
2g Nov. 1654 ] 
3 June 1663 Robert Ditchfield, B.A.” . 
28 July 1677 Henry Patten, M.A.” . 
6 Jan. 1678-9. Robert Hunter ® 


g Mar. 1679-80 . 
28 Nov. 1684 
10 Mar. 1696-7 
4 Apr. 1698 

1 Mar. 1706-7 
4 Mar. 1722-3 
14 July 1731 

1 June 1750 . 

3 Sept. 1755 . 
2g June 1772. 
22 Aug. 1794 . .- 
27 July 1835 . 

Fey GS 560 5 

18 Oct. 1859 

14 July 1891 


a lease of the vicarage to Thomas Ander- 
ton ; Fishwick, op. cit. 144, citing Pedder 
D. Hugh Anderton graduated from St. 
Mary Hall, Oxfi.q B.A. 1¢66, BUC.L. 
15723 Foster, -/umnar. From an agree- 
ment dated 1583 between John Bold, 
farmer of the vicarage, and Thomas 
Brockholes of Claughton it appears that 
a grant of the vicarage was made in 1581 
by Thomas and Hugh Anderton of 
Chorley during the life of the said Hugh 
Anderton, B.C.L.3; Add. MS. 32105, 
fol. 2284. There is therefore something 
doubtful about the time and manner of 
Ainsworth’s succession. 

3 The bishop collated ‘by lapse.’ 
George was a younger brother of Henry 
Ainsworth, the Brownist. 

In a return made in 1590 he was 
described as ‘no preacher’; S. P. Dom. 
Eliz. xxxi, 47. A similar report was 
made of him about 1610, but at that time 
one of the king’s preachers had been 
stationed at Garstang ; Hist. A1SS. Com. 
Rep. xiv, App. iv, 8. 

4-5 From this time the institutions are 
recorded in the Inst. Bks. P.R.O. printed 
in Lanes. and Ches. Antiz. Nites, i, 95, &c. 

Dr. Wildbore was vicar of Preston 
1626-30, and of Lancaster 1630 onwards. 
Both benefices were sequestered by the 
Parliament, he being a Royalist. He 
died in 1654. 

7°Tt is improbable that Edmundson 
had any legal title to the vicarage, as Dr. 
Wildbore was sequestered only for ‘delin- 
quency,’ but he is styled vicar in the 
registers. He was approved by the 
Assembly of Divines as ‘godly and 
orthodox,’ and required to officiate as 
vicar and preach diligently, having for his 
pains therein the vicarage-house, &c. ; 
Plund. Mins. Accts. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 3. He was a member of the 
Classis in 1646, and signed the ‘ Har- 
monious Consent’ in 1648; he was 
approved as ‘a diligent painful minister’ 
in 1650; Commonw. Ch. Surv. 150. 
Edmundson’s title ceased on the termina- 
tion of the sequestration by Dr. Wild- 
bore’s death in 1654, and the people 
petitioned that Ambrose, who had long 
had the office of king's preacher in the 
neighbourhood, should be appointed, ‘there 


Name 


George Ainsworth? . . 

George Mitton, BA. . . . . 
Augustine Wildbore, D.D°  . 
Christopher Edmundson 

Isaac Ambrose, M.A.7. . 


Richard Richmond, M.A.” 
Richard Wroe, D.D.% . . 
Robert Styth, BA. 2 . . 
Henry Richmond, B.A“. . 
Thomas Waring, M.A“... 
Thomas Hayward, M.A.* 2... 
Lezh Richmond”. . . 1. os 
Thomas Hunter, M.A... 
James Pedder, B.A.” 2... 
James Fisher®™ . 2. 2 
John Pedder, M.A." . 
James Pedder, M.A. 2. 
John Pedder, MLA” 5... 
Wilson Pedder, M.A. . . 
John Wilson Pedder, M.A.” . 


The King 


being agreat necessity of such a reverend 
and able man among us in regard to the 
extraordinary profaneness, lukewarmness, 
popery and several strange heresies so 
much abounding’ ; Fishwick, op. cit. 168. 
Edmundson was presented to Hawkshead 
in 1657 (Plund. Mins. Accts. ii, 182, 
307), probably conformed in 1662, and 
died at Hawkshead in 1675. 

Hiet Edmundson, son of Christopher, 
entered St. John’s Coll., Camb., in 1661, 
aged seventeen ; he was described as ‘of 
Oldham.’ He graduated B.A. in 1664, 
and became vicar of Deeping; Mayor, 
Admissions to St. John's, iy 149 3 Wilson, 
Sediergh Reg. 85. 

7 Vicar of Preston 1639-57. He was 
presented to Garstang 1 Sept. 1654, and 
the appointment was ratified 29 Nov.3 
Plund. Mins Accts. ii, 54. On the 
restoration he obtained a new presenta- 
tion from the king ; Dep. Keeper’s Rep. 
xlvi, App. 19. He was deprived for 
nonconformity in 1662 and retired to 
Preston. 

7 The bishop presented by lapse. This 
vicar, who was of St. Mary Hall, Oxf., 
B.A. 1662 (Foster), appears to have had 
a doubtful title. In 1676 the king pre- 
sented Richard White, M.A., to the 
vicarage ; Dep. Keeper's Rep. xlvi, App. 
121. Ditchfield died at Garstang in July 
1677. 

‘* The king presented ‘by reason of 
simony or other cause’; Patten was 
instituted, but his title must have been 
faulty, as the next vicar was presented as 
successor to Ditchfield. Henry Patten 
matriculated at Oxford in 1664 (Foster, 
Alumni), but the source of his degree is 
not known, 

Hunter was curate of Liverpool 
1670-88 ; he probably occupied Garstang 
till Richard Richmond was of proper age. 

*l'In the Inst. Bks. P.R.O. and the 
Church Papers the date is given as in the 
text; in the Act Bks.as 30 Oct. 1679. 
For this vicar see the accounts of the 
rectors of Sefton (1684-1721) and Walton 
(1690-1721). 

% Also Warden of Manchester (q.v.) 
1684-1718. 

% The patrons were Sarah, Richard, 
Silvester and Henry Richmond and 


298 


Patron 


Bishop of Chester. . . 
James Anderton 7 
Master of Wards . . 


Master of Savoy . . . 
Bishop of Chester . ; 


Silvester Richmond . . 


Richard Righswond, Be, . res. 
Silvester Richmond . 


Richard Pedder 
James Pedder. 2 . 
John Pedder 
James Pedder . . . 
John Pedder . . : 
Richard & Thomas Pedder 
J. W. Pedder . . . 


Cause of Vacaney 


_—— 


d. G. Ainsworth 


depr. I. Ambrose 


d. Rt. Ditchfield 


res. R. Hunter 


Richard Richmond . . res. R. Richmond 
Sarah Richmond, &c. . res. R. Wroe 


res. R. Styth 

H. Richmond 
. dT. Waring 

- +. res. T. Hayward 
. . . res, L. Richmond 
res. T, Hunter 
d. J. Pedder 

res. J. Fisher 

d. J. Pedder 

d. J. Pedder 

d. J. Pedder 

d. W. Pedder 


Richard Houghton. Styth was one of 
the curates of Liverpool, and occupied 
Garstang for twelve months only, till 
Henry Richmond (one of the patrons) 
was ready. 

‘4 Educated at Brasenose Coll., Oxf.; 
B.A. 1695 ; Foster, d/umni. He became 
one of the rectors of Liverpool in 1706. 

8 Educated at Christ Ch., Oxf.; M.A. 
1688 ; Foster. 

56 Educated at Brasenose Coll., Oxf. ; 
M.A. 1719; Foster. He was head 
master of Warrington Grammar School, 
and held Garstang only until the patron's 
son was of age for institution. 

87 Son of the patron, He resigned 
Garstang on being presented to the rectory 
of Stockport, 1750-69 ; Earwaker, East 
Ches. i, 396, 372- His grandson, of the 
same name, wrote the Dairyman's 
Daughter, &c. 

88 Educated at Queen’s Coll., Oxf., but 
left without graduating. He had Balderston 
chapel, but resided at Garstang ; Visit. 
Ret. In 1771 the degree of M.A. was 
granted by the University for his Philo- 
sophical Character of Lord Bolingbroke. 
He wrote other works. From 1755 till 
his death in 1777 he was vicar of Weaver- 
ham, Cheshire. See Fishwick, op. cit. 
193-7 3 Dict. Nat. Biog. 

59 The patron is described as ‘of 
Preston, linen draper’; the vicar was 
his son. He was educated at Brasenose 
Coll. Oxf.; B.A. 17535 Foster. A 
‘threatening letter’ by him, addressed to 
the priest at Claughton, is printed by 
Hewitson op. cit. 460. 

” ‘The patron, an infant, was son of the 
late vicar. Ye 

91 The patron presented himself in this 
and some following cases. John Pedder 
was educated at Trinity Coll. Camb. 
M.A. 1794. 

9 Educated at Christ’s Coll, Camb. ; 
M.A. 1829. 

a Bduccted at St. John’s Coll., Camb. ; 
M.A. 1829. 

4 Educated at Brasenose Coll., Oxf. ; 
M.A. 1842, vice-principal of Wella 
Theological Coll. 1242-7, vicar of 
Compton Dando 1847 4 J.P. for Lancs. 

5 Educated at Brasenose Coll, Oxf. ; 
M.A. 1876. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Before the Reformation the vicars appear to have 
been, as a rule, canons of Cockersand ; one or two 
became abbots, but nothing is known of them further. 
The services of the church, its chantries, and the 
chapels at Garstang and Pilling would normally 
require five priests, or a nominal staff of six should 
the vicar be non-resident or only occasionally resident. 
In the visitation list of 1554 six names appear, but 
in that of 1562 only two are given, the non-resident 
vicar and the curate, who appeared but did not 
subscribe.%6 The story during the remainder of 
Elizabeth’s reign is unknown ; probably the vicar or 
a curate was in sole charge. The religious people in 
general probably remained Roman Catholic. An 
incident in 1600 shows the popular sympathies. The 
Bishop of Chester having sent a pursuivant to arrest 
‘some obstinate recusants’ in and near Kirkland, the 
vicarage was attacked during the night by a number 
of armed men and shots were fired at the house to 
intimidate the vicar and pursuivant.°? 

In view of the state of the people, one of the four 
‘King’s Preachers’ had already been stationed at 
Garstang,°*® and later the famous Puritan Isaac 
Ambrose held the office there. In 1619 Anne wife 
of John Butler of Kirkland was presented to the 
Bishop of Chester ‘for being of bold, insolent and 
offensive behaviour in maintaining of popish supersti- 
tion and making choice of popish recusants to be her 
servants’; and two of the gentry, Edward Kirkby 
and Bartholomew Jackson, did ‘offensively keep 
argument in maintaining of popery and disgracing of 
the profession of the Gospel, especially on the Sabbath 
day.’ %9 

Under Bishop Bridgeman an effort at improvement 
was made, for acurate of Pilling isnamed in 1639.10 
Even under the Commonwealth the only resident 
ministers were the vicar and the curate of Pilling, 
and the latter had been silenced.!°!_ Isaac Ambrose 
is the only vicar of eminence, and after his expulsion 
in 1662 the list contains no name requiring com- 
ment, except that of the non-resident Wroe. The 
parish was not neglected.1°? The diary of Thomas 
Parkinson, curate 1723-5, shows that ‘ prayers were 
then said in the church on all Wednesdays and 
Fridays, and all saints’ days and holy days throughout 


GARSTANG 


the year.” The communicants were numerous, being 
236 on Good Friday and 285 on Easter Day, 1723.1% 
Soon afterwards the vicars appear to have resided, so 
that with curates at Garstang and Pilling the normal 
staff was raised to three. 

In 1755 the churchwardens made a religious census 
and recorded 461 Protestant families, 154 Papist, 
and 18 Dissenters. The number of ‘Papists’ 
in the parish reported to the Bishop of Chester 
increased from 230 in 1717 to 837 in 1767.14 

There were two chantries. ‘he principal was 
that of St. Mary, at the altar on the south side of 
the church. It was founded by Margaret Rigmaiden, 
one of the daughters and co-heirs of John Lawrence 
of Ashton near Lancaster, for a priest to celebrate 
for the souls of her ancestors, a stipend of {5 6s. 84. 
being allowed out of her hereditary lands. Her 
heir John Rigmaiden about 1547 refused to pay the 
stipend, and so the chantry ceased.!% ‘This refusal 
was probably due to a desire to save the endowment 
from confiscation ; if so it did not succeed, for in 
1606-7 a grant was made by the Crown of ‘ Ashton’s 
lands’ belonging to a chantry in Garstang Church.10 
The other chantry was that of the Brockholes family, 
which may have been the one they were bound to 
maintain by the tenure of Claughton. Nothing 
but a stipend of 40s. belonged to it; Henry Hey 
was the incumbent in 1547.107 

Official inquiries into the charities 

CHARITIES of the parish were made in 1824 and 

1898.18 Apart from several small 

educational endowments, amounting in all to £133,109 

the poor receive money doles out of a gross total of 
£82 16s. 3d. available. 

Elizabeth Caton of Cabus in 1728 left £30 for 
money or cloth for the pocr of the whole parish. 
John Caton of Claughton in 1720 left {£40 for the 
poor, and Christopher Caton of the same place in 
1721 left another {40 for the poor of Claughton. 
With these sums Round Meadow in Forton was 
purchased, and in 1824 part of the rent was spent 
in cloth at Martinmas and part in money at Christmas. 
Margaret Blackburn of Scorton in Nether Wyresdale 
in 1718 bequeathed £50 to the poor of this township 
and £40 ‘for the learning of poor children.’ John 


solemn obit with note and mass of 


% Visit. Lists at Ches. Dioc. Reg. 
The church ‘ornaments’ remaining in 
2 were scanty; Fishwick, op. cit. 

1-2, 

7 Cal. 8. P. Dom. 1598-1601, pp. 
466-7. Over ninety persons were sum- 
moned before the justices. 

% This is evident from the story ; see 
also Cal. S. P. Dom. 1633-4, p. 467. 

% Visit. presentments at Chester. 
Several persons were in trouble in 1624 
for taking part in a funeral in which the 
corpse was set down at crosses by the 
wayside, with ‘obeisance to the same in 
superstitious manner,’ and was ‘ buried 
without the minister’s aid or any prayers 
made’; Fishwick, op. cit. 274. 

100 Misc, (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), 
i, 124. The vicar was non-resident, 
holding Lancaster also. Ambrose was 
king’s preacher from 1635, and resided 
at Garstang till his appointment to Pres- 
ton ; Fishwick, op. cit. 163. 

10 Commonw. Ch. Surv. 150. The visit. 
list of 1691 shows a vicar (non-resident), 
a curate and a second curate at Pilling. 

In 1680 the churchwardens reported 


‘many Papists, or reputed for to be, and 
some Quakers’; Visit. Ret. 

103 Parkinson, Old Ch. Clock (ed. 1880), 
188-9; at Eastertide 1724 the com- 
municants numbered about 740. See 
also Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1870), ii, 532. 

104 Visit. Ret. at Chester. 

101a Trans. Hist. Soc. (new ser.), xviii, 
217. 
his Raines, Chantries (Chet. Soc.), 199; 
there was no plate. 

106 Pat. 4 Jas. I, pt. xiii. 

107 Raines, op. cit. 201. An inquiry 
was made into the matter in 1561. 
John Rigmaiden, then aged thirty-six, 
produced the will of Margaret Rigmaiden, 
dated 19 June 1516, She directed her 
trustees to set aside 8 marks a year ‘to 
hold and keep therewith a sufficient and 
able priest to read and sing in the said 
church of Garstang continually for ever, 
in manner following : That is to wit, to 
say mass three days in every weck, and 
Placebo and Dirige with three lessons 
every ferial day, the commemoration, 
Pasch time and octaves precipue only 
except; and also every year to make a 


299 


Requiem in like wise for my husband’s 
soul, my soul, all our parents’ and friends’ 
souls; and also help to maintain and 
keep divine service in the said church 
every Sunday and holy day at matins, 
masses and evensong in his surplice as oft 
as there shall happen to be company to 
do the said service with note.’ Her son 
Richard Rigmaiden was the first priest 
appointed ; on his death John Pye suc- 
ceeded, and dying was followed by Thomas 
Lawrenson (1543), who was cantarist for 
two years or more. It was then that 
John Rigmaiden, deceased, refused to pay, 
and Lawrenson died in Holborn of the 
plague about 1550; Duchy of Lane. 
Special Com. 33. 

108 The report of the 1898 inquiry, 
issued in 1899, contains also the report 
of 1824. 

109 The Sunday school attached to the 
parish church has also a small endowment. 

10 The will declares, ‘though I ex~ 
clude no sort of poor from partaking of 
my charity, yet still I would have poor 
Catholics preferred before others,’ 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Jenkinson in 1733 left £20 for the poor of the same 
township, and Henry Barton in 1784 left the residue 
of his personal estate, which residue amounted to 
£454, for the poor of Nether W'vresdale and 
Claughton in equal shares. These sums, with 
assistance from the Caton estate, were used to purchase 
the Cook Green Farm in Forton. These charities 
have long been admin‘stered together. The landed 
estate was sold in 1886 and the proceeds, £1,400 
invested in consol, yield, with the interest on £24 
in the savings bank,’ £38 10s. 8¢. a year. This 
income is apportioned thus: Claughton, £20 Ios. ; 
Scorton, £11; Garstang, £5 10s. Si; trustees’ 
allowance, £1 10s. ‘The original trusts are partly 
for clothing, but the dis:ribution is now made in 
money... . It has long been customary to confine 
the Caton charities to Roman Catholics.’ 

William Baviton in 1679 gave to trustees Dimples 
Field in Barnacre and Calder Field in Catterall for 
the poor of Barnacre and of Garstang and Catterall, 
and added {60 in money, which was spent on land 
in Forton. ‘The estate is intact and produces 
£36 155. 7d. a year, with a prospect of increase. In 
1898 it was the custom ‘to distribute £10 to the 
poor, £6 to hospitals, £4 each to four public 
elementary schools, and to reserve the balance for 
expenses.” '? 

A rent-charge of {4 on land in Claughton granted 
by Elizabeth Parker in 1757 in fulfilment of the 
wish of her father Joseph Chorley is given thus: 
£1 in Catterall, £1 in Claughton and £2 in Preston 
to poor persons not in receipt of poor law relief. 

Margaret Catterall, widow, in 1868 left £100 to 
the incumbent and churchwardens of St. Lawrence’s, 
Barton, for the poor of Bilsborrow, the interest to 
be given in either money, clothing or food. The 
income is {£2 los. a year.'¥ 

John Corless in 1721 left £20 to the poor of 
Garstang, the interest to be given in wheat. The 
capital was in 1756 spent on the town hall, and £1 
a year has since been given from the funds of the 
town, Is. each being given to twenty poor widows or 
others on St. Thomas’s Day. Elizabeth Vasey in 
1811 bequeathed £20 for gifts of 1s. each to poor 
widows of Garstang on Christmas Day. The trustee 
died insolvent about 1858, and the capital was lost. 

Gregory Sturzaker of York left £50 for the poor 
of Winmarleigh. This is now considered to be 
represented by a rent-charge of £2 on a farm in 
the township, part of the late Lord Winmarleigh’s 
estate. It is distributed by two of the farmers in 
small doles at Christmas time. 


NETHER WYRESDALE 


Wyresdale, 1246. 
The township retains the name of the large dis- 


1 The origin of this sum has not been 


trict of which it forms part. The River Wyre in 
general bounds it on the west, and (Grizedale Brook, 
on which at one point a reservoir of the Fylde water- 
works has been formed, forms about three-fourths of 
the southern boundary. The surface, level along 
the Wyre, rises to the south and the east, 1,000 ft. 
being attained on the side of Grizedale Fell. The 
small village of Scorton lies in the south-west corner, 
Dolphinholme in the extreme north. The area 
measures 4,215 acres,' and in 1991 there was a 
population of 454. 

The principal road, from Garstang into Over Wyres- 
dale, passing through Scorton goes thence nerth-west 
through the township, being crossed about the centre 
by another road, south-east from Ellel. From Scorton 
a road goes west to Cockerham, crossing the Wyre 
by a bridge; there are various minor roads, and 
several other bridges over the Wyre, including one at 
Dolphinholme. The London and North-Western 
Company’s main line to Scotland crosses the south- 
west end, and has a station called Scorton near that 
village. 

The pipe-line of the Thirlmere-Manchester water 
supply passes through the township. 

The soil is loamy and clayey ; practically all the 
land is in pasture. There is a fish hatchery, in the 
hands of a limited liability company, on the River Wyre. 
Formerly there was a cotton factory at Scorton. 

The township has a parish council. 

At Cross Hill, Scorton, is the base of an ancient 
cross.” 

In 1066 this township was part of the 
large manor of GARSTANG, rated as 
six plough-lands, which was a member of 
Earl Tostig’s Amounderness lordship,’ and in later 
times NETHER WYRESDALE and Garstang were 
used indifferently to denote the fee of the barons of 
Kendal in this part of Lancashire, including the whole 
or large parts of the parishes of Cockerham, Gar- 
stang and St. Michael’s, and some part of Lancaster 
also. Members of the fee were granted out to free 
tenants or to religious houses,‘ but Nether Wyresdale, 
Holleth and Cabus in Garstang seem to have been 
retained in demesne. 

The story of the Lancaster family has already been 
told.6 William de Lancaster I held a knight’s fee 
in Warton and Garstang in the times of Stephen and 
Henry II. He gave Cockerham to monks of Leicester, 
and at his death in or about 1170 left as successor a 
son William, the founder of Cockersand Abbey. The 
second William, by his wife Helewise de Stuteville, 
left a daughter and heir Helewise to succeed him in 
1184. She married Gilbert son of Roger son of 
Reinfred,® who died in 1220 and had a son known 
as William de Lancaster III. He married Agnes de 
Brus, but died without issue in 1246’; his widow 
had Garstang and other manors in dower.’ His 


MANOR 


ascertained. 

1? Barnacre has half, Catterall and 
Garstang each a quarter of the income. 

13 Protestant Nonconformists are ad- 
mitted to the distribution, but Roman 
Catholics excluded. 

14,243 acres, including 57 of inland 
water; Census Rep. (1901). A small 
detached portion of Cleveley was added 
in 1887 by Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 20097. 
At the same time (ibid. 20100) a small 
part of Ellel was added. 


2 Lancs. and Ches. Antig, Soc. xx, 207. 
To the north of the township is the site 
of Bradshaw Cross 3; ibid. 206. 

3 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 2884, 

4 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), i, 2-5. 

5 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 357-65, of which 
the account here given is an outline. 

® Gilbert, usually called Fitz Reinfred, 
held one knight’s fee in Lancashire in 
12125 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 2. 
This fee was usually said to contain 
twenty-four plough-lands, and the Wyres- 


300 


dale portion was separately reckoned as 
half a knight’s fee. 

7 Ibid. i, 144, 165. He held in all 
thirty-six and a half plough-lands in 
Lancashire, either in demesne or granted 
out in service or alms, by the service of 
one knight. The yearly value was 
£93 101. 84d. The heirs were Peter 
de Brus, of full age, and Walter son of 
William de Lindsay, aged sixteen, 

8 In 1269-70 Agnes de Brus distrained 
Robert de Holland t» appear at her court 
of Garstang ; Curia Regis R. 109,m. 44 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


heirs were the representatives of his three sisters, 
Helewise, Alice and Sarot, married respectively to 
Peter de Brus, William de Lindsay and Alan de 
Multon ; but the last-mentioned sister having no 
children the Lancaster inheritance was divided 
between Brus and Lindsay. 

The Brus moiety of Nether Wyresdale or Gar- 
stang descended to Peter son of Peter and Helewise, 
and on his death without issue in or before 1274 
his four sisters were found to be co-heirs, namely 
Margaret married to Robert de Ros, Lucy to 
Marmaduke de Thweng, Agnes to Walter de 
Fauconberg, and Ladarena to John de Bellew.® 
Of these Margaret de Ros had Kendal and appears 
to have had little or nothing to do with Wyres- 
dale’; and the others, concerned chiefly in York- 
shire, granted their rights to John de Rigmaiden, 
who appears about 1290," and founded the family 
of Rigmaiden of Wedacre or Woodacre, seated for 
over three centuries in the adjacent township of 
Barnacre. 

The Thweng family, however, remained for about 
a century the nominal lords of part of Wyresdale.¥ 
Marmaduke de Thweng died in or before 1322 
holding part of the Lancaster inheritance, but Wyres- 
dale is not expressly named.'* He left a son and heir 
William, thirty years of age, who soon afterwards 
began a long series of lawsuits concerning the lord- 
ship and various lands against John son of John de 
Rigmaiden and others.% It was in 1333 alleged for 
the defence that Marmaduke de Thweng had alienated 
the tenement in dispute to John de Rigmaiden and 


GARSTANG 


Isolda his wife before 1285.'° William de Thweng 
died in 1340 or 1341 holding the fourth part of a 
knight’s fee in Garstang, Ellel, Scotforth and Ashton 
of the Earl of Lancaster, but 
took no profit to his own use 
beyond the rent payable to o 
the earl. His heir was his 
brother Robert, aged forty- 
six.’ 

Robert de Thweng died 
within three years, leaving 
another brother, Thomas, to 
succeed him.” In 1346 
Thomas son of Sir Marmaduke 
de Thweng is found prose- 
cuting the claim to the fourth 
part of the manor of Garstang, 
&c., already referred to." He 
died in 1374 holding four messuages, &c., in 
Garstang, and leaving four nephews and nieces as 
heirs. Of their descendants Sir John Lumley 
occurs in 1420 as holding the tenement in Garstang.” 

The Fauconberg and Bellew families scarcely 
appear in this lordship. Walter and William sons of 
Walter de Fauconberg in the father’s lifetime were 
concerned in various local suits from 1276 to 1292.” 
John son of Walter de Fauconberg in 1333-43 
claimed a rent of £10 from Garstang, alleging that 
it had been granted by John de Rigmaiden in 1305 
to his father Walter, lord of Whitton in Lincoln- 
shire.” John’s son, Sir Walter de Fauconberg, 
renewed the claim in 1351-2.% 


Tuwenc. Argent a 
fesse gules between three 


popinjays vert, 


9 Yorks, Ing. (Yorks. Arch. Assoc.), 1 
147-50. For the Brus or Bruce of 
Skelton family see Ord, Cleveland, 249-50. 

In 1278 Roger de Wedacre claimed a 
messuage and lands in Garstang against 
William de Lindsay, who replied that he 
had a share of the inheritance of William 
de Lancaster in conjunction with Walter 
de Fauconberg, Agnes his wife, Marma- 
duke de Thweng, Lucy his wife, John de 
Bellew, Ladarena his wife and Margaret 
de Ros. These were accordingly sum- 
moned, Margaret being in Westmorland ; 
De Banco R. 24, m. 50d. The land 
claimed may have been in Barnacre, 
‘Garstang’ being used for the whole of 
the fee within the parish. 

Later in the same year Richard de 


Tresal (? Threlfal), Ellen his wife and ~ 


Agnes daughter of Warine de Blyth 
claimed 60 acres in Garstang against John 
le Tailor of Garstang (Kirkland), and 
he called to warrant him the repre- 
sentatives of William de Lancaster, viz. 
William de Lindsay, Walter de Faucon- 
berg, Agnes his wife, Marmaduke de 
Thweng, Lucy his wife, Margaret de Ros, 
Sibyl and Joan, daughters and heirs of 
Ladarena de Bellew, which Sibyl and Joan 
were under age and in custody of John de 
Bellew, who lived in Yorkshire; De 
Banco R. 27, m. 41. Margaret de Ros 
does not appear again in connexion with 
Garstang. 

In 1292 Roger de Wedacre (a grandson 
of Paulinus) claimed certain tofts, &c., 
against Ingeram de Gynes, Christiana his 
wife, Ada widow of William de Lindsay 
and Walter son of Walter de Fauconberg ; 
the trial was adjourned to the full age of 
Lucy daughter of Robert de Thweng and 
of Joan daughter of John de Bellew; 
Assize R. 408, m. 38. Joan and her 
elder sister Sibyl, wife of Milcs de 


Stapleton, are named as heirs in 1292; 
Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 383. 

The Bellews do not appear again in 
Wyresdale except in the statement as to 
William de Coucy’s court (1344) quoted 
later. 

10 For the partition in 1281 see Cal. 
Close, 1279-88, pp. 105-6. 

In 1290 Marmaduke de Thweng 
and John de Rigmaiden were defendants 
to a Garstang claim by one Robert de 
Hasthorp; Assize R. 1288, m. 134. 
From 1294 onwards John de Rigmaiden 
appears to have been in sole occupation ; 
Assize R. 1299, m. 16; De Banco R. 
106, m. 145. In 1301 John and his wife 
Isolda were stated to have a third part of 
the lordship of the vill of Garstang ; 
Assize R. 1321, m. 5d. In 1309 Isolda, 
as widow, called Marmaduke de Thweng 
and Walter son of Walter de Fauconberg 
to warrant certain land to her ; De Banco 
R. 179, m. 164. 

12Marmaduke son of Robert de 
Thweng, according to later pleadings, 
granted various lands in Wyresdale and 
apparently a part of the lordship to his 
son Marmaduke, which latter Marma- 
duke had a son William, the plaintiff in 
1333 3 Coram Rege R.294,m.47. The 
first-named Marmaduke must have been 
the husband of Lucy and father of the 
Robert whose daughter Lucy was a Lan- 
caster co-heir in 1292, as recorded above ; 
see Plac. de Quo Warr. loc. cit. 

18 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, ii, 14.7. 

M4 The suits began in 1325 and lasted 
for many years; see De Banco R. 258, 
m. 2843; 264, m. 61; 275, m. 334. 

15 Coram Rege R. 294, m. 47. For 
further details see De Banco R. 304, 
m. 286; 305, m. 3393 323, m. 194. 

16 Ing. ppm. 15 Edw. III (rst nos.), 
no. 4. Among other land he held a piece 


301 


of waste called Solam or Sulam in Garstang 
(in Barnacre), named in later inquisitions 
of the family. 

17 Ing. p.m. 18 Edw. III (1st nos.), no. 45. 

18 De Banco R. 345, m. 2d. ; the pedi- 
gree is given as Marmaduke de Thweng 
—-s. Marmaduke -s. Sir Marmaduke -s. 
Thomas. It appears that Robert and 
Thomas were priests, the latter being rector 
of Kirkleatham ; Ord, Cleveland, 269. 

19 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 4. 
His three sisters (all dead) were Margaret 
wife of Sir Robert de Hilton, Katherine 
of Sir Ralph Daubeny and Lucy of Sir 
Robert de Lumley. The first left two 
daughters, Isabel wife of Sir Walter 
Pedwardine and Maud, represented in 
1374 by her son Sir John de Hotham ; 
the second left a daughter Elizabeth wife 
of Sir William de Botreux ; and the third 
was represented by her grandson Robert 
de Lumley (son of Marmaduke). 

20 Chan. Ing. pm. 10 Hen. VI, 
no. 42; he held four messuages, &c., in 
Garstang of John Duke of Bedford, also 
a messuage in the same place called 
Sulam, uncultivated. Thomas Lumley, 
his son and heir, was aged twenty-two in 
1431, when the inquiry was made. 

The Lumley estate in Wyresdale and 
Cleveley was by Private Act of 1531 
granted to the king in exchange for other 
lands and given to his illegitimate son 
Henry Duke of Richmond. This son 
dying in 1536 the lands were granted to 
Sir William Parr; L. and P. Hen. VII, 
xii (1), g- 795 (14). 

21De Banco R. 13, m. 8d.5 17, 
m. 89d.3 51, m. 48d.5 55, m. 45 5 
Assize R. 408, m. °3. 

22 De Banco R. 296, m. 1883; 326, 
m. 204.d.; Assize R. 1435, m. 52. 

23 Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 1, m. 4 
(Mich.), 5 d. (Lent). 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


The heir to the Lindsay moiety of Wyresdale in 
1246 was Walter son of William de Lindsay. 
Walter died in or before 1272, his son William being 
then of full age and married to Ada daughter of John 
de Balliol.28 William de Lindsay died in 1282, and 
soon afterwards his daughter and heir Christiana was 
by the King of Scotland married to Ingram or Ingel- 
ram de Gynes, she being then in Scotland.” This 
part of the manor was in the escheator’s hands for six 
months in 1282-3, and the receipts amounted to 
£72 35. 42% In 1292 Ingelram and Christiana 
were called upon to prove their right to the assize of 
bread and ale, gallows and infangenthef, and market 
at Warton and Garstang, but it was alleged that at 
the latter place only assize of ale was exercised, and 
that all the rights had been held by William de 
Lancaster.* In 1297 half a knight’s fee in Amoun- 
derness was held of the Earl of Lancaster by Ingram 
de Gynes, Walter de Fauconberg and Marmaduke de 
Thweng, who rendered 5s. a year for castle ward™ ; 
and in 1302 Ingram de Gynes and John de Rig- 
maiden were tenants of the half-fee in Garstang. 

Ingram and Christiana were involved in many local 
suits, as was a Gilbert de Lindsay, and in 1313-14 
the defendants to a claim for common of pasture in 
Garstang were Marmaduke de Thweng, Walter de 
Fauconberyz, Ingram de Gynes, Christiana his wife, 
Gilbert de Lindsay, a number of Rigmaidens and 
others.*' Baldwin de Gynes was enfcoffed of the 


Lindsay moicty of Wyresdale before 1318,” and in 
one version of the feodary of 1324 he appears as 
tenant by knight’s service, rendering 25. 6d. a year 
for castle ward.* Ingram de Gynes died in 1324, 
but Wyresdale is not named in the inquisition, 
His son and heir was William, aged thirty-six. 
Christiana obtained the lordship of Wyresdale from 
Baldwin de Gynes, without the king’s licence, and 
received a pardon in 1325." She was still living in 
1333. 

William de Gynes, also known as de Coucy from 
his French lordship, in 1335, 
after his mother’s death, 
granted the barony of Lindsay 
and various manors and lands 
in Scotland and England, 
including Wyresdale, to his 
son William.*® Robert de 
Gynes, however, another son 
of Ingram, seems to have been 
made lord of Wyresdale ; on 
the outbreak of war with 
France he took the French 
side, and all his English lands 
were declared forfeit. William 
de Coucy, his nephew, was placed in possession,” but 
died in 1342, when his brother Ingram was found 
to be the heir. Several inquisitions were taken," for 
Ingram died or forfeited his rights,” so that the 


Coucy, Barry of 


six vair and gules, 


4 Lanes. Ing. and Extents, i, 166, 168. 
The family had the barony of Lindsay in 
Berwick-on-Tweed and various manors, 
&c., in Scotland. 

% Ibid. 236-8. 

26 Cal. Doc. rel. to Scotland, ii, 69, 72. 
In 1292 Edward I caused inquiry to be 
made as to the loss he might have sus- 
tained by the marriage of the heiress, but 
it was alleged to be the custom that when 
an heir had lands both in Scotland and 
England the marriage was granted where 
the body was found ; Coram Rege R. 134, 
m. 38. 

For the pedigree see Duchesne, Hist. 
des Maisons de Guines... et de Cuucy, 
1631. 

The homage of Ingram de Gynes and 
his wife was specially named in a grant 
by Edward I to his brother Edmund in 
12913; Duchy of Lanc. Misc. Bks. xi, 
42d. 

27 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 258. 

% Plac. de Quo Warr, (Rec. Com.), 383 3 
a statement of the descent is given. In 
1291 Ingram de Gynes had been com- 
manded to do homage to Edmund the 
king’s brother for the lands in the honour 
of Lancaster held in right of his wife ; 
D. of Lanc. Royal Chart. no. 172-3. 

29 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 289, 297. 

30 Ibid. 316. 

31 Assize R. 424, m. 2. 

3? De Banco R. 225, m. 435d. 

33 Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 394, which 
gives Ingram instead of Baldwin (probably 
his brother). The latter name appears in 
the version printed in Gregson’s Frag- 
ments (ed. Harland), 341. The lordship 
extended over Great and Little Eccleston, 
Great Carleton, Upper Rawcliffe, Cat- 
terall, Sowerby and Rowall. 

34 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, ii, 164. 

3 Cal. Pat. 1324-7, p. 1723 Ing. 
a.q.d. file 186, no. § (19 Edw. II). 

“De Banco R. 294, m. 291d. She 
died soon afterwards ; Cal. Par. 1330-4, 


p. 561. 


37 Cal. Doc. rel. to Scotland, iii, 210. 
The pedigree above referred to states that 
William married Isabel de St. Paul. 

%> Cal. Pat. 1340-3, pp. 69-70. In 
1334 there was a treaty of marriage 
between John Earl of Cornwall (son of 
Edward III) and Mary daughter of 
William de Gynes, lord of Coucy, but 
the marriage did not take place ; Rymer, 
Foedera (Syllabus), i, 274. 

The elder William appears to have 
died in or before 1339, leaving his son 
William a minor; Cal. Pat, 1338-40, 
p- 252- Robert de Gynes was uncle of 
William the son; ibid. 1340-3, p. 70. 
Inzrim brother of the elder William is 
named in 13413; De Banco R. 326, 
m. 191d. 

39 In 1337 Edward III granted the 
custody of Robert’s lands to his nephew 
William de Coucy, the king’s yeoman 3; 
Cal. Pat. 1334-8, p. 404. It seems 
from this grant that William’s own lands 
had for the time been seized. 

William de Coucy in 1340 obtained a 
grant of free warren in his demesne 
lands of Wyresdale and elsewhere ; Chart. 
R. 14 Edw. III, m. 2, no. 7. 

40 Ing. p.m. 17 Edw. III (18t nos.), 
no. 51; Robert son of Ingram de Gynes 
is named, and Ingram, brother and heir 
of William, was of full age. The manor 
of Wyresdale (of which William had held 
a moiety) was held of the Earl of Lan- 
caster by knight’s service. The manor 
(place) was worth 12d.; 60 acres of 
arable land held by tenants at will ren- 
dered 6d. a year each, as did 11 acres of 
meadow. Various tenants at will paid 
£18. There was a park rendering gs. 
yearly ; the moiety of three water-mills 
rendered £4 anda fulling-mill tos. The 
court was held jointly with Robert de 
Bellew from three weeks to three weeks, 
and was estimated to produce 20s. in all. 
There were also nine free tenants of the 
Coucy moi-ty, holding by knight's service 
and rents amount.ng to 24s. 10d. William 


302 


de Coucy had by the king’s grant held 
certain estates which had belonged to 
Robert de Gynes. 

The inquiry as to the estates of the 
said Robert, ‘an adherent of the king's 
enemies in France,’ was made a year 
later. It was found that he had held of 
the Earl of Lancaster a moiety of the 
manor of Wyresdale in fee in the vill of 
Garstang by knight’s service ; William 
de Coucy had occupied it for his life, and 
after him the king had granted it to the 
Countess of Pembroke; Ing. p.m. 18 
Edw, III (2nd nos.), no. 58. 

41 A further inquiry was made in 1347; 
Ing. p.m. 20 Edw. III (znd nos.), no, 63. 
It gives many details, The pasture of 
the manor site was worth 6d. ; 75} acres 
of demesne farmed to various persons 
were worth 112s, rogd.; in Hallsteads 
and Mekmyr were 4 and 44 acres of 
meadow, 175.3 a several pasture, 405. ; 
tenants at will of improved land, 
£38 7s. 10d. ; 8 acres more might be 
improved, worth 8s.; Thomas de Rig- 
maiden, who held per indiviso with the 
other lord, inclosed 12 acres, of which 
6 acres belonged to the Coucy moiety, 6s 
At Cleveley a water-mill and the moiety 
of another were worth £4, a mill at 
Garstang 4os., the moiety of a mill at 
Sandholm 46s. 8d., a fulling-mill at 
Cleveley and the moiety of a mill at 
Calder 20s. The sale of wood produce 
6s. 8d. The rents of free tenants came 
to 245. 10d. 

There were two courts—-a common 
court, the perquisites of which were worth 
20s, a year, and a several court, 131. 44. 
Other profits arose from the pannage of 
pigs, dead wood, the fishery of the Wyre, 
honey and bees in the park and outside 
wood, F 

Other inquisitions were taken in 
1365-6, as cited below. 

4 The lands of Ingram son of Ingram 
de Gines were escheated in 13425 Cel, 
Close, 1341-3) p42. Tiuia may refer to 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Crown entered into possession and made various 
grants." 

In 1346 the land of Wyresdale seems to have been 
assessed as three plough-lands, half being described as 
lately held by William de Coucy and the other half 
as held by John son of Thomas de Rigmaiden ; each 
moiety rendered 25, 6d. for castle ward. John de 
Coupland, a distinguished soldier of the time, who 
captured David King of Scots at Nevill’s Cross in 
1346, had a grant of {500 a year partly at one time 
charged on the Coucy manors.‘® Joan wife of John 
de Coupland also had a grant of Wyresdale,’® but 
after her death it was in 1365 restored to Ingram 
son of the above-named Ingram de Coucy, who won 
the favour of Edward III,‘7 receiving the king’s 
daughter Isabella in marriage and being created Earl 
of Bedford in 1366.48 Ingram’s daughter and co- 
heir, Philippa wife of Robert de Vere Earl of 
Oxford and Duke of Ireland, had his English estates 
and died in 1411-12. Wyresdale was granted to 
John Duke of Bedford, son of Henry IV, famous in 
the French campaigns of the 15th century,'® and 
later still to Edmund Earl of Richmond in 1453 
and in 1487 to Margaret Countess of Richmond, 


a son of the earlier Ingram. In 1343 
a preliminary grant of William de 


heir was Ingram de Coucy Earl of 
Bedford, son and heir of Ingram brother 


GARSTANG 


mother of Henry VII.°° On her death in 15¢9 it 
descended to the king, and was granted out on lease 
to Sir ‘Thomas Parr and others. 

A compotus of 1495 preserved at Sizergh Castle 
shows that the rents of the Crown moiety of Nether 
Wyresdale amounted to {51 25. 7¢., including 25. 
from Sir Thomas Radcliffe for Winmarleigh, accord- 
ing to a rental renewed in 1461, The mill at 
Sandholme paid 20s. 8¢.a year. Lord Derby paid 
4s. for ‘Grenoll,’ Thomas Rigmaiden 34d. for the 
‘“Boundes.’ The free tenants of the Bonds in ah 
paid 5s. 5d. 

The Crown moiety of Wyresdale was purchased 
in 1574? by Sir Gilbert Gerard, Master of the 
Rolls ; and as his son Sir Thomas Lord Gerard of 
Gerard’s Bromley 8 acquired the other moiety in 
1602 from the heirs of Rigmaiden,®4 the whole 
lordship was reunited in his family. Lord Gerard 
died in 1617° and his son Gilbert in 1623,°8 
leaving a son and heir Dutton, who died in 1640.57 
Gilbert had married Eleanor Dutton, heiress of the 
great Cheshire family ; she afterwards married Robert 
Needham Viscount Kilmorey, and occurs in con- 
nexion with Wyresdale.5® Dutton’s son Charles was 


her son three months, dying 14 July 1509, 
and Henry VIII succeeded her. She 


Coucy’s lands was made to his brother 
Ingram ; Cal. Pat. 1343-5, p- 36. 

43 A grant to the Countess of Pembroke 
(Mary de St. Pol) has been recorded 
above. After the expiry of her term the 
manor of Wyresdale was to go to Aymer 
Darcy for life; Cal. Close, 1343-6, 
p- 643. The Earl of Lancaster was in 
1345 suing her for her free tenement in 
Garstang, viz. a moiety of the manor of 
Nether Wyresdale; Assize R. 1435, 
m,. 35d. 

4 Survey of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 50, 
52, The former moiety is wrongly 
described as one plough-land only. The 
sheriff’s compotus of 1348 gives it 
correctly. 

48 Cal. Pat. 1345-8, p. 370. The 
Archbishop of York in 1368 gave licence 
to the Prior and Canons of Kirkham (in 
the East Riding) to remove the body 
of John de Coupland from Carham to 
their church ; Dods. MSS. vii, 202. For 
will see Wills and Invent. (Surt. Soc.), 
i, 29. 

© The Duke of Lancaster in 1361 

_ Claimed a moiety of the manors of 
Mourholme and Wyresdale against John 
de Coupland and Joan his wife; Assize 
R. 441, m. 2d. Joan is described as 
daughter and heir of John de Rigmaiden ; 
Feud. Aids, iii, go. She died early in 
1365 holding by grant of Edward III 
the Coucy part of the Lancaster family’s 
possessions. The moiety of the manor 
of Wyresdale was held of John (of Gaunt), 
Duke of Lancaster, by knight’s service, 
with reversion to Ingram de Coucy Earl 
of Bedford and Isabella his wife ; Inq. 
p-m. 49 Edw. III, pt. i, no. 29. 

“7In Sept. 1365 a fresh inquiry was 
made as to the lands, &c., of William son 
of William de Coucy; Ing. p.m. 49 
Edw. III, pt. i, no. 22. It was stated 
(erroneously) that William had died 
without heir in 1335 and that he was 
‘a man of the kingdom of France.’ 
In the next year another jury found that 
William de Coucy had held the moiety 
of the manor of Wyresdale, &c., as before, 
that he died in Feb, 134.1~2, and that his 


of the said William ; ibid. 50 Edw. III 
(st nos.), no. 18. William the English 
and then John de Coupland and Joan his 
wife were said to have occupied the 
manors, &c., after William’s death. 

43G.E.C. Complete Peerage, i, 292 3 
‘Ingelram or Enguerraud de Coucy, 
Sire de Couci, La Fére and Oisi in the 
district of Marle, &c., only s. and h, of 
Enguerraud de Couci of the same... 
succeeded his father in 1344, being then 
in his fifth year. He was one of the 
hostages for John King of France to 
England, where he arrived in 1360. The 
English king showed great favour to him, 
restoring him to lands in Lancashire, &c.’ 
He in 1367 gave the king the reversion 
of his manors, then held by Joan widow 
of Sir John de Coupland (Arch. Journ. 
xxxv, 166), and finally renounced his 
English honours in 1377. Mention is 
made of a grant by him; Cal. Pat. 
1385-9, p. 413. 

49 G.E.C. op. cit. i, 293. At his death 
in 1435 he held the manor or lordship of 
Wyresdale of the king in chief by knight’s 
service, and other parts of the Lancaster 
inheritance ; Chan. Inq. p.m. 14 Hen. VI, 
no. 36. The king was his nephew 
and heir. Jaquetta his widow had as 
dower the third part of a moiety of 
Wyresdale, &c., and held it till her death 
in 1472; Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. gt. 
Richard Boteler of Kirkland was the 
farmer of the lordship; Cal. Pat. 
1436-41, p. 275. 

A rent from the manor is named 
among the possessions of John Duke of 
Somerset in 1444; Chan. Ing. p.m, 22 
Hen. VI, no. 19. 

50 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iv, no. 28. 
Henry VI granted all the late Duke of 
Bedford’s manors, &c., to Edmund Tudor 
Earl of Richmond (d. 1456), from whom 
they descended to his son afterwards 
Henry VII; as king he gave the same 
to his mother for life. She had dower in 
1459, confirmed 1464 ; Cal. Pat. 1461-7, 

. 363. For a grant by her to Sir 
William Parr (1472, 1475) see ibid. 
1467-77) PP 3342 532+ She survived 


393 


had a further connexion with Lancashire 
as wife of the Earl of Derby, and some- 
times lived at Lathom; Cooper, Lady 
Margaret, 57. 

In 1498 a writ was issued summoning 
Margaret Countess of Richmond and 
John Rigmaiden to hear judgement in a 
plea concerning their right to assize of 
bread and ale in Garstang ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Writs Proton. 15 Hen. VII. 

61 To Sir Thomas Parr in 1513 for 
forty years; Pat. 4 Hen. VIII, pt. i. 
To William Parr Earl of Essex in 1546 3 
Pat. 38 Hen. VIII, pt. vi. To Henry 
Earl of Cumberland in 1553-4 for 
twenty-one years ; Pat. 1 Mary, pt. iv. 

*2 Pat. 16 Eliz. pt. ii; the grant, to 
Gilbert Gerard and his wife and their 
issue, included the manors of Nether 
Wyresdale, Ashton, Carnforth and Scot- 
forth. 

53 G.E.C. Complete Peerage, iv, 17-18 5 
Ormerod, Ches. (ed. Helsby), i, 653. 

54.A third part of a moiety from 
Charles Fleming and another third part 
from Thomas Brockholes; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 64, no. 21, 28. A 
settlement of the manors of Wedacre, 
Nether Wyresdale, Winmarleigh, &c., was 
made in 1611; ibid. bdle. 77, no. 58. 

55 Chan. Ing. p.m. (Ser. 2), ccclxviii, 
11g (16 Jas. I) ; the purchase of the two 
moieties of the manor is recited, also a 
settlement on Eleanor wife of Gilbert 
Lord Gerard for life with remainder to 
Gilbert in tail male. Gilbert, the son 
and heir, was twenty-one years of age. 

56 Ibid. cccci, 119 3 Dutton, the son, 
was nine years old, 

57 Ibid. dxcix, 923; Charles, the son 
and heir, was five years of age. 

58 The following refer to settlements of 
the manors :—1618, by Gilbert Lord 
Gerard; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 
94, no. 7. 1635, by Dutton Lord 
Gerard, Robert Viscount Kilmorey and 
Eleanor his wife ; ibid. bdle. 127, no. 7. 
1662, by Charles Lord Gerard and Jane 
his wife ; ibid. bdle. 168, m. 7. 

Lord Kilmorey is named in Cal. Com, 
for Comp. ii, 1284-5. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


in 1657 succeeded by his son Digby, who married a 
distant cousin, Elizabeth daughter of Charles Gerard, 
Earl of Macclesfield, lord of the manor of Ha'sall in 
Lancashire. Digby's heir was his daughter Eliza- 
beth, who in 1698 married James fourth Duk: of 
Hamilton, killed in the celebrated duel with Lord 


Geraro, Lord Hastnton, Duke of 
Gerard of Gerard's Hamilton, Gules three 
Bromley. Argent a cinzuefoils pierced er- 
saltire gules, mine. 

Mohun in 1712.59 The lordship of Wyresdale 


descended with the dukedom until 1853,°° when it 
was sold to Peter Ormrod of Bolton,®! who settled 
at Wyresdale Park. He diel about 1875, after 
which his widow held it for life. On her death in 
18go it went to James Cross Ormrod, nephew of 
Peter, who was in 1895 succeeded by his son Captain 
Peter Ormrod, stated to be now lord of the manor ® 
Wyresdale Park, a modern house, had a herd of 


Courts are held. In 1642 it was ordered by 
the jury that the court should be elected out of the 
several townships in rotation, the first year out of 
Barnacre, Bonds and Tarnacre, the second year out 
of Cabus, Cleveley and Holleth, and the third year 
out of Wyresdale, Longmoor or Pilling Moss and 
the remainder. ‘The meeting-place was at Gober- 
thwaite or Gubisthwaite in Cabus.™ Gubberford 
and Gubberford Lane are marked on the ordnance 
map in Cabus and adjoining Woodacre, and the 
bridge over the Wyre is named Gubbertord Bridge. 
The courts are still held in Cabus. 

The lords of the manor having been almost sw'e 
landowners, no other families occur to be notived 
specially in the township.“6 ‘There were some 
sequestrations under the Commonwealth,” 

Dolphinholme in Nether Wyresdale Forest: was 
the subject of dispute in 1591. Wyreside, in this 
part of the township, is the seat of Captain Charles 
Henry Garnett.® Scorton Old Hall belonged to the 
Blackburnes in the 17th century.” 

In connexion with the Church of England St. 
Peter’s, Scorton, was built in 1878-9; Captain 
Peter Ormrod is patron.” 

The Wesleyan Methodists have a chapel at Scorton, 
built in 1843,’? and another at Dolphinholme. The 
Congregationalists have one at the latter hamlet.” 

The Roman Catholic church of St. Mary and 
St. James, built in 1861-2, replaced an earlier one, 
and represents missionary work at different home- 
steads in the township and district, which can be 


deer ; a pack of staghounds is maintained. 


59 G.E.C. Complete Peerage, iv, 146-50. 
The descent may te given in outline as 
follows: James, 4th duke, killed 1712 
-s. James, 5th duke, d. 1743 —8. James, 
6th duke, d. 1758 —s. James George, 
7th duke, d. 1769 -bro. Douglas, 8th 
duke, d. 1799 —uncle Archibald, gth 
duke (son of James, sth duke), d. 1819 -8. 
Alexander, roth duke, d. 1852. 

Lord Archibald Hamilton (afterwards 
duke) was knight of the shire 1768-72 ; 
Pink and Beaven, Parl. Repre. of Lancs. 
85. He died at Ashton Hall. 

There were fines and recoveries of the 
manors of Nether Wyresdale, &c., in 
t7or1 by James Duke of Hamilton and 
Elizabeth his wife, 1737 by James Duke 
of Hamilton, 1762 by Lord Archibald 
Hamilton, and 1800 by Archibald Duke 
of Hamilton and Aicxander Marquess of 
Douglas; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdles. 247, m. 105; 319, m. 10; Plea 
R. 596, m. §; Aug. Assizes, go 
Geo. III, R. 6. 

© Fishwick, op. cit. 54. 

61 The Ormrods were cotton spinners 
of Bolton. James Ormrod of Chamber 
Hall died in 1825, leaving two sons, 
Peter and James ; Barton, Bolton Glean. 
i, 153. The latter was father of Col. 
James Cross Ormrod named in the text. 
Peter Ormrod rebuilt the parish church 
at Bolton ; his brother James built St. 
Peter’s, Scorton, in memory of him. 

The price paid for Nether Wyresdale 
(4,027 acres) was 110,500, _— for 
Cleveley (693 acres) £35,100, and for 
Cabus (1,359 acres) £54,100; Preston 
Guard. 21 Nov. 1874. 

® Hewitson, Northward, 75. 

® Fishwick, op. cit. 57. 

™ Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1870), ii, 528. 
Fishwick (op. cit. 47-54) gives a list of 
the tenants in 1604-5 with the allot- 


ments of common made to each by 
agreement with Lord Gerard. 

® Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. vi, no. 72 ; 
the manor of Wyresdale is here called 
Goburthwaite. See the account of Little 
Eccleston. 

6 Scabgill in Wyresdale was in 1615 
held by Robert Foxe of the king as of 
his manor of Wenden Ferrens in Bucks. 
in socage. Thomas Foxe, aged twenty, 
was next of kin ani heir; Lancs. Ing. 
pom. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), ii, 
122. 

Park House, part of the lands of 
William (Parr) Marquess of Northampton, 
was in 1561-4 in dispute between 
Anthony Harrison (in right of his wife 
Margaret, daughter and heir of Richard 
Hodgekinson) and William Harrison, &c. ; 
Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), ii, 286-7. 

There were disputes as to tenures in 
the manor in 1664 and later, yielding 
the names of many of the tenants; 
Exch. Dep. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
38, 43, 44. The depositions were 
printed in the Preston Guard. 6 Nov. 
1886 and later. A court held at 
Wedacre is named. There were further 
disputes in 1687, Lady Elizabeth Gerard 
being in possession ; Exch. Dep. 71. 

7 William Baines, recusant, had two- 
thirds of his estate under sequestration in 
16535; Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 157. John Baines, 
aged thirty, admitted to the English 
College, Rome, in 1659, was son of 
William. He stated that his parents, 
* Catholics of the middle classes, descended 
from an ancient stock . . . suffered much 
on account of their religion and were 
reduced to very slender means in con- 
sequence’ ; Foley, Rec. S. J. v, 399. He 
was ordained and sent to England. John 
Baines, who had taken part in the ‘ second 


304 


trac-d back to the early part of the 18th century.” 


war’ on the king's side, escaped with a 
fine of £35 Royalist Comp. Papers, i, 118, 
Thomas Mercer and Mary his wife, 
who were leaseholders under Lady Kil- 
morey, for recusancy suffered sequestra- 
tion, but were dead in 1655 ; ibid. iv, 130, 
The surname is given as Myerscough in 
Cal. Com, for Comp. v, 3242. John 
Rigmaiden of Wyersdale, recusant, de- 
sired to contract for the two-thirds of his 
estate in 16543 ibid. v, 3186. John 
seems to have died soon after, the trustees 
of his daughter Anne, wife of Roger 
Green, petitioning for discharge later in 
the year; ibid. iv, 2851. William 
Windress, though not actually sequestered, 
compounded in 1651 for having been in 
arms for the king in 1643 ; ibid. iv, 2899. 

68 Ducatus Lanc. iii, 275. 

6 Burke, Landed Gentry. 

70 Fishwick, op. cit. 256. 

71 A district was formed for it in 1880 ; 
Lond. Gaz. 17 Sept. 

72 Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 524. 
A poor woman, employed at the mill, 
held a class meeting in her house ; this, 
after some persecution, found protectors 
in the mill-owners and regular services 
were instituted, 

78 Services began in 1875 and an iron 
church was opened in 1881 ; Nightingale, 
Lancs. Nonconf. i, 207. 

74 Hewitson, op. cit. §21-3. Mass used 
to be said at Brackenlea (occupied by the 
ip ouanian and there was a priest's 

iding-place at Foxhouses. ‘The original 
Catholic chapel at Scorton was a smail 
rude thatched building. In its early career 
the building, it is said, was used as a 
clogmaker’s shop on weekdays and for 
Catholic worship on Sundays, It was 
eventually replaced by another building, 
set apart entirely for religious purposes. 
This was afterwards used as a schoolroom. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


A school existed at Cross Hill as early as 1717, 
and another was built at Scorton in 1793, each with 
a small endowment.” 


HOLLETH 


Holouth, 1326 ; Holuith, 1329 ; Holough, 1375. 
This township is entirely separated from the 
main part of the parish by Forton in Cockerham, 
and about 60 acres of its southern edge lie in the 
latter parish. The area is 358% acres,' and may 
be said to consist of a hill reaching about 100 ft. 
above sea level and sloping away to the boundary 
on all sides. In 1go01 the population numbered 
twenty-five only. There is no considerable residence 
within it. A minor road from Cockersand eastward 
to join the north road from Preston to Lancaster 
crosses the south-west corner, as does also the Kendal 
Canal. 
The base of Buck’s Cross remains, and the site of 
another ancient cross is known.” 
HOLLETH seems to have belonged to 
MANOR Forton. There was never any manor, 
but Holleth is named in 1345 among 
the Rigmaiden properties.‘ It descended with 
Wedacre,® and so came to the Gerards and Hamiltons, 
lords of Wyresdale. At the sale in 1853 it was 
purchased by Mr. Richard Cardwell Gardner of 
Liverpool, who died in 1882.° 
The canons of Leicester had right of common in 
Holleth in the parish of Garstang, but released it to 
Thomas de Rigmaiden in consideration of an annual 
rent of 20s. 
The Cawson family occur in the 17th century.° 


CLEVELEY 


About a fourth part of this township, in the south- 
east, lies within Garstang parish ; the remainder is 
in Cockerham, where an account of the whole will 
be given. 


CABUS 

Cayballes, 1328 ; Caboos, 1550. 

This township has an area of 1,388 acres,’ and a 
population of 171 according to the Census of 1gor. 
From the Wyre on the east the surface rises till about 
100 ft. above the ordnance datum is attained and 
then falls away to the west. The hamlet of Patten 
Arms lies in the north-west corner. Two roads go 


For the convicted recusants in Nether duke de 


Wyresdale and Cabus c. 1670 see Misc. 
(Cath, Rec. Soc.), v, 172-4. The names 


Rigmaiden complained that 
certain persons had broken his close 
there; De Banco R. 345, m. 


GARSTANG 


through it from Garstang northwards, one to Lan- 
caster, the other to Cockerham. The railway from 
Preston to Lancaster crosses the north-east corner, 
and the canal between the same places winds along 
near the western side. 

Carr Holme in Cabus was added to Garstang in 
1887 ; at the same time a detached part of Barnacre 
with Bonds was added to Cabus." 

The soil is a heavy loam with clay subsoil. The 
land is almost entirely in pasture. About 1880 there 
was a tile manufactory worked by Mrs. Ormrod. 

The pedestal of an ancient cross remains near 
cross roads on the north-west boundary." 

There was never any separate manor 
of CABUS, but the courts for the lord- 
ship of Nether Wyresdale were formerly 
held here at Goberthwaite. This place is named in 
a grant by William son of Swain to his son Henry 
the Clerk.’® Cabus occurs in an agreement made in 
1340 between Dame Christiana de Lindsay and the 
abbey of Leicester.* It descended with Nether 
Wyresdale '® and was purchased in 1853 by Peter 
Ormrod. It is now owned by Captain Peter Ormrod. 


MANOR 


WINMARLEIGH 


Wynomerislega, Wynermerisle, 1212 ; Wimerleg, 
1241; Winmerly, 1244; Wynnemerley, 1262 ; 
Wymerlay, 1292. The accent is on the second 
syllable. 

On the eastern side of this township the land is 
50 ft. or more above sea level, and here is placed the 
hall ; but westwards about two-thirds of the surface 
lies below the 25-ft. level, much of it being moss- 
land. There is no village or considerable hamlet. 
The area is 2,3424 acres,' and in 1go1 there was 
a population of 284. 

Northward through the eastern side go roads from 
Garstang to Cockerham, and the west end is crossed 
by one from the former place to Pilling ; these are 
connected by another passing through the centre of 
the township, having the hall on one side and the 
church on the other. The Garstang and Knott End 
single-line railway crosses the western corner, with a 
station called Coglie Hill, and the Lancaster Canal 
at one place bends so as to come within the north- 
east boundary. 

The soil is clay and peat, with clay subsoil ; wheat 
and potatoes are grown, but two-thirds of the land 
is in pasture. 


10 By Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 20097. 

11 Lancs. and Ches. Antig. Soc. xx, 207. 
152. A 12 See the account of Nether Wyresdale. 
The 


include Baines, Blackburn, Cawthorne, 
Cross, Hubbersty, Myerscough, Parkin- 
son, Sykes and Windress. 

The Garstang churchwardens in 1755 
teported a ‘ Papist chapel’ at Wyresdale ; 
Visit. Ret. at Chester. 

% End. Char. Rep. for Garstang, 7, 8. 

1359 acres, including 2 of inland 
water ; Census Rep. 1901. 

9 Lancs. and Ches. Antig. Soc. xx, 209. 

5 The place is named in an agreement 
as to tithes between Cockersand and 
Leicester Abbeys in 1242; Cockersand 
Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 382. Also in 
an agreement between Leicester Abbey 
and Dame Christiana de Lindsay in 1320 ; 
ibid. i, 299. 

‘In that year Thomas son of Marma- 


r, 


similar complaint was made by Thomas 
de Rigmaiden in 1375 against Edmund 
de Washington ; ibid. 457, m. 34d. 

5 It is named in the Rigmaiden inqui- 
sitions as a dependency of their manor 
in Garstang. John Rigmaiden in 1583 
complained of destruction of his wood in 
Holleth ; Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), iii, 
149. 

2 Fishwick, Garstang (Chet. Soc.), 33. 

7 Cockerham charters in MS. Laud. 
H 72, fol. 48. 

8 Richard Cawson in 1647 and John 
and George Cawson of Cocker House in 
1663-4, tenants of the manor of Nether 
Wyresdale ; W. Farrer’s D. 

9 1,392 acres, including 20 of inland 
water ; Census Rep. 1901. 


395 


18 Add. MS. 32106, no. 806. 
grantor gave all his land in Gubisthwaite 
(otherwise Goberthwaite or Gubber- 
thwaite) within these bounds: From 
Gubisthwaite Pool, up the River Wyre 
to Drypool, by Drypool to the carr, 
round it to the pool which falls by 
Hagrimai, and down that pool to Gubis- 
thwaite Pool. The land was to be held 
as three-eighths of an oxgang where 
24 carucates made a knight’s fee. 

M4 Cockersand Chartul.(Chet. Soc.), i,299- 

15 Cabus and Goberthwaite are both 
named among Walter Rigmaiden’a lands 
in 1587; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xiv, 
no. 5. 

12,343 acres, including 7 of inland 
water ; Census Rep. 1901. 


39 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


The moss-lands in the neighbourhood provide 
materials for the manufacture of moss litter. 
The township is governed by a parish council. 
Two oxgangs of land in Wyresdale 
MANOR were granted by William de Lancaster I], 
who died in 1184, to Harvey the 
Falconer,’ and this estate probably formed the nucleus 
of the later manor of WINMARLEIGH. Harvey’s 
son Hugh adopted the local surname,’ which con- 
tinued in use for some centuries, perhaps by several 
of the freeholding families,‘ but the descent cannot 
be traced clearly. In 1347 Thomas le Gentyl held 
2 oxgangs of land by knight’s service of the king, as 
representing William de Coucy, late lord of Wyres- 
dale,> and shortly afterwards, in 1359, Nicholas le 
Gentyl claimed the manor against Thomas son of 
Maermaduke de Rigmaiden.® From fines of an earlier 
time it seems that Robert de Pleasington had obtained 
a moiety of the manor from Thomas le Gentyl.’ The 


Pleasington inheritance probably descended to an 
heiress who married Richard Radcliffe. The Rad- 
cliffes also obtained in 1472 part of the inheritance 
of Roger de Winmarleigh, which by a daughter 
Christiana had descended to Christopher Rowall.’ 
Sir John de Harrington of Farleton died in 1359 
holding a messuage and 40 acres in Winmarleigh as 
of the manor of Wyresdale, formerly William de 
Coucy’s."” 

Richard son of William de Radcliffe in 1 375 
complained that Joan widow of Roger de Winmar- 
leigh had abducted the heir, and he claimed the 
custody of a moiety of the manor until the Majority 
of Robert son and heir of Roger." Richard was the 
kinsman and heir of Robert de Radcliffe of Astley, 
which manor he acquired.” Winmarleigh descended 
regularly '* to Richard Radcliffe, who died in 1477 
holding the manor of the Earl of Richmond in socage 
by a rent of 5¢.; he also held the moiety of Astley 


2 Lancs. Inj. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 3; in 1212 Hugh 
de Winmarleigh held by knight's service. 

3 Hugh son of Harvey the Falconer 
about 1200 granted Gamel’s toft and 
croft of 3 acres to Cockersand Abbey, 
with casements of his fee in Winmarleigh, 
including pasturage for thirty oxen and 
cows, &c.3; Cockersund Chartul. (Chet. 
Soc.), i, 290. William son of Harvey is 
also named; ibid. i, 2g1. William son 
of Hugh de Winmarleigh made a further 


grant to Cockersand ; ibid. i, 296. Alice 
was the widow of Hugh ; ibid. 
‘Grants to Cockersand were made 


by Roger son of Hamelin and his son 
Richard, by Richard son of Robert de 
Winmarleigh, and several (one dated 
1246) by Gregory de Winmarleigh, who 
names his brother Richard, also by 
Richard de Wath ; ibid. i, 290-7. John, 
Robert and Thomas de Winmarleigh are 
named in these charters. 

There is nothing to show whether 
Gregory was the successor of Hugh or 
the lord of that part of Winmarleigh not 
in Hugh's fee ; he occurs from 1241 to 
12533 Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 825 Lancs. Inz7. and Extents, i, 
159, 191. John de Winmarleigh is 
named in 1257; ibid. i, 210. Robert 
son of Gregory and Avice his wife had 
land in Stalmine in 1262; Final Conc. i, 
135. John de Winmarleigh was defendant 
in 1276; Assize R. 405, no. 3a. 

‘Ing. p.m. 20 Edw. IIT (2nd nos.), 
no. 63. Thomas appears to have been 
son of William le Gentyl of Poulton in 
Lonsdale ; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 9, 118. 

® Duchy of Lanc. Assize R. 7, m. 1 d.; 
Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 346. 

‘In 1338 Robert de Pleasington ob- 
tained a messuage and lands in Garstang, 
including wood called Eskland, from 
Thomas le Gentyl and Katherine his 
wife ; Final Conc. ii, 110, The same 
Robert in 1343 obtained a moiety of the 
manor of Winmarleigh (except two mes- 
suages, &c.) from the same and their son 
Randle ; ibid. 116. At the same time 
Robert granted to Thomas ten messuages, 
&c., and certain homages. The field- 
names include Herneshead, Lawesteghele, 
Hyngilka, Briggemouridding and Deres- 
lowe. Very soon afterwards these ten 
messuazes, &c., were granted to Robert 
de Pleasington and Ellen his wife ; ibid. 
117. It seems possible that Katherine 
and Ellen were the heirs of Winmarleigh. 


In 1344 Robert de Pleasington obtained 
a messuage and land in Winmarleigh from 
Robert the Grayve; Add. MS. 32104, 
no. go6. In 1348 he acquired another 
in Garstang from John son of Thomas de 
Rigmaiden ; Final Conc.ii,126. John de 
Pleasington in 1354 successfully claimed 
the manor and 2s. rent from Gilbert de 
Haydock and Ellen his wife ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Assize R. 3, m. 3d. 

> Dodsworth (MSS. cliii, fol. 48) states 
that Richard de Radcliffe of Winmarleigh 
(living 1407) married the daughter and 
co-heir of Henry de Pleasington by Isabel 
his wife. From pleadings cited below 
it is clear that Richard’s grandfather had 
part of the manor in 1376. 

2One Roger de Winmarleigh was 
plaintiff in 1292 and 13023; Assize R. 
408, m. 96, 97d.5; 418, m. 11, 12d. 
William son of Roger occurs in 13303 
Assize R. 1400, m.235. Again in 1345 
Robert de Pleasington complained that 
Roger de Winmarleigh had cut his grass, 
&c.; De Banco R. 344, m. 613. 

Thomas Henryson de Rowall, as heir 
of his mother Christiana daughter and 
heir of Roger de Winmarleigh, in 1425 
granted a moiety of the demesne of 
W omarleigh in the vill of Garstang to 
his brother Christopher, with remainder 
to another brother Richard ; Dods. MSS. 
cliii, fol. 475. From what is stated 
below it appears that Thomas and Chris- 
topher sold much of their inheritance. 
John Rowall son of Christopher had to 
wife Ellen daughter of Thomas Jenkinson 
in 1447-8 ; ibid. fol. 48. A messuage, 
&c., was granted to John and Ellen in 
1490-1, with remainder to their son 
Edward; ibii. An elder son Richard 
had in 1480 married Janet daughter of 
William Colous ; ibid. Ellen the widow 
of John Rowall was living in 1500-1 ; 
ibid. fol. 485. Deeds of 1436 and 1447-8 
are in Pal. of Lanc. Chan. Misc. bdle. 1, 
files 1 and 6, 

Edward son of Richard Roo alias Rowall 
died in 1531 holding six messuages, &c., 
in Winmarleigh, held of Thomas Rad- 
cliffe by a rent of 2s. His heir wasa 
daughter Alice, aged six in 1535. Edward’s 
mother Joan and wife Anne survived 
him; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. viii, 
no. 39. For an earlier marriage of 
Edward see Add. MS, 32106, fol. 284, 
no. 234. 

In 1472 John son and heir of John 
Rigmaiden released all his right in lands 
obtained from Christopher Rowall and 


306 


Thomas his brother (sons of Henry) to 
Ralph, Hugh and Richard Radcliffe; 
Dods. loc. cit. Hugh Radcliffe had pre- 
viously obtained messuages, é&c., from 
Christopher Rowall, which in 1468 he 
demised to Thomas Myerscough ; ibid. 

10 Ing. p.m. 36 Edw. III, pt. 1, no. 99, 
120, Nothing further seems known of 
this tenement, which was held by knight's 
service and rendered 4os. 

De Banco R. 457, m. 10, 95. In 
1376 Richard and Isabel his wife were 
plaintiffs and John de Southworth and 
Joan his wife defendants in the same 
matter; ibid. 462, m. 330. Later in 
1376 Isabel widow of Richard son of 
William de Radcliffe continued the plea. 
She alleged that Roger, father of the heir, 
had held a moiety of the manor of Win- 
marleigh of her by homage and fealty, 
paying 20s. to a scutage of gos. and 2s, 
rent. The defendants alleged that Roger 
had made a feoffment of his moiety to 
William de Curwen and William de 
Hornby, and that Joan, the defendant 
and mother of the heir (of tender years), 
had had charge of him, and was in pos- 
session of the moiety of the manor by a 
grant from the feoffees in 1374; ibid. 
464, m. 533 219, 430 d. From the 
terms of Isabel’s claim it might be inferred 
that she was the heiress of Winmarleigh. 
She may have been heiress of Gentyl 

12 V.C.H. Lancs, iii, 446; Final Cone. 
ii, 128. 

18 The pedigree is shown in Lancs. Ing. 
p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 32-4, thus : Richard 
de Radcliffe and Isabel his wife -s. Thomas 
-s, Sir Richard, d. 1431 -s. Sir Thomas, 
aged forty. 

oan widow of Thomas Radcliffe of 
Winmarleigh occurs in 1410 and 1417 5 
Final Conc. iii, 69, 85. The inquisition 
after the death of Sir Richard Radcliffe 
above cited concerns the manor of Astley 
only. 

Proof of the next step is afforded by 
an entry in the court rolls of Ightenhill 
in 1441, Richard Radcliffe son and heir 
of Sir Thomas being accused of wrong- 
fully withholding a tenement called the 
Chamber in Pendle from Lawrence 
Parker of Foulridge ; Add. MS. 32105, 
fol. 251. } 

Sir Thomas's daughter ie married 
Robert Shireburne of Stonyhurst ; Lancs. 
Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, §3- Thomas 
son of Sir Thomas came to a violent end 
at Whalley in 1439; Pal. of Lanc Chan. 
Misc. bdle. 1, file 7. The executors of 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


and lands, &c., in Chatburn, Clitheroe, Hapton, 
Great Marsden and Showley. His grandson Richard 
son of Thomas was his heir and under age." 

Richard Radcliffe died in 1500, leaving a son and 
heir Thomas, aged seventeen, and this Thomas 
died in 1521, leaving as heir a son of the same name, 
five years old."* The younger Thomas died in 1538, 
when his son William was only four years old.” This 
son died at Astley in 1561, without issue, and his 
half-sister Anne, wife of Gilbert Gerard, obtained 
Winmarleigh.* As already shown, Gilbert purchased 
the superior lordship of Wyresdale,"”” but at his death 
in 1593 he was said to hold the manor of Winmar- 
leigh by the old tenure, viz. of the queen as of her 
earldom of Richmond by knight’s service and 5d. 
rent. His son and heir Sir Thomas Gerard was 
aged twenty-nine.” Some estate in Winmarleigh 
was at that time held by the Rigmaidens,” whose 
manors were afterwards purchased by Sir Thomas. 

The manor descended to Dutton third Lord 
Gerard of Bromley,” and was granted to his daughter 
Elizabeth, who married the Hon. William Spencer. 
It descended to their great-granddaughter Elizabeth 
wife of Edward eleventh Earl of Derby, and was sold 
to Thomas Patten in 1744.7 From him it descended 
to John Wilson-Patten,“ who after a long and 


GARSTANG 


honourable career in the public service, having been 
knight of the shire as early as 1830, was raised to the 
peerage in 1874 and took his title from this manor. 
Lord Winmarleigh died in 1892, and his son and 


Way 
WOT 
WAR) 


PATTEN. Lozengy Witson. Sablea 
ermine and sable a canton wolf salient or, in chief 
gules three estoiles of the 


second. 


grandson having died before him the title became 
extinct. He was sole landowner, and built Win- 
marleigh House in 1871.” Lady Headfort, widow 
of the son, is tenant for life of the manor. Nocourts 
are held.” 

John Goose was a freeholder in 1600.” A few 
names of former landowners can be recovered from 


the will of Sir Thomas were in 1442-3 
summoned to answer Margaret widow of 
Sir Richard concerning lands, &c., demised 
to her in Astley and Clitheroe; ibid. 
file 11. 

14 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 
103. The son Thomas, who married 
Ellen daughter of Richard Balderston and 
so obtained a considerable increase of the 
family possessions, died before 1473 ; 
ibid. 92. The heir’s age was given as 
fourteen in 1473 and as twelve in 1477. 

18 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. ili, no. 75 ; 
the manor of Winmarleigh was said to 
be held of the Earl of Lincoln by services 
unknown. It had in 1495 been settled 
upon Alice daughter of Sir Thomas 
Gerard for life. Other grants are 
recited, including one in favour of 
Richard’s brothers John and Roger. Alice 
married Thomas Radcliffe and was living 
in 1538 ; ibid. viii, no. 26. 

16 Thid. v, no. 3. The will of Thomas 
Radcliffe is recited making provision for 
his wife Alice, his children Thomas and 
Cecily, his sister Margaret and others. 
The manor of Winmarleigh was stated 
to be held of the king as Earl of Chester 
in socage by 5d. rent. In 1524 Alice 
widow of Thomas Radcliffe claimed dower 
in the manor of Winmarleigh, &c. ; Pal. 
of Lanc, Plea R. 135, m. 4. 

1 Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. viii, no. 26 5 
the manor of Winmarleigh was said to 
be held of the king as of his duchy of 
Lancaster by knight’s service and 5d. 
rent. 

18 Ibid, xi, no. 73 the jurors ignored 
the half-blood, and found that William’s 
heirs were John Singleton, aged twelve, 
and Joan Radcliffe, aged fourteen. Win- 
marleigh was found to be held of the 
queen as of the earldom of Richmond by 
knight’s service and 5d. rent. William 
had shortly before his death made a settle- 
ment of his manors, &c., in favour of his 
sister Anne, 

William Radcliffe married Anne 
daughter of Sir John Holcroft, by whom 
he had a son and three daughters who 


died in infancy, and he was buried at 
Culcheth, where a memorial brass records 
the facts. 

The heirs named by the jury were the 
grandson and the daughter of his aunt 
Cecily. 

There is a Radcliffe pedigree in the 
Visit. of 1613 (Chet. Soc.), 43-4. 

1 A settlement of the manor of Win- 
marleigh was made by Gilbert Gerard and 
Anne his wife in 15743 Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 36, m. 269. 

29 Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. xvi, no. 2. 
A large collection of deeds (already 
quoted) relating to disputes as to the 
Radcliffe inheritance has been preserved 
by Towneley in Add. MS. 32105, fol. 
237 onward. These show that Cecily 
Radcliffe above mentioned was twice 
married : (1) to Thomas Farington, by 
whom she had a daughter Alice, wife of 
(William) Singleton (of Staining), whose 
son John left two daughters—Elizabeth 
wife of James Massey (s.p.) and Alice 
wife of Henry Birkenhead ; (2) to Edward 
Radcliffe of Mearley, by whom she had 
another daughter Joan, wife of Ralph 
Assheton of Great Lever, whose son was 
Sir Ralph Assheton, bart. 

Thomas Farington appears as plaintiff 
in the time of Henry VIII ; Ducatus Lanc. 
i, 205. 

a. Winmarleigh is named in the inquisi- 
tions of Walter and John Rigmaiden, 
1587—8, but without separate details. 

22 See the account of Nether Wyres- 
dale. 

3 Fishwick, Garstang (Chet. Soc.), 
44-5, where a lease of 1668 is quoted, 
showing the services required. William 
Spencer (third son of the second Lord 
Spencer) and Elizabeth had a son William, 
who left four children—John, Charles, 
Alice and Elizabeth. Elizabeth married 
Robert Hesketh of Rufford, and her 
daughter and heir, the Elizabeth named 
in the text, married in 1714 Sir Edward 
Stanley, afterwards (1736-76) eleventh 
Earl of Derby. Collins states that the 
first William Spencer had no issue, 


307 


A deed of 1667 by the Hon. William 
Spencer of Ashton and Elizabeth his wife, 
sole daughter and heir of Dutton Lord 
Gerard by Elizabeth his (second) wife, 
recites a conveyance of the manor, with 
remainder to the right heirs of Elizabeth ; 
Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), iii, 60. The 
following fines, &c., relate to this manor : 
1658—William Spencer and Elizabeth his 
wife (the Gerard manors) ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 162,m.161. 1667—the 
same (Winmarleigh only) ; ibid. bdle. 
179,m. 9. 1669—the same with Giles 
Russell and Milcham his wife; ibid. 
bdle. 182,m. 4; 183, m.4. 1710—John 
Spencer, vouchee; Pal. of Lanc. Plea 
R. 491, m. 6d. 1713—Charles Spencer ; 
ibid. 497, m. 5. 

24 Thomas Patten of Bank Hall, War- 
rington, d. 1772 —s. Thomas Patten, 
d. 1806 —3rd s. Thomas Wilson-Patten, 
d. 1826 -2nd s, John Wilson-Patten, 
born 1802; Burke, Commoners, iii, 
83-43; Gregson, Porefolio (ed. Harland), 
186-7. 

35 Dict. Nat. Biog.; G.E.C. Complete 
Peerage, viii, 189; Pink and Beaven, 
Parl. Repre. of Lancs. 89-93. He sat for 
Lancashire as a Tory 1830-1, and for 
North Lancashire 1832-74, in twelve 
Parliaments ; chancellor of the duchy 
1867-8, constable of Lancaster Castle 
1869. 

His son Eustace John Wilson-Patten 
died in 1873, leaving a son John Alfred 
(who died unmarried in 1889) and 
daughters. His widow (Emily daughter 
of Lord John Thynne) afterwards married 
the third Marquess of Headfort, who died 
in 1894. 

26 Information of Messrs, John White 
& Co., Warrington. 

27 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), i, 
232. 

Sir Gilbert Gerard in 1591 purchased a 
messuage, &c., in Winmarleigh from John 
Goose and Mary his wife ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 53, m. 83. For the 
Goose family see Ducatus Lanc, iii, 149, 


327. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


the inquisitions®® and the sequestrations of the 
Commonwealth period.” 

In connexion with the Church of England 
St. Luke’s was built in 1876 and enlarged in 1887.%° 
The patronage is vested in the Hon. Misses Ellinor 
and Elizabeth Wilson-Patten, daughters of Lord 


Winmarleigh. 


NATEBY 


Natebi, Nateby, 1204. 

Nateby is a level and low-lying township, the 
highest land, on the eastern side, not rising much 
above 70 ft. over sea level. The small hamlet of 
Nateby lies near the centre of the township, but the 
hall is near the northern border. The area measures 
2,087 acres,! and in 1go1 the population was 297. 

Along the eastern border goes the road from 
Garstang to Cockerham, while through the centre 
goes that from Garstang to Pilling. The single-line 
railway between these places also runs through the 
township, and has a station called Nateby. The 
Preston and Lancaster Canal crosses the north-east 
portion. 

The old divisions into Great and Little Nateby 
are now forgotten. The former was in the north 
and the latter in the south. 

Wheat and oats are grown, but more than half 
the land is in pasture. The soil is light with clay 
subsoil. Tiles are made. 

The township is governed by a parish council. 

Sir Roger Strickland, admiral and Jacobite, was a 
son of Walter Strickland of Nateby. He was born 
in 1640, and died at St. Germains in 1717.? 


As a part of Wyresdale NATEB?’ was 

MANOR held by the Lancaster family and their 

successurs. William de Lancaster II, who 

died in 1184, granted an oxgang of land there to 

Hugh the Northman. A rent of 4s. was to be paid, 

but all easements and common rights of the vill of 

Garstang, ‘ both within the Wyre and without,’ were 

allowed.22 William de Lancaster III gave the lord- 

ship of Nateby, or part of it, to his clerk Gilbert de 
Garstang, as pertaining to land in Scot‘orth.* 

The oxgang named appears to have been in Great 
Nateby. The owners adopted the local surname, 
and in 1292 William son of Ralph de Nateby sold 
his estate to Lawrence son of Lawrence Travers. 
This was afterwards transferred by Lawrence to his 
brother Thomas.® It descended in this family, who 
also held part of the manors or lands in Ribbleton, 
Tulketh, Esprick and Trunna in Thornton down to 
the time of Charles I. In 1347, however, the tenants 
of William de Coucy for this part of Wyresdale 
were stated to be John de Pleasington for 1 oxgang 
of land in Great Nateby, Robert de Pleasington and 
Robert de Bour (Bower) for an oxgang in Little 
Nateby, all holding by knight’s service.® Little 
Nateby, which was later held by Travers, was probably 
the messuage and 40 acres in Nateby claimed by 
William de Layton from Ingram de Gynes and 
Christiana his wife in 1292. Their defence wasa 
technical one—that Nateby was not a vill.” 

Thomas Travers in 1308 transferred an oxgang of 
land in Garstang to his son John,® while two years 
later John Travers surrendered 2 oxgangs of land 
there to’ Thomas Travers and Alice his wife, with 
remainders to Lawrence and Alexander sons of 


In 1301 


*3 For Rowall and Rigmaiden see earlier 
notes. John Sale or Saule compounded 
for refusing knighthood in 16313 Misc. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 222. He 
died in 1634 holding a messuage, &c., in 
Garstang and Winmarleigh of Dutton 
Lord Gerard as of his manor of Winmar- 
leigh. Christopher his son and heir was 
thirty-two years of age ; Towneley MS.C8, 
13 (Chet. Lib.), 1087. 

William Ambrose of Woodplumpton 
had land in Garstang in 14213 Final 
Cone. iii, 79. It was perhaps in Winmar- 
leigh, for William Ambrose and John 
Kuerden sold a messuage, &c., there to 
John Rigmaiden in 1567; Pal. of Lane. 
Feet of F. bdle. 29, m. 53. 

*? Anne Molyneux had two-thirds of 
her tenement sequestered for recusancy, 
and died in 1654, the heirs at law being 
William L:ius of Catterall, Dorothy his 
wife and John Goose of Winmarleigh. 
She had in 1652 devised her estate to 
Robert Pleasington of Garstang. There 
was a suspicion that this was on trust for 
some priest or delinquent or convicted 
recusant, but one John Charnock of Cabus, 
a Protestant andcommunicant at Garstang 
Church, claimed; Royalist Comp. Papers 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), iv, 140-3. 

3° A district was assigned to itin 1876 ; 
Lond. Gaz. 5 Dec. 

1 2,088 acres, including 12 of inland 
water; Census Rep. 1901. 

2 Dict. Nat. Bicg. 

28 Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 77; Robert 
son of Bernard was a witness (dead in 
1206). Another version of the charter 
(or perhaps a different grant) is in Kuerden 
MSS. iv, G 36. It gives the bounds as 
beginning where Rosnyt descends into 


Pilling Moss, and going by various sykes, 
moor, moss and wood till the ford of 
Winmarleigh was touched, thence down 
to Stockenbridge and to Pilling Moss. 

It is possible, if not probable, that the 
two plough-lands in Scotforth granted to 
Hugh by William de Lancaster I (Lancs. 
Ing. and Extents [Rec. Soc. Lancs, and 
Ches.], i, 4) included the whole or part 
of Nateby. 

3 Dods. loc, cit. ; in a letter addressed 
to William rector of Garstang, who 
occupied land in Nateby. Scotforth and 
Nateby occur together in fines of 1204, 
by which Hawise wife of Gilbert Fitz 
Reinfred secured the third part of two 
plough-lands there; Final Conc. (Ree. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 22-3. 

4 Kuerden, loc. cit.; ‘Rosnyt’ is here 
spelt ‘Rasich.’ The date is fixed by the 
accompanying fine; Final Conc. i, 175. 
On the same day William de Nateby 
obtained a release of what appears to be 
the same tenement from Roger de 
Wedacre ; ibid. 173. A pleading of the 
same year shows that Roger was brother 
and heir of Hugh son of Robert son of 
Paulin brother and heir of Robert, who 
had held the same in the time of King 
John. Roger appears to have proved his 
right in the court of Ingram de Gynes 
held at Garstang in 1286 ; Assize R. 4°08, 
m. 69. The last-named Robert was 
probably the rector of Garstang. 

John son of William de Nateby and 
William de Nateby occur in 1308-9; 
Assize R. 423, m. 4. 

5 Dods. and Kuerden, loc. cit.; the 
date was between 1298 and 1302, Master 
Richard de Hoghton, then — sheriff, 
attesting. Thomas Travers was sheriff 


308 


in 1302-6; P.R.O. List, 72. 
Isabel widow of William de Nateby 
complained that Lawrence Travers and 
others had di d her of a ge, an 
oxgang of land, &c., in Garstang, and 
Lawrence replied that he had found that 
she and her husband, being childless, had 
desired to enfeoff Thomas Travers of the 
same, and he had taken possession ; Assize 
R. 1321, m. 103; 418, m. 13. After the 
grant to his brother Lawrence in 1301 
wrote to Isabel to direct her in future to 
render to Thomas the services she had 
hitherto rendered to himself ; Dods. loc. cit. 

In 1300 Thomas Travers, Cecily his 
wife and Alexander their son were 
defendants to a claim for a messuage, &c., 
in Garstang made by Benedict son of 
Ralph de Nateby ; De Banco R. 131, m. 
33d. The same three with a daughter 
Margaret were in 1301 defendants to a 
like claim by Roger de Brockholes and 
others ; Assize R. 419, m. 13. 

6 Ing. pm. 20 Edw. HI (2nd nos), 
no. 63. A Robert de Bure (Bower) claimed 
common of pasture in Garstang against 
the Abbot of Leicester and others in 1301 
and later; Assize R. 1321, m. 125 418, 
m. 4,14. Robert son of Adam del Boure 
was in 1317 summoned to warrant Roger 
de Wedacre, against whom Alice widow 
of Adam son of Robert del Boure was 
claiming dower in certain messuages, MC 
in Garstang ; De Banco R. 218, m. 1544.5 
221, m. 16. 

Little Nateby in the town of Garstang 
occurs in a plea Wedacre v. Catherton 
13523 Duchy of Lanc. Aasize R2m1t. 

* Assize R. 408, m. 42d. 

8 Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 894 Jobs 
Travers restored the same to Thomas his 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Thomas. Thomas son of Lawrence Travers was in 
1331 contracted to marry Eleanor daughter of John 
de Kirkby,!° but Lawrence was still living in 1339.1! 
Thomas son of Lawrence Travers in 1349 granted 
to John his son and heir and to Alice daughter of 
Robert de Pleasington a windmill and lands in 
Stanah in Thornton, Ribbleton, Ashton, Elswick and 
Ingol, and in default of issue to his other sons 
Lawrence, Edmund, Thomas, Roger, William and 
Richard? John Travers died in 1361 holding 
lands, &c., in Tulketh, Ribbleton, Thornton and 
Winmarleigh in the vill of Garstang, this last being 
held of the moiety of the manor of Wyresdale for- 
merly William de Coucy’s, by a rent of 45.8 His 
son and heir Roger was eight years old. Roger 
occurs from 1389 to 1420.14 His son Thomas was 
forty years old in 1429,!° and appears to have been 
still in possession in 1448.16 Robert son of Lawrence 
Travers was in 1452-3 contracted to marry Katherine 
daughter of Richard Radcliffe of Clitheroe.” At 
this point there is a defect in the evidence.!® 

William Travers died on 28 July 1524 holding 
messuages, &c., in Nateby and other places, having in 
the May previous bequeathed ‘the whole manor of 
Nateby’ to his wife Margaret for her life, two tene- 
ments only being excepted. The Nateby lands were 
said to be held of the king in socage by the rent of 


GARSTANG 


thirteen.!® William Travers, said to have been a 
younger brother of Lawrence, succeeded, dying in 
July 1558 in possession of the capital messuage 
called Nateby and lands, &c., there held of the queen 
as of her manor of Nether Wyresdale in socage by a 
rent of 45.2 His son and heir Richard, then fifteen 
years of age, died in April 1576 holding in addition 
a messuage in Little Nateby in Garstang of the queen as 
of her castle of Lancaster in socage bya rent of 25. Id. 
and a pair of gauntlets worth 63¢. The heir was 
again a minor, being his son William, aged thirteen.?} 

A pedigree recorded in 1613 22 enables the descent 
to be carried a little further. William Travers and 
Richard his son in 1626 sold the manor to George 
Preston of Holker,” and he gave it to a younger son 
George Preston, who had a command in the royal 
army in the Civil War and was killed at Bradford.” 
His son George in 1654 transferred it to Walter 
Strickland of Sizergh ; his son Robert gave it to 
George Leyburne of Cunswick, who had married a 
daughter of George Preston. The new owner 
resided at Nateby, and was in 1704 succeeded by his 
son John Leyburne. Being a Jacobite, he joined the 
Highland force in 1715, and his estates were con- 
fiscated.26 Nateby was re-purchased, and through 
a sister descended to Michael Anne of Frickley, and 
was by him sold in 1806.27 After passing through 


4s. yearly. The heir was a son 


father and Alice his wife ; Kuerden, loc. 
cit. John Travers in 1323-4 was author- 
ized to grant lands in Bolton-le-Sands, &c., 
to his daughter Katherine ; Dods. MSS. 
cxlix, fol. 78. 

9 Final Conc. ii, 8; the following put 
in claims—Ingram de Gynes and 
Christiana his wife, Gilbert de Lindsay, 
Tsolda widow of John de Rigmaiden and 
Lawrence Travers the elder. 

From the accounts of Ashton near 
Preston and Ribbleton it will be seen that 
Lawrence Travers the younger married 
Aline daughter and co-heir of Henry de 
Haydock, and so acquired lands in those 
townships. 1 Kuerden, loc. cit. 

NIbid. The account of Stanah shows 
that Thomas Travers was in possession in 
1346. 
? Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 784. John 
Travers occurs at Ribbleton in 1362. 

13 Ing. p.m. 36 Edw. III, pt. ii, no. 52. 

M Roger was a juror in 1389-903 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 38. In 
1402 he made a settlement of the manor 
of Nateby, lands in Preston and Elswick 
and the reversion of the fourth part of the 
manor of Ashton ; the remainders were 
to his sons Thomas and John, and in 
default of male issue to Katherine 
daughter of Roger and Alice, formerly 
his wife, daughter of John de Thornton ; 
Kuerden, loc. cit. (Two versions are 
given; in one John is called son not 
brother of Thomas.) Thomas seems to 
have been in possession as early as 1415 3 
account of Ribbleton. As late as 1420, 
however, the feoffees regranted to Roger 
Travers of Nateby and Joan his wife the 
manor of Tulketh with remainder to 
Thomas the son of Roger; Dunken- 
halgh D. 

© Lancs, Ing, p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 25. 
In 1430 the Archdeacon of Richmond 
gave licence to Thomas Travers to have 
an oratory at Nateby ; Raines MSS. (Chet. 
Lib.), xxii, 407. 

‘6 Thomas occurs at Ribbleton in 
1445. In 1447 Nicholas Boteler of Raw- 


Lawrence, aged the 


cliffe claimed a debt of 10 marks from 
Thomas Travers of Nateby, ‘gentleman.’ 
The defendant pleaded that he was very 
illiterate, and being told that the promise 
to pay was conditional upon his son John 
not submitting to arbitration regarding 
certain trespasses he agreed to it. The 
verdict was for the plaintiff ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Plea R. 10, m. 26. Thomas Travers, 
‘esquire,’ was defendant in 1448; ibid. 
11, m. 153 12, m. 6. 

7 Kuerden MSS. iv, G4, no. 7. The 
writ of diem cl. extr. after the death of 
Robert Travers was issued in 1479 3 Add. 
MS. 32108, no. 1413. 

18 The pedigree in Travers Family 
(1864) states that Robert Travers died 
1479-80 and was ‘buried at Calais’ 
(Dods. MSS. Ixxxvii, fol. 1132), and left 
a son Richard, ‘ buried in the north aisle 
of the minster at Canterbury’; his son 
was the William Travers who died in 
1524. 

19 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. v, no. 62. 

20 Ibid. xi, no. 68. His will, recited in 
the inquisition, is printed in Fishwick’s 
Garstang (Chet. Soc.), 248-50. 

21 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xii, no. 22 5 
the hall of Nateby and appurtenances were 
held of Gilbert Gerard, attorney-general, 
as of his manor of Nether Wyresdale, by 
a rent of 4s. See note 29 below. 

Richard Travers in 1574 obtained a 
messuage, &c., in Nateby from Walter 
Preston and Margaret his wife; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 36, m. 215. This 
may have been Little Nateby. 

2 Visit. of 1613 (Chet. Soc.), 85. 
William Travers was then living and 
had a son Richard, twenty-three years 
of age. 

23 This account of the descent is taken 
from Fishwick, op. cit. 250-1, where 
details are given from the title-deeds. 

24 Misc, (Cath. Rec. Soc.), i, 124. 

Walter Strickland of Rydal in 1649, 
as cousin and heir, desired to compound 
for an estate descending to him by the 
death of George Preston in 1644. He 


ae) 


hands of several owners®® it was in 1868 


said he had always been well affected 
towards the Parliament, but desired to 
compound rather than attend the Com- 
mittee of Sequestration. This was 
allowed, £266 being the fine. After- 
wards it was alleged that George Preston 
had been ‘a Papist in arms and an active 
delinquent,’ and that Strickland himself 
was a sequestered delinquent. The latter 
protested that a mistake had been made 
between George Preston of Nateby and 
George Preston of Holker, his father. 
These difficulties delayed the discharge 
until 1651; Cal. Com. for Comp. iii, 
1888-9. 

25 In 1668 Robert Strickland obtained 
the manor of Nateby, &c., against Francis 
and Richard Biddulph; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 181, m. 35. 

6 Tyldesley Diary; Gillow, Bibl. Dict. 
of Engl. Cath. iv, 240. 

a7 John Leyburne’s sister Anne married 
Thomas Walton of Winder. Their 
daughter Elizabeth married (1) Thomas 
Cholmley and (2) George Anne of Frickley; 
her daughter by the second marriage gave 
the estate to her father absolutely. He 
married (2) Mary Needham, and had sons 
George and Michael the vendor; Fish- 
wick, op. cit.; Burke, Landed Gentry. 

There was a recovery of the manor by 
George Anne in 1783 ; Com. Pleas Recov. 
R. East. 23 Geo. III, m. 91. There 
was a fine concerning the manor in 1803, 
Henry Maire v. Michael Anne ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Aug. Assizes, 43 Geo. III. 

28 Thomas Swarbrick and John Valen- 
tine, purchasers in 1806, conveyed to 
John Birley of Kirkham, who in 1818 
sold to Thomas Butler-Cole of Kirkland. 
In 1826 it was purchased by Richard 
Thompson of Lancaster, whose daughter 
Elizabeth married John Stewart. He and 
his son sold it in 1868 ; Fishwick. 

In 1826 there was a fine concerning 
the manor, Richard Thompson v. Thomas 
Fawcett and wife and Richard Thompson 
and wife; Pal. of Lanc, Fines, Aug. 7 
Geo. IV. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


purchased by John Wilson-Patten, afterwards Lord 
Winmarleigh. 

Nateby Hall, now occupied as a farm-house, 
stands in a sheltered position surrounded by a belt 
of trees, but is a building of no architectural interest, 
the greater part having been destroyed by fire about 
1870 and the remainder modernized. The exterior is 
stuccoed and all the windows are modern sashes.” 
In the garden is a fine mulberry tree. ; 

In Little Nateby is Bowers House, built about 
1627 by Richard Green.?? He or his son Richard, 
as ‘a Papist delinquent,’ had his estate sequestered 
under the Commonwealth,*® and at last sold by the 
Act of 1653.3! It seems to have been part of the 
endowment of the Savoy Hospital. 

The house, though to some extent modernized, 
preserves a good deal of its original appearance. 
The building is of three stories with a middle and 


house doubtless possessed originally some architectural 
features, but, though these have been lost, it retains 
some degree of picturesqueness, added to by the 
dwarf fence wall and tall stone gate piers in front, 
the latter with large ball finials. The chapel is said to 
have been in the top room in one of the gables. On 
the lintel of an outbuilding now used as a wash-house 
are the date 1627 and the initials R. G., G. G., 
referring to members of the Green family, 

A large part of the soil remained in the hands 
of the lords of Nether Wyresdale, and in 1853 
the Duke of Hamilton held 1,802 acres in Nateby 
and the neighbourhood. This estate was pur- 
chased by William Bashall of Farington Lodge for 
£47,500.8 

Among the recusants who in 1654 sought to com- 
pound for their sequestrated two-thirds was John 
Miller a/ias Atkinson of Nateby.*3 There were a 


Bowers House 


projecting end wings, but the old mullioned windows 
have given place in the front to modern insertions 
and others have been blocked up. ‘The walls are 
whitewashed and the gables quite plain, being with- 
out barge-boards or ornament of any kind. The 


2) There is a local legend of a subter- 
Tanean passage from Nateby Hall to 
Bowers House. 


Margaret, a year old; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. xiii, no. 29. 


number of convicted recusants in this township and 
Winmarleigh after the Restoration.*4 Three brothers 
of John Leyburne of Nateby registered estates as 
‘Papists’ in 1717, viz. James (Croxteth), Nicholas 
(Prestwood) and George (Nateby) ; the last was a 


took part in the burning of Lancaster ty 


Another inquisi- the Royalists ; Cal. Com. for Comp. i, 21. 


%9 Fishwick, op. cit. 252-3. In 1631 
Richard Green of Garstang compounded 
for refusing knighthood ; Misc. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 222. 

Thomas Bower died in 1557 holding a 
messuage, &c., in Garstang, held partly 
of the queen as of her manor of Nether 
Wyresdale by knight's service and 2s, ahd. 
rent, and partly of the queen in socage 
by 35. 8d. rent. His heir wasa daughter 


tion (later) gives a different account of 
the tenure, viz. all was held of the queen 
as of her castle of Lancaster in socage by a 
rent of 2s. 1d. and a pair of gauntlets value 
62d. for castle ward. Margaret, the 
daughter, was in 1570 the wife of Walter 
Preston of Preston in Westmorland ; ibid. 
xiii, no, 28. This may refer to Bower 
House in Nateby. 

5° Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. Lancs, 
and Ches.), iii, 95-100. Richard Green 


410 


31 Index of Royalists (Index Soc.), 42- 
The estate appears to have been recovered 
for the family, for in 1717 Agnes Green, 
spinster, registered her leasehold estate at 
Garstang as a ‘Papist’; Estcourt and 
Payne, Engl. Cath. Nonjurors, 141. 

32 Preston Guard. 21 Nov. 1874. 

83 Royalist Comp. Papers, iv, 139- 

4 Misc. (Cath. Rec. Soc), ¥, 171-25 
in the notes will be found an account of 
the Green family. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


secular priest. Their estates consisted of annuities 
out of the manor.® 

Owing to a division in the Congregational church 
at Garstang a Particular Baptist church was established 
at Nateby, the chapel being opened in 1839.8 

From early in the 17th century there were mis- 
sionary priests’ stations at Bowers House” and 


Nateby Hall.* 
GARSTANG 


Cherestanc, Dom. Bk.; Geresteng, Grestein, 
1204; Gayrestan, 1236; Gayerstang, 1246; Gayr- 
stang, 1274 3; Gayrestang, 1292. 

This township, which gives its name to the parish,! 
extends for about 2 miles along the western bank of 
the Wyre, but its breadth seldom exceeds half a mile, 
and the area measures but 5024 acres.” The little 
town of Garstang lies along the main road from 
Preston to the north, which here crosses the Wyre 
by a two-arched stone bridge.* At the south end of 
the town is the modern church, and at the north 
end is a station on the single-line railway which 
branches from the London and North-Western main 
line to go to Pilling and Knott End.* Various roads 
lead to Cockerham, Pilling and Churchtown. The 
Preston and Kendal Canal comes into the township 
by an aqueduct over the Wyre and crosses into 
Nateby. 

The surface is generally even, between 50 ft. and 
70 ft. above sea level for the most part, but at the 
north end attaining 100 ft. The population in 
1901 was 808. 

The relative importance of the place has greatly 
declined since the opening of the railway route to 
the North. There are no manufactures, and the 


GARSTANG 


private company formed in 1880° and water by the 
Fylde Water Board. 

William Lancaster issued a farthing token in 1663.° 

In 1690 Ogilby described Garstang as ‘a good 
thoroughfare, with a market for corn, cattle, &c., on 
Thursdays.’ Pococke in 1750 thought it ‘a very 
poor town’; he ‘saw to the east the smoke of some 
iron-smelting houses, which are erected there on 
account of the great plenty there is of wood.’? 

The market cross, restored in 1897, stands in the 
main street. Near it were formerly the well and 
pump and the fish-stones. The old stocks are pre- 
served in the town hall.® 

As already explained, Garstang usually 
MANOR denoted the lordship of Nether Wyres- 
dale, but a smaller subordinate manor 
was created in 1246 in the present township of 
GARSTANG by one of William de Lancaster’s 
death-bed gifts—that of 4 oxgangs of land, which he 
granted with his heart to Cockersand Abbey.’ This 
manor, after the Suppression, was given by Philip 
and Mary to the Savoy Hospital’; it afterwards 
reverted to the Crown, and was let on lease," but was 
in 1750 sold to the lessee, the Hon. Edward 
Walpole, under a special Act of Parliament.” Through 
his daughter the lordship has descended to Mr. 
Bertram William Arnold Keppel of Lexham, Norfolk.” 
Courts baron have been held down to the present 
time. 

In 1310 the canons of Cockersand obtained a 
royal charter for a market every Thursday at their 
manor of Garstang and a yearly fair on 28-9 June." 
The right fell into abeyance, and Leland’s statement 
that ‘some said’ it was a market town shows that 
markets had ceased to be held long before the Reforma- 


land is entirely in pasture. 
governed by a parish council. 


35 Estcourt and Payne, op. cit. 121, 
148, 150. 

36 Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. i, 203 3 
Fishwick, op. cit. 124. 

37 Thid. 252. 

38 Gillow, op. cit. iv, 241. 

1 Perhaps it would be more correct to 
say that it takes its name from the parish. 

? 488 acres, including 13 of inland 
water; Census Rep. 1901. A small de- 
tached part of Cabus was added in 1887 
by Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 20097. At the 
same time some adjustments were made 
with Barnacre township. 

3 The first Earl of Derby left £20 
towards the building of a bridge here ; 
V.C.H. Lancs. iii, 160, n. 6. 

‘This railway was opened in 1870 as 
far as Pilling, and completed to Knott 
End in 1908. 

5 Act 43 & 44 Vict. cap. 61. 

8 Lancs, and Ches. Antig. Soc. v, 77. 

” Ogilby, Bk. of Roads ; Travels through 
Engl. (Camd. Soc.), i, 13. 

8 Lancs. and Ches. Antig. Soc. xx, 197. 
Remains of two other crossea are known ; 
the cross itself in one case is at Bowgrave ; 
ibid. 201, 

Lancs, Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 165 ; it was then 
worth 2 marks yearly. The brief charter 
1s in Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 
281, This may be a confirmation or 
extension of a previous grant of 4 oxgangs 
of land (ibid. 280), the bounds of which 
are given—from Belanspot Ford to Kiner- 
syke and thence to Tilversheimholme 
Ford beyond the Moss. 


The township is now 
Gas is supplied by a 


tion. 


Its history under the rule of the canons 
appears to have been unmarked by note- 
worthy incidents. An oxgang of land was 
in dispute in 1246 ; Assize R. 404, m. 6. 
Names of tenants, with their rents, from 
1451 to 1538 will be found in the printed 
Chartulary, iii, 1272-5. In 1538 the 
abbots and canons leased their manor 
and other estates in the district to John 
Rigmaiden for ninety-nine years at a rent 
of £10 8s.; Fishwick, Garstang (Chet. 
Soc.), 14. 

10 Pat. 4 & 5 Phil. and Mary, pt. xv. 
The advowson of the parish church was 
included. The master of the hospital 
gave a lease to Henry Saville, its term of 
ninety-nine years to begin on the expiry 
of the Rigmaiden lease. This prospective 
lease was acquired by John Rigmaiden 
and passed by the sale of the Wedacre 
estate to Lord Gerard; Fishwick, op. 
cit. 15. 

Thus in 1667 William Spencer and his 
wife Elizabeth were involved in disputes 
with Lord Gerard, with Thomas Green 
as to messuages held on lease, and with 
Hugh Barton and others as to the customs 
and tenant rights of the manor as observed 
by the abbey of Cockersand and_ the 
masters and chaplains of the Savoy Hos- 
pital; Exch. Dep. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), 45. There was a fine respecting 
the manor of Garstang, &c., in 1689 
between Elizabeth Spencer, widow, and 
William Spencer and Mary his wife ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 224, m. 63. 

1 After the expiration of the leases 
named above the Crown in 1742 let the 


31l 


In 1597 Elizabeth granted the inhabitants a 
weekly market and two yearly fairs ‘for the relief of 


manor to William Hall, who transferred 
to the Hon. Edward Walpole, and he in 
1751 obtained a fresh lease for thirty-one 
years; Fishwick, op. cit. 16-173; Pat. 
25 Geo. II, pt. iii. 

1223 Geo. II, cap. 7, private. The 
Act was passed for the benefit of the 
town and district, it being represented 
that the lessee, having only a short lease, 
was discouraged from any attempt to 
improve it ; Fishwick, loc. cit. 

13 Edward Walpole was second son of 
Sir Robert, the great statesman, created 
Earl of Orford in 1742. Edward was 
Chief Secretary for Ireland, created K.B. 
in 1753 (Collins, Peerage, v, 49) and 
died unmarried in 1784. His natural 
daughter Louisa, who received Garstang, 
was the wife of Dr. Frederick Keppel 
(son of the second Earl of Albemarle), 
Bishop of Exeter 1762-77 -s. Frederick 
of Lexham, d. 1830 —s. Frederick Wal- 
pole, d. 1858 -bro. (Col.) Edward George 
Walpole, d. 1859 -bro. (Rev.) William 
Arnold Walpole, d. 1888 -s. (Col.) 
William Henry Augustus, d. 1889 —e. 
Bertram W. A. Keppel, b. 1876; Burke, 
Peerage under Albemarle ; Dict. Nat. 
Biog. lix, 205. 

The estate was offered for sale in 1867. 

M Chart. R. 4. Edw. II, m. 22, no. 59 3 
Cal. Chart. R. 1300-26, p. 138. 

On the fair day, 29 June 1369, there 
came to the fair John de Derby, canon 
and warden of Cockerham, John de 
Chacoumbe and various men of Cocker- 
ham, with force and arms, to seck a 
certain Thomas and maltreat him, and 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


the poor.’'> In this way the distinction between 
Garstang Churchtown and Garstang Market-town 
became established, and now the latter is known as 
Garstang absolutely, the former being Churchtown. 
In 1679 a charter of incorporation 
BOROUGH was granted by Charles IJ, constitut- 
ing a free borough of Garstang with 
bailiff and burgesses. The charter appointed William 
Spencer the first bailiff, the office to be an annual 
one, and named the seven burgesses, who held for 
life. A common seal was allowed, and the market 
and two fairs, with court of pie powder, were ratified 
and extended.’* Freemen were elected and a town 
hall was built.” The corporation was dissolved in 
1886 under the Municipal Corporations Act of 1883, 
and the Garstang Town Trust was then formed to 
manage the property, viz. the town hall, with offices, 
warehouse and cottage, market tolls, piccage and 
stallage ; fair tolls; furniture of the town hall; two 
constables’ halberds, a silver-topped staff, the common 
seal and documents. The gross income is about 
£50 a year; any balance over expenses is to be 
applied to the establishment of a library or other 
institution for the benefit of the inhabitants. 

In 1654 Jane Hodgkinson, widow, of Garstang, 
desired to compound for the two-thirds of her estate 
sequestered for recusancy.'* Roger Green and Richard 
Richardson registered estates in 1717 as ‘ Papists.’ ” 

In 1437 the inhabitants obtained a 
licence for one year for the chapel of 
Holy Trinity in Garstang.” This 1s 
supposed to refer to a chapel in what is now called 
Garstang. No clear evidence of its continuance is 
forthcoming” till 1646, when the Committee of 
Plundered Ministers made a grant of £50 a year 
from Royalists’ estates in order to provide a minister 
for ‘the chapel of the Market town of Garstang.’® 
Bishop Gastrell in 1717 found that it had no endow- 


CHURCH 


ment, but was ‘supplied by the vicar.’ In 1: 34 
the churchwardens reported that service was ‘seldom 
performed’ there.% It was rebuilt on a new site in 
1770, and some endowments were obtained. It is 
now called St. Thomas’s, and has been enlarged and 
restored.* A separate district was assigned to it in 
1881,” and the vicars are presented by the vicar of 
Garstang. ‘The net value is £197. The following 
have been in charge ” :— 


1723 Thomas Parkinson ® 
1736 John Sutton, B.A. (Trin. Coll., Camb.) 
c.1738 John Hunter ° 

1762 James Fisher ® 

1773 John Moss * 

1800 William Wayles Thornton, B.D. (Em- 
manuel Coll., Camb.) 

1822 James Pedder, M.A.* (Christ’s Coll., 
Camb.) 

1835 William Armitstead 

1879 George Boys Stones, M.A. (St. John’s 


Coll., Oxf.) 

A school was built in 1756, the lord of the 
manor, Sir Edward Walpole, granting a piece of 
land at the north end of the great street of Garstang 
at a rent of 2s. 6d.* 

John Wesley visited Garstang in 1765 and 1770, 
but the Wesleyan Methodist chapel was not built 
till 1814.° He preached in the Congregationalist 
chapel,*® which is of unknown origin, but the lease 
had thirty years torun in 1823." A fresh beginning 
was made by the Congregationalists in 1829, and 
the chapel was altered and improved in 1868. A 
graveyard is attached.® 

Roman Catholics during the time of the penal 
laws were served by the missionary priests harboured 
at a number of the houses in the district, such as 
Dimples in Barnacre * or Bowers House in Nateby.” 
They had a chapel in the town from 1784 until 


this to the terror of the people and disturb- 
ance of the peace; Assize R. 451, m. 2. 
It does not appear that they found him. 

Cal. S. P. Dom. 1595-7, p. 347. 
The market was to be kept (on Thursday) 
on the street way and the fairs were to 
be held on 29 June and 11 November ; 
Fishwick, op. cit. §9. The revived market 
became populsr, and is noticed by 
‘Drunken Barnaby.’ Blome in 1673 
says there was ‘a great market for corn, 
cattle, yarn and fish on Thursdays’ ; 
Brit. 135 (quoted by Baines). 

‘6 The charter is printed by Fishwick, 
op. cit. 59; here also may be seen the 
seal (ibid. 68) and extracts from the 
town’s books (61-7). The annual meet- 
ing of the corporation used to be held on 
z9 September. The weckly market on 
Thursday was continued by the charter 
and the fairs were extended to two days 
each, viz.2$-g June and 10~11 November. 
The June fair has long been discon- 
tinued, but the Martinmas fair (affected 
by the change of style) is held still on 
22-3 November for cattle and horses. 
A market-house was built in 1843 and 
the Thursday market continues. There 
is no authority that a charter of incorpora- 
tion was granted in 1314, but ¢ burgages’ 
occur in Kirkland. 

An additional fair instituted in 1830 
to be held on 12~13 April has ceased to 
exit 5 ibid. 58. 

“It was rebuilt 1755-64; Baines 
Lanes. (ed. 1870), ii, Pb bi : 


> End. Cha. Rep. tor Garetang, 1899, 
pp. 21-3. There are eleven trustees— 
two ex officio, viz. the guardians of the 
poor for the parish, four elected by the 
parish council, one nominated by the 
Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian 
Society—a noteworthy case—and four 
co-optative, appointed by the other trustees 
to serve for seven years. It is added that 
several of the old freemen were living and 
were exempt from the fair and market tolls. 

'9 Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 231. 

*0 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. Non- 
jurors, 142. 

“1 Raines MSS. (Chet. Lib.), xxii, 409. 

2 Robert Beck, draper, of Manchester 
in 1556 left 16s. 8d. towards the buying or 
making of a chalice for ‘the chapel of Gar- 
stang’; Piccope, Wills (Chet. Soc.), i, 84. 

® Plund. Mins. Accts, (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 24. It is called ‘the chapel 
of Garstang’ in 1648 ; ibid. 63. Thomas 
Smith in 1648 signed the ‘Harmonious 
Consent’ as ‘preacher at Garstang 
Chapel,’ but he had removed to Cocker- 
ham by 1650. Edward Lawrence was 
there in 1656; Fishwick, op. cit. 137. 
In 1650, ‘the chapel at Garstang market 
being two miles distant from the parish 
church and in the high road between 
Preston and Lancaster,’ the people of the 
neighbourhood desired it to be made a 
parish, with a minister and a ‘competent 
Maintenance’ ; Commonw. Ch, Surv. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), 150. 


512, 


34 Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 412. 

% Visit. Ret. at Chester. In 1743 
service was performed every Sunday after- 
noon, excepting those days when the 
sacrament was administered at the parish 
church ; ibid. 

26 The title being defective, the chapel 
was not consecrated until 1848; Nositia 
Cestr. ii, 413. Some details are given by 
Fishwick, op. cit. 100-1. A descriptive 
account is given in Hewitson, Our Country 
Churches, 477-81. 

37 Lond. Gaz. 18 Jan. 1881. 

28 This list is mainly derived from 
Fishwick, op. cit. 102-4, where further 
details may be found. 

29 Parkinson, Old Church Clock (ed. 
1880), 187~g0. 

30 Afterwards curate of Pilling. 

31 Afterwards vicar of Garstang. 

32 Hewitson, op. cit. 481. 

33 Afterwards vicar of Garstang. 

® End, Char. Rep. 

35 Hewitson, op. cit. 492. 

86 Fishwick, op. cit. 124, citing R. 
Allen, Methodism in Preston. : 

37 B, Nightingale, Lancs. Nonconf. i, 
196. . 
"a Ibid. 191-263; Hewitson, op. cit. 
482. The cause was injured by the 
secession of the more extreme Calvinists in 
1828 ; see Nateby. i 

39 See Tyldesley Diary, 94, 158. 

0 ibid, 50. a 1687 Bishop Leyburn 
had at Nateby Hall confirmed 1,0§2 
Roman Catholics ; ibid. 22. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


1858, when the church in Bonds was opened." The 
old building is now a public institute. 


KIRKLAND 


Kirkelund, 1246; Kyrkelund, 1254 ; Kyrkelond, 
1292; Kyrkeland, 1331. 

This township is bounded on two sides by the 
Wyre, which flows south and then turns sharply to 
the west at a point where it is joined by the Calder 
from the east ; on its north bank is situated the old 
parish church, nearly two miles south of Garstang. 
The hamlet called Churchtown adjoins. The hall is 
somewhat to the north of it, and Humblescough lies 
in the north-west corner. The area measures 9744 
acres,' and in 1901 there was a population of 274. 

The principal road follows the course of the river 
from Garstang to St. Michael’s; there is a bridge 
somewhat to the west of the bend named above, by 
which there is a connexion with the main road to 
Preston. The surface is in general level and lies 
low, the highest ground, about 50 ft. above the 
ordnance datum, being near the eastern edge. 

The dead-wood of ‘ Kirkelund’ is mentioned in a 
charter made before 1245.” There is now very 
little wood in the township, the land being mostly in 
pasture. The soil is gravelly, with subsoil of sand 
and clay. 


GARSTANG 


A large boulder stone lying about half a mile from 
the church is called Crappencrop. It is said to 
have been thrown from the church tower and to 
turn round when the bells ring. The spot was con- 
sidered haunted.’ 

The township is administered by a parish council. 

The village cross has a sundial.! 

Sir Edward Frankland, a distinguished chemist, 
was born at Churchtown in 1825. After a long 
and brilliant career he died in Norway in 1899.° 

This formed part of the lordship of 

MANOR Nether Wyresdale. All his land of 
KIRKLAND was by William de Lan- 

caster III granted to Robert the Tailor and his 
heirs,® with other land adjacent and free fishery in 
all waters within his demesne of Wyresdale.’ The 
Tailors were sometimes styled ‘de Kirkland.’ The 
manor descended regularly ® to William de Kirkland, 
who died in 1361 holding various lands of that 
moiety of the manor of Wyresdale which had 
belonged to William de Coucy by the service of 1d. 
or half a pound of cummin yearly. He had three 
daughters, and his wife Margaret was pregnant at his 
death,® but the child if a son must have died early, 
as Kirkland passed with the eldest daughter Alice to 
her husband John Boteler and their issue.” The 
descent is not clearly established," but William 
Boteler died in 1505 holding the manor of Kirkland 


41 Fishwick, op. cit. 121. 

1975 acres, including 11 of inland 
water; Census Rep. 1got. 

2 Cockersand Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 
280. 

3 Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 449. 

4 Lancs, and Ches. Antiz. Soc. xx, 203. 
The bases of the churchyard cross and 
Hagwood cross remain ; ibid. 200, 204. 

5 Dict. Nat. Biog. 

6 Dods. MSS. Ixii, fol. 89. 

* Ibid. William de Lancaster died in 
1246 and among the gifts he made on his 
death-bed was one of 56 acres of aravle 
land in the townfields of Kirkland (worth 
18s. 8d. a year) and of the wood of Kirk- 
land (worth 20s.) ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Chea’, i, £66. 

In 1253-4 Hilda widow of Robert the 
Tailor claimed dower in Kirkland against 
Agnes widow of William de Lancaster 
and in Ravenmeols against William del 
Well; Curia Regis R. 154, m. 10. 

3 John de Kirkland in 1253-4 gave 
the king 20s. for an assize of mort 
dancestor ; Orig. R. 38 Hen. III, m. 10. 
John son of Robert the Tailor paid 
1 mark for an assize in 1269 ; Excerptae 
Rot. Fin. (Rec. Com.), ii, 490. John the 
Tailer was defendant in 1278 ; De Banco 

-R. 23, m. 62. William son of Alan de 
Cathirton in 1285 released to John son 
of Robert le Tailor of Kirkland all claim 
in forty pigs which of right he should 
have in the wood of Kirkland by inherit- 
ance; Dods. MSS. lxii, fol. go. 

John son of John the Tailor about 
1285 confirmed a charter granting the 
dead-wood of Kirkland to the abbey of 
Cockersand, for which they allowed him 
and his successors to approve parcels of 
wood, waste and pasture in Garstang 
within the bounds of Kirkland; one 
piece lay between Ounespool and Pilling 
Moss and between Humblescough and 
the Wyre ; another 4 acres lay in parcels 
from John’s manor-house to the gate 
called the Lodyat, leading to Howath 
Bridge, also 6 acres by his manor in the 


7 


Hallhursts. Rights of way were allowed 
to the canons, including one within 
Kirkland Wood to Fildingford and thence 
to Pilling Moss; Cockersand Chartul. 
(Chet. Soc.), i, 269-71. Oak trees are 
named as growing in the wood. Ounes- 
pool seems to be the brook falling into 
the Wyre a quarter of a mile west of 
Garstang Church. Sir Henry de Lea was 
then sheriff ; Dods. MSS. Ixii, fol. god. 

In 1292 John the Tailor of Kirkland 
was non-suited in a claim for common of 
pasture in Garstang against Ralph de 
Catterall ; Assize R. 408, m.1d. This 
appears to have been the elder John, for 
John son of Robert the Tailor was plaintiff 
in 12943 Assize R. 1299, m. 16, 16d. 
In 1298 William de Wedacre complained 
that John son of Robert the Tailor had 
taken his goods at Kenandesaker and did 
not perform a covenant about messuages, 
&c., in Garstang; De Banco R. 122, 
m. 141, 113d. 

In 1306 John the Tailor of Kirkland 
released to William le Gentyl common of 
pasture ; Dods. MSS. lxii, fol. gob. The 
monks of Leicester in 1327 demised to 
John the Tailor of Kirkland—perhaps 
the same or a son—Margaret his wife 
and William his eldest son a messuage 
and land situate partly in Boulandwra by 
Kirkland ; Dods. MSS. lxx, fol. 161. 
John and William had previously granted 
a release of the same ; ibid. cviii, fol. 115. 
John the Tailor held of William de 
Coucy by knight’s service in 1346 ; Inq. 
p-m. 20 Edw. III (2nd nos.), no. 63. In 
1349 the feoffees granted the manor of 
Kirkland to John the Tailor and Margaret 
his wife with remainders to William de 
Kirkland and his brothers John, Nicholas, 
Lawrence and Robert ; Dods. MSS. Ixii, 
fol. go. At the same time the feoffees 
gave lands to three younger brothers in 
Woodslac, Gildouscroft, Halecroft, &c., 
Kuerden MSS. iv, Ki1g. It appears 
safe to assume that the William son of 
John the Tailor of 1327 was the William 
de Kirkland of 1349. 


oa3 


9 Ing. p.m. 36 Edw. III, pt. 1, no. 102. 
He had a messuage and 60 acres in Kirk- 
land, worth 60s. a year; also 10 maiks 
rent from tenants at will. He had given 
his manor, &c., to trustees for his wife 
(for her life) and then for his daughters 
in succession—Alice, Joan and Katherine. 
The trustees made a grant accordingly ; 
Kuerden, loc. cit. 

Various inquiries as to the descent of 
the manor were made in 1365 and later. 
From these it appears that Margaret the 
widow married John Boteler, that the 
daughters were aged five, three and one 
respectively at the father’s death, and 
that the charter granting the manor to 
the widow was suspected but proved 
good ; Memo. R. (Q.R.) 1433 (L.T.R.) 
130, Xxix 5 131. 

10 A settlement of the manor of 
Kirkland and 16d. of rent in Garstang 
was made by John Boteler and Alice his 
wife in 1392. The remainder was to 
the sons of Alice, and in default to 
Margaret daughter of Alice and John and 
to her sisters Joan, Katherine, Ellen, 
Elizabeth and Isabel, &c. Nicholas de 
Kirkland was still living; Final Conc. 
(Rec, Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), iii, 39. In 
1397 the feoffees granted to Alan son of 
William de Warburton and Margaret his 
wife, daughter of John Boteler of 
Kirkland, all the lands in Claughton, 
with the whole demesne, which they had 
received from Alan, with remainders to 
Robert de Blackburn of Arley, to John 
son of William de Bradkirk, to William 
son of Thomas Rigmaiden, and to the 
right heirs of Joan de Fetherby ; Dods. 
MSS. Ixii, fol. god. 

11 The next in possession after John 
and Alice was Richard Boteler, at one 
time (1420 onward) escheator in the 
county, but his paternity is not stated in 
the notices of him; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 
(Chet. Soc.), i,139- In 1400-1 Boniface IX 
granted a dispensation for the marriage 
of Richard Boteler of Kirkland with 
Elizabeth daughter of Sir John Boteler 


40 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


and various lands, &c., of Margaret Countess of 
Richmond by the service recorded in 1362. His 
son and heir Thomas was six years of age.” 

Thomas Butler died in 1526 holding the manor 
of the king and John Rigmaiden as of the lordship 
of Goberthwaite in socage."* He left a daughter 
and heir Margaret, aged eight, but the manor went 
to his brother John, who died in possession in 1543 
holding of the king bya rent of 2. and other service 
not known. The heir was his son John, aged ten." 
This John Butler recorded his pedigree in 1567,'° 
and his son and heir John made a settlement in 1591, 
including the capital messuage called Kirkland Hall 
in the town of Garstang, forty messuages, water-mill, 
&c., and a parcel of meadow called Bolon-wray ; 
he died a few days afterwards, leaving a son James, 
only four years old.© James Butler died in 1600, 
during his minority, and his younger brother John, 
aged nine, succeeded him.” 

John Butler, who recorded a pedigree in 1613,’ 
lived on until 1659. Though he compounded for 
recusancy in 1632" the estates do not appear to 
have been molested by the Parliamentary authorities 
during the Civil War.” His :on John fought for 
the king and took part in the burning of Lancaster”! ; 
he was killed at Marston Moor, 1644.” His son 
Thomas, aged twenty-nine in 1665, succeeded his 
grandiather and recorded a pedigree.” By this 
time the family had probably become Protestant, but 


Thomas's son Alexander is said to have been a 
Jacobite. He died in 1747,” and his son Thomas 
in the following year, leaving a son Alexander Butler 
high sheriff in 1767," and constable of Lancaster 
Castle. Through his mother Dorothy Cole he 
acquired Beaumont Cote, near Lancaster. He had 
no children and bequeathed his estates, with an 
obligation to take the surname of Cole, to his brother 
Thomas’s grandson Thomas,” who on succeeding in 
1811 was sixteen years old. 

Thomas Butler Cole, an eccentric man,” died in 
1864, having bequeathed Kirkland to Major Thorn. 
ton for life, with remainder to Captain Clarke, 
maternal uncle, with remainder to his se:ond son and 
male issue ; failing issue it was to revert to the heirs 
of the Butler family.” 

Kirkland Hall stands about half a mile to the 
north of Churchtown village and has a plain 
18th-century brick front facing south, three stories 
in height, with cornice, wide pediment, and sash 
windows retaining their original wood bars. On the 
pediment are the Butler arms and over the porch is 
the date 1760 with the initials of Alexander Butler. 
The oldest part of the house, however, is at the 
back, a stone at the north-west corner bearing the 
date 1668 and the initials of Thomas Butler and 
Elizabeth (Fleetwood) his wife. Another stone in a 
gable near to this has the same initials and the date 
1679, and on the north-east side is a good 17th-cen- 


(of Rawcliffe) ; they were related in the 
fourth degree ; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. g14. 
Rich:ard Boteler was in 1427 accused of 
having made false returns of the profite of 
his escheatorship; Add. MS. 32104, 
fol. 179. An inquiry was in 1433 
ordered into a charge that he had held a 
market at Kirkhouse in Wyresdale to the 
prejudice of the Duke of Bedford's 
tenants ; Dep. Keeper’s Rep. xl, App. 533. 

In 1428 the feoffees gave to John son 
ot Richard Boteler of Kirkland and Ellen 
his wifc, daughter of Gilbert Barton, a 
messuage in Kirkland ; Dods. MSS. lxii, 
fol. go. Richard the father was living in 
1448, when he gave land in Kirkland in 
the vill of Garstang to trustees for 
Elizabeth wife of Edward son of John son 
of the said Richard; Kuerden MSS. iv, 
K 19. A charter by John the son of 
Richard dated 1446 has been preserved ; 
it gave Walkerholme and Aldfield in 
Giretang to trustees; ibid. Nicholas, 
another son of Richard Boteler, had land 
in Homelsco in Kirkland in 1457 ; Dods. 
MSS. liii, fol. 985. In 1441 Richard, 
Thomas and Nicholas Boteler of Kirk- 
land were charged with trespass on the 
fishery of Richard Catterall at Garstang 
and Catterall; Pal. of Lance. Plea R. 3, 
m. 17. 

William Boteler and Alice Rigmaiden 
had an indulgence in 1482; Dods. MSS. 
Ixii, fol. go. The first recorded ped'gree 
begins with Robert father of William 
Beuceler. 

‘2 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iv, no. 44. 
He made a settlement of the manor, &c., 
in 1501 in favour of his male issue by 
Al'ce his wife and in default to his right 
heirs male. His will (1505) is recited 
also 5 it provides for his son John and 
other younger children. Alice, the 
widow, and two daughters were executors 3 
Dods. MSS. Ixii, fol. 90. Thomas, the 
heir, was at once contracted to marry 
Isabel daughter of John Brockholes - ibid. 


13 Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. vi, no. 72. 
Isabel in 1528 claimed dower in the 
manor of Kirkland against John Boteler 
and others; Pal, of Lanc. Plea R. 142, 
m. 3- 
's Duchy of Lane. Ing. p.m. vii, no. 32. 
His will is recited. He left 205. to the 
parish church; to his son John ‘all 
thinzs belonging to my chapel, with my 
velvet night-cap, my damask doublet and 
all the harness that I have, to the 
intent that the said harness with all 
things pertaining to my said chapel and 
my clock shall be left at my manor of 
Kirkland as heirlooms for ever.’ He 
had in 1527 made a settlement on 
Elizabeth daughter of Thomas Farington, 
whom he was to marry; Pal. of Lanc. 
Plea R. 178, m. 3. Another, of 1538, 
is in Towneley MS. DD, no. 679. 

18 Visit, of 1567 (Chet. Soc.), 43. 

The grant of a crest in 1560 is printed 
in Gregson’s Fragments (ed. Harland), 267. 

16 Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. xv, no. 17 ; 
the deceased is called grandson of John 
Butler late of Kirkland. Kirkland Hall 
was held of the queen as of her manor of 
Nether Wyresdale in socage by the rent 
of half a pound of cummin ; Bolon-wray 
was held of the queen in chief by knight's 
service and arent of 4s. By the settle- 
ment recited the remainders were to 
James and John, sons of John Butler, 
and then to his brother James. 

Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvii, 
no. 29. 

fii of 1613 (Chet. Soc), 74. 
There was a recovery of the manor of 
Kirkland in 1612, John Butler and Anne 
his wife being vouchees; Pal. of Lance. 
Plea R. 310, m. 4. Another settlement 
was made in 1636 by John Butler and 
John his son and heir; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bd'e. 129, no. 2. 

19 Trans. Hist. Sic. (new ser.), xxiv, 175. 

9 John Butler gave certain lands to 
younger children—James, Elizabeth and 


314 


Mary (wife of James) Anderton— and 
they being recusants the lands were 
sequestered, so that the purchaser, 
Thomas Cole of Cotes, had in 1651 lost 
possession ; Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 261-2. Wear- 
ingmoor, Kinsacre and Bredenham are 
among the field-names given. 

Part of the manor-house of Kirkland 
was in 1659 in possession of Thomas 
Carus, Mary his wife and Reginald 
Heber; Pal. of Lanc, Feet of F, bdle. 
164, m. 80, 

21 Cal. Com. for Comp. i, 21. 

® Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 63. 

°8 Ibid. 

21 According to a local tradition re- 
ported in Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 
447-8 ; it refers apparently to 1715. 

% The remaining part of the descent 
has been taken from Fishwick, Garstang 
(Chet. Soc.), 227-30, where fuller details 
may be read. 

The following recoveries of the manor 
of Kirkland are on record :—1696, Alex- 
ander Butler, vouchee; Pal. of Lanc. 
Plea R. 463, m. 12. 1728, Alexander 
Butler ; ibid. 529, m. 6d, 1762, Alexander 
Butler ; ibid. 595, m. 3. 

36 P.R.O. List, 74. His monument 
in Garstang Church declares that ‘he 
chose an elegant retirement as most con- 
genial with his literary and philosophical 
pursuits’; Fishwick, op. cit. 94. 

2% The brother Thomas was rector of 
Bentham in Yorkshire and Whittingten 
in Lancashire 1793-1825. His evo 
Thomas, a custom-house officer at Liver- 
pool, married Sarah Clarke and had a 
son Thomas ; Fishwick. 

Thomas Butler was deforciant in a fine 
of the manor in 1826; Lanc. Aug. 
Assizes, 7 Geo. IV. 

2° Hewitson, Our Country Churcher 456. 

® Fishwick. The Rev. Henry Clarke 
of Torquay is one of the beneficiaries. 
having a life interest. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


tury doorway with moulded jambs and hood mould, 
the ornamental head of which is dated 1695 and 
has the initials of Alexander Butler and Elizabeth 
(Parker) his wife. The door, which is the original 
one, with ornamental iron hinges and ring handle, is 
panelled and profusely studded with nails. 

The whole of the land in this township except the 
glebe has long belonged to the Butlers, so that there 
is little or nothing to record of minor families.5° At 
one time Leicester Abbey owned the pasture called 
Bolon-wray mentioned above.*! Robert White of 
Garstang compounded in 1631 for declining knight- 
hood.? In the Civil War he took the king’s side ; 
his lands in Garstang, Kirkland and Catterall were 
declared forfeit,33 and were purchased by John White 
his ,son.*# It is noteworthy that ‘burgages’ are 
mentioned in the White possessions in Kirkland and 
the neighbourhood. 

The history of the parish church has already been 
given. There is no other place of worship in the 
township. 

The school was formerly considered a grammar 
school. It was founded, according to Bishop 
Gastrell, by the representatives of Walter Rigmaiden 
of Wedacre in 1602, and certainly existed in 1624, 
when an inquiry was made as to its funds. The 
Butlers of Kirkland gave £100 for endowment, and 
this was augmented later.°¢ 


BARNACRE WITH BONDS 


Bernaker, 1450. Byrewath, 1292; Byrewayth, 
1357. Grenolf, 1347. Howath, 1274; Hawath, 
1276. Lingarth,1276. Wedacre, Wedaker, 1276 ; 
Wodacre, 1292. 

Bonds lies in the south-west of the township, 
occupying 960 acres out of the total area of 4,4943.! 
The name is applied especially to the hamlet by the 
bridge over the Wyre, carrying the high road from 
Preston to the north into the adjacent town of 
Garstang. The surface is in general level, but there 
is a small hill in the south, round which are Dimples 
to the east, Bowgrave and Howath south-east and 
Byrewath or Byerworth west. In the north end of 
Bonds are the remains of Greenhalgh Castle and the 
farm or hamlet of Lingart. 

Barnacre, the main portion of the township, 
occupies higher ground to the north and east, over 
600 ft. above sea level being attained, but the surface 
falls away somewhat at the eastern and northern 


530 For Crombleholme of the Cross see 


GARSTANG 


boundaries, formed respectively by the Calder and 
Grizedale Brook. In the north-west corner, on level 
ground beside the Wyre, is Woodacre, formerly 
Wedacre ; towards the eastern border are Eidsforth 
and Kelbrick, and in the south-east arc Sullam Side 
and Stirzacre. On the high land at the north end 
are reservoirs of the Fylde Waterworks. 

A detached part of Catterall was added to this 
township in 1887; at the same time a detached 
portion of Barnacre called the Banks was added to 
Cabus.? The population of the township, including 
Bowgrave and Calder Vale, was 1,117 in Igo}. 

The principal road is that already mentioned from 
Preston northwards; from it another branches off 
east and then north over the hilly portion of the 
township. The London and North-Western Com- 
pany’s main line to Scotland runs north through 
the western side, having a station named Garstang 
and Catterall nearly two miles by road from the town 
of Garstang. From the station a single-line railway 
branches off westward to Pilling and Knott End. The 
Preston and Lancaster Canal winds through Bonds and 
crosses the Wyre into Garstang by an aqueduct. 

The Garstang Union Workhouse, built in 1876, 
is in Bonds. 

The soil is clay; wheat is grown, but most of 
the land is in pasture. There was formerly a paper- 
mill on the Calder. 

The enlarged township is governed by a parish 
council. 

The Thirlmere water supply is conveyed through 
the township towards Manchester. 

A square masonry well near Woodacre Hall is 
known as the Spa Well, and is believed to have 
healing qualities.® 

The base stone of an ancient cross remains at 
Stirzacre, and the sites of four others are known.* 

Though in some late documents a 

MANORS manor of BARNACRE is named,’ the 

place was formerly no more than a 

hamlet in the manor of Garstang or Nether Wyres- 

dale.6 There were within it a number of smaller 
estates or manors which call for notice. 

The principal of these is Woodacre or WEDACRE, 
once the residence of the Rigmaiden family. ‘They 
were for three centuries lords of a moiety of Nether 
Wyresdale, and this moiety was spoken of as the 
manor of Wedacre. The origin of their title having 
been narrated above,’ it remains to give an account 


of the descent. John de Rigmaiden and Isolda his 


3 Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 


Fishwick, op. cit. 259. 

51 See previous notes and Pat. 31 
Eliz, Also Exch, Dep. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), 5. 

The chartulary of the abbey (MSS. 
Laud. H 72, fol. 46) records a demise by 
the canons in 1327 to John le Taylor, 
Margaret his wife and William their 
eldest son, at a rent of 4s. 

_ 59 Misc, (Rec, Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 222. 

88 Index of Royalists (Index Soc. ; 
Robert wit aE Sof Pee 
was dead in 1652, 

“Cal. Com. for Comp. iv, 2506. 
Robert White was recusant and delinquent, 
but John ‘had been in service for the 
Parliament and ever well affected.’ 

85 Notitia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 410-11. 
The free school was to have been erected 


in the churchyard, but according to Gas- 
trell was built on a piece of the waste 
granted by the lord of the manor. 

Thomas Richardson of Myerscough 
died in 1637, leaving his lands, in the 
case of failure of issue in the heirs named, 
to trustees for the maintenance of the 
schoolmaster at the school of Garstang ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxviii, no. 76. 

In 1689 a master was nominated by 
Dame Elizabeth Gerard as guardian of the 
heiress of the manor-house of Wedacre ; 
Garstang Ch. Papers at Chester Dioc. 
Reg. 

36 End. Char. Rep. 1899. 

1 4,969 acres, including 96 of inland 
water ; Census Rep. 1901. 

2 Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 20097. At 
the same time some adjustments were 
made in the boundary between this town- 
ship and Garstang. 


315 


487. 
4 Lancs. and Ches. Antiz. Soc. xx, 200-1, 
2073 the sites are Brunahill, Grizedale, 
Ringing Hill and Whittingham’s. 

5 In 1776 in a recovery of the Earl of 
Derby’s estate in the district; Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R. 623, m. Ta. 

6 William Banastre of Bretherton in 
1362 granted to Adam de Meols of North 
Meols all his lands in the hamlet of Barn- 
acre in the vill of Garstang; Towneley 
MS. OO, no. 1570. 

This may have been the oxgang of land 
in Garstang settled on Richard Banastre 
of Bretherton in 1304, with remainders 
to Isolda daughter of Richard Ulf of 
Wyresdale, &c.; Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 204. 

7 See the account of Nether Wyres- 
dale. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


wife, the first in possession,” had two sons, John and 
Marmaduke. John son of John de Rigmaiden in 1323 
settled two plough-lands, Xc., in Wyresdale and Gar- 
stang upon his son Thomas and Joan his wife, together 
with a moiety of the manor of Wyresdale and rents 
in various townships.? John was still living in 1331,1° 
but Thomas was dead in 1328, and his widow Joan 
afterwards married Robert de Culwen ; she was still 
Thomas left an infant son John,” 
who married Lettice, afterwards the wife of Richard 
de Molyneux of Great Crosby.13 John de Rigmaiden 
died in 1355 }*; his heir was a daughter Joan, who 
died without issue in or before 1362.14 


living in 1348.12 


8 These have been frequently named. 
Isolda had a daughter Nichola, who is 
described as her heir, and who married 
Roger de Brockholes of Claughton. It 
does not appear what Isolda’s name was 
or her estate, and,as the later Rigmaidens 
descended from her, she must have been 
twice married. 

John de Rigmaiden and Isolda his wife 
were defendants in 1292 3 Assize R. 408, 
m. 66, In 1303 they made a claim 
against Hugh de Akovere concerning 
waste; De Banco R. 148, m. 31. They 
appear again in 1304; Assize R. 419, 
m. g. In the same year Gilbert de 
Lindsay complained that John de Rig- 
maiden, John his son and Robert de 
Pleasington had cut trees in his several 
woos, viz. Chapelfield in the park of 
Arkestanheved, &c. John replied that 
he and his wife held a wood in common 
with Gilbert; Coram Rege R. 176, 
m. 46d, 

Robert de Leyburn and Isolda his wife 
in 1311 claimed against Ingram de Gynes 
and Christiana his wife certain services 
demanded for a tenement in Garstang by 
Gilbert de Lindsay and Isolda widow of 
John de Rigmaiden; De Banco R. 185, 
m. 57. Ten years later the Abbot of 
Leicester demanded common of pasture 
in Garstang, of which he alleged he had 
been disseised by Isolda widow of John 
de Rigmaiden and others; ibid. 238, 
m. 111d, 

9 Final Cone. ii, §1, §5. In each case 
one-third was said to be held of the king 
as of his honour of Lancaster and the 
rest of the lords of the fee. This probably 
refers to the subdivisions of the Brus 
moiety, John then holding one share 
immediately and the rest as tenant of 
Thweng and (probably) Fauconberg. See 
also Cal. Pat. 1321-4, pp. 281, 284. 

10 He was defendant to claims by the 
Abbot of Leicester in 1325 ; De Banco 
R. 257, m. 123d. 134d. About the 
same time Christiana daughter of William 
de Lindsay and widow of Ingram de Gynes 
claimed a messuage in Garstang against 
him, alleging that Isolda de Rigmaiden 
had intruded after the death of Christiana 
de Howath ; ibid. 258, m. ;53. John 
de Rigmaiden, Joan his wife and others 
were in 1328 charged with an assault by 
Richard son of Alan de Catterall; ibid. 
273, m. 45 d. John de Rigmaiden, 
Joan his wife and John and Roger his 
sons, Thomas son of Marmaduke de R’z- 
maiiten, Robert de Culwen and Joan his 
wife, William de Heaton and Anilla his 
wife, were defendants in 1330; Ass‘ze 
R. 1400, m. 235. John son of Jchn 
de Rigmaiden the elder was again de- 
fendant in 1331; De Banco R. 287, 
m. 25. 

Joan widow of John de Rigmaiden was 


a plaintiff in 1334 respecting her dower 
in forty-two messuages, mill, &c., in 
Garstang; ibid. 297, m.230d.3 300, 
m. 204d. 

Tn 1328 William de Thweng claimed 
six messuages, lands, the fourth part of a 
mill, &c.. in Garstang, against John de 
Hornby and Joan widow of Thomas son 
of John de Rigmaiden ; also four mes- 
suages, &c., against Thomas son of 
Marmaduke de Rigmaiden, &c.; ibid. 
275, m. 33d. 

‘The tine of 1323 concerning the moiety 
ct the manor was adduced in 1334, when 
John son of John and Thomas de Rig- 
maiden both being dead, Joan the widow 
(then wife of Robert de Culwen) claimed 
to benefit; another John son of John 
de Rigmaiden was one of the defendants ; 
Coram Rege R. 297, m. 127. Joan was 
wife of Robert de Culwen in 13313 
De Banco R. 287, m.25. She was again 
a widow in 1348; ibid. 355, m. 124 d. 

A family named Croft appears in Gar- 
stang about this time. Isabel (or Isolda) 
widow of William de Croft claimed 
warranty from Ingram de Gynes and 
Christiana his wife in 1291-2; ibid. 
gi, m.129d.; 92,m. 146d. William 
de Thweng in 1332 recovered land against 
John son of William de Croft; ibid. 
292, m. 537d. 

12 John son of Thomas de Rigmaiden 
appeared in some of the pleadings of 
1334; ibid. 297,m. 230d, He was 
called to warrant by John de Lingart in 
1336, but was under age; ibid. 305, 
m. 339. He was again called to warrant 
in 13485; ibid. 355, m. 124 dc. In 
the account of Nether Wyresdale it 
has been shown that he held a moiety of 
the manor in 1346. In 1350-1 the 
Abbot of Cockersand claimed against him 
60 acres of moor and pasture in virtue of 
4 oxgangs of land granted by William 
de Lancaster to his abbey and the church 
of St. Helen of Garstang, but he answered 
that he was jointly seised with John de 
Coupland ; Assize R. 1444, m.2 d. 3 431, 
m.1. He again appears in 1352, being 
described as the great-grandson of John 
de Rigmaiden, whose wife was Isolda; 
Duchy of Lance. Assize R. 1, m. 5d. 

13 Final Conc. ii, 181. Lettice widow 
of John de Rigmaiden died in 1387 hold- 
ing in dower the third part of the manor 
of Wedacre of the duke in chief by 
knight’s service and 10d. a year for castle 
ward. The heir was Thomas son and 
heir of John de Rigmaiden (of the other 
line, as will be scen), then twelve years 
old and in ward to the duke ; Lancs. Ing. 
p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 26. The custody of 
that third part was granted to Joan widow 
of Thomas de Rigmaiden (he was grand- 
father of this heir) at a rent of 20 marks ; 
ibid. ; Dep. Keeper’s Rep. xl, App. 526. 


216 


Wedacre was then claimed by Thomas de Rig. 
maiden, son of Marmaduke above named." A settle- 
ment was made by him of this moiety of the manor 
of Wyresdale in 1366-71, the remainders being to 
John the son of Thomas, who was to marry Margaret 
daughter of Robert de Hornby, and in default of 
issue to Richard, William and Peter, brothers of 
John ; to John son of William de Bradkirk and Agnes 
his wife, daughter of Thomas de Rigmaiden.'® John 
de Rigmaiden afterwards married Elizabeth,!” and 
dying at Wedacre in 1379 !8 before his father, left 
by her a son and heir named Thomas, who proved 
his age in 1397.)° 


Thomas Rigmaiden held the 


13a The writ of diem cl, extr. after his 
death was issued 20 July 1355; Dep. 
Kecper’s Rep. xxxii, App. 334. 

‘4 Joan was in possession in 1355 as 
daughter and heir of John de Rigmaiden, 
she and John de Coupland contributing 
to the aid for half a knight's fee in 
Garstang with its members; Feud, 4:41, 
li, go. 

') In 1362, Joan having died without 
issue, Thomas de Rigmaiden claimed from 
the Earl of Lancaster (John of Gaunt) a 
moiety of the manor of Wyresdale, &c., 
in accordance with the fine of 13233 De 
Banco R. g11, m. 246d, 

Thomas eon of Marmaduke son of (the 
first) John de Rigmaiden and Isolda was 
plaintiff in 1372 respecting a further 
part of his inheritance ; De Banco R. 444, 
M. 3513 447, Mm. 322, 346 (where the 
pedigree is set out fully). Marmaduke 
was living in 1313 (Assize R. 424, m. 2), 
but died in or before 1321, when Ieolda 
widow of John de Rigmaiden, calling him 
her son, acknowledged the receipt of 
money due from him; Towneley MS, 
C8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), R. 46. His widow 
probably was the Anilla who as wife of 
William son of William de Heaton is 
frequently joined in the pleadings with 
Thomas son of Marmaduke, e.g. De 
Banco R. 257, m. 134d. (1325). In 1338 
Thomas gave William and Anilla a release 
of all actions concerning his inheritance in 
Garstang and Ellel; Townelcy, op. cit. 
R. 51. Ten years later, however, Thomas 
son of Marmaduke de Rigmaiden was 
plaintiff against William de Heaton; De 
Banco R, 356, m. 369d. The same 
Thomas made a claim against John son 
of Thomas de Rigmaiden (i.e. of the 
elder line) in 1352; Duchy of Lanc. 
Assize R. 2, m. 1. 

16 Final Cone. ii, 181. 

In 1372 Thomas de Rigmaiden claimed 
compensation for waste from Adam the 
Calfherd in a messuage and land demised 
to him for ten years. The jury found 
that Adam had thrown down a kitchen 
and a chamber (each worth 4+.) and had 
cut down and sold four ash trees worth 
1od. each, but acquitted him of the further 
charges ; De Banco R. 448, m. 564. 

The writ of diem cl extr. after the 
death of Thomas de Rigmaiden was issued 
on 1 Feb, 1383-4; Dep. Keeper's Rep. 
xxxii, App. 356. Dower was in March 
assigned to his widow Joan and the custody 
of the heir—his grandson Thomas (son of 
John son of Thomas)—was granted to ber 
at a rentof £13135. 4d. ; Lancs. Ing. p.m 
(Chet. Soc.), i, 12; Dep. Keeper's Rep. 
xxxii, App. 3574 *l App. 522. 

17 On this marriage his father granted 
them lands called ‘ Yngtonthintill * ia the 
vill of Garstang ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. 1, 12- 

1 Ibid. » Ibid. i, 67. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


moiety of Nether Wyresdale in 1431,?° and appears 
to have left a son Nicholas, in possession in 1445.72 

Nicholas Rigmaiden died in 1478 holding the 
manor of Wedacre of the king as of his duchy by 
fealty and a rent of 2s. 6¢.; his son John having 
died, the heir was John’s son Nicholas Rigmaiden, 
then thirty years of age.? This Nicholas died in 
or before 14968; he seems to have married Margaret, 
one of the daughters and co-heirs of Robert Lawrence 
of Ashton and Carnforth,?4 and to have left a son 
John,”* whose son and heir Thomas proved his age 
in 1§14,2° and died in 1520, leaving a son John, 
only five years old.2”7_ John Rigmaiden died in 1557 
holding a moiety of the manor of Nether Wyresdale 
of the king and queen by knight’s service and a rent 
of 2s. 6d. yearly.*® 

The heir was a namesake, grandson of the above- 
named Thomas’s brother John, and thirty years of 
age. He recorded a pedigree in 1567,’ and in 
1585 was discharged from his office of master forester 


GARSTANG 


of Quernmore and Wyresdale on account of disorders 
there and destruction of the deer.3? He died in 
1587 holding the moiety of 
Nether Wyresdale as before, 
and leaving a son Walter, 
thirty years of age,®! who was 
a lunatic.*? He died between 
1598 *8 and 1602, and in the 
latter year his representatives 
sold his estate to Sir Thomas 
Gerard,®4 who had inherited 
the other moiety of Nether 
Wyresdale. 

After this Wedacre for a 
time ceased to be a seat of 
the lords of Wyresdale and 
in itself became the residence of a family named 
Fyfe.85 John Fyfe raised a company of men for the 
Parliament in the Civil] War,®6 and was killed at the 
storming of Bolton by Prince Rupert in 1644.37 He 


Ricmaipen. Argent 
three stags’ heads ca- 
boshed sable. 


2 Feud, Aids, iii, 95 ; he held a moiety 
of the manor of Garstang by the fourth 
part of a knight’s fee. The writ of diem 
cl.extr. after his death was issued 18 Aug. 
1440; Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxiii, App. 39. 
He was found to hold the eighth part of 
the manor of Garstang by knight’s service 
and the rent of 14d. ; Harl. MS. 2085, 
fol. 4465, There may be some confusion 
between contemporaries of the same 
name, so that the descent outlined in the 
text is only probable. 

21%n 1438 a settlement of six mes- 
suages, &c., in Garstang and Cockerham 
was made by Nicholas Rigmaiden and 
Eleanor his wife ; Final Conc. iii, 103. In 
1440 the escheator was ordered to deliver 
to Nicholas, son and heir of Thomas 
Rigmaiden, the eighth part of the manor 
of Garstang which Thomas had held in 
fee, as also other lands, &c., which he 
had held conjointly with Alice his wife ; 
Dep, Keeper’s Rep. xxxiii, App. 39. 

In 1445-6 Nicholas Rigmaiden was 
said to hold in Garstang a plough-land and 
a half for the fourth part of a knight’s 
fee ; the relief was 25s. which the escheator 
had received ; Duchy of Lanc. Knights’ 
Fees, bdle, 2, no. 20, 

*2 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 106. 
The 2s. 6d. was for castle ward (note 13). 
Some other Rigmaidens occur in the 
pleadings contemporary with Nicholas ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 3, m. 13 (John) ; 
6, m. 2b (Thomas) ; 10, m. 3 (John and 
Gilbert his brother). 

In 1444 William Rigmaiden, ‘esquire,’ 
claimed an account of their receiverships 
against Nicholas Rigmaiden of Wedacre, 
‘gentleman,’ and Richard son of Gilbert 
Barton of Barton; ibid. 6, m. 7. In 
the recorded pedigree the descent is traced 
through a William who was a younger 
son of the Thomas who died in 1384 ; 
see the fine of 1371. 

John Rigmaiden, ‘esquire,’ occurs in 
1462, together with many others of his 
family and neighbourhood, charged with 
assault ; Pal, of Lanc, Writs Proton. file 2 
Edw. IV. 

*3 Towneley MS. CC (Chet. Lib.), no. 
6413; writ of diem cl. extr. He held a 
moiety of the manor of Wyresdale in 
Garstang by the fourth part of a knight’s 
fee; Harl. MS. 2085, fol. 449. 

ey Margaret Lawrence married a 
Rigmaiden, but his Christian name is 
not stated in Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 163, 
m. 20. Margaret Rigmaiden died in 


1516 holding forty messuages, &c., in 
Garstang of the inheritance of Thomas 
Rigmaiden, being parcel of the manor of 
Wedacre, which manor was held of the 
king as of his ‘duchy by the fourth part 
of a knight’s fee and 2s. 6d. rent ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iv, no. 73. It is 
here stated that Margaret was mother of 
John father of Thomas, but her hus- 
band’s name is not given. 

35 John the son and heir of Nicholas 
Rigmaiden in 1489 was married or con- 
tracted to Katherine daughter of Sir John 
Pennington of Muncaster; Hist. MSS. 
Com. Rep. x, App. 228. The writ of diem 
cl. extr. after John’s death was issued 
14 Feb. 1504-5 ; Dep. Keeper’s Rep. xl, 
App. 544. The wardship and marriage 
of Thomas son and heir of John 
Rigmaiden were soon afterwards granted 
to John Lawrence; Dep. Keeper’s Rep. 
xl, App. 544- 

28 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iv, 
no. §23 it was stated that Thomas was 
born at Wedacre 10 June 1493. 

{7 Ibid. v, no. 65. His will is recited, 
from which it appears that he had an 
uncle James, brothers John and Richard, 
a sister Katherine and daughters Isabel, 
Margaret and Eleanor. ‘There is also 
recited a demise by the feoffees of his 
father John (1503) made in 1506 in 
favour of Joan wife of Thomas. The 
manor of Wedacre and lands, &c., in 
Barnacre, Garstang and elsewhere were 
stated to be held of the king as of his 
duchy by the moiety of a knight’s fee. 
The will is printed by Fishwick, Garstang 
(Chet. Soc.), 215. The custody of the 
manors was granted to John Porte; 
Duchy of Lanc. Misc. Bks. xxii, 57. 

As mentioned in a previous note there 
was a minor Rigmaiden family in the 
township. In 1521 there died a Nicholas 
Rigmaiden holding two messuages, land, 
&c., in Barnacre and Wyresdale of the 
king as duke by the twentieth part of a 
knight’s fee. He left a son and heir 
John, aged six; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. 
pm. v, no. 37. Again John (son of 
John) Rigmaiden of New Hall in Barn- 
acre was about 1556 called upon to 
answer John Rigmaiden (of Wedacre) re- 
specting his title to Bradley House, &c. ; 
Fishwick, op. cit. 217. A settlement of 
New Hall, dovecote, water-mill, &c., in 
Barnacre and Winmarleigh was made by 
John Rigmaiden in 1563 ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 25, m. 63. 


317 


°8 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. x, no. 11. 
The estate was a moiety of the manor of 
Nether Wyresdale in Garstang, with 
eighty messuages, three water-mills, half 
a water-mill at Sandholme, land, &c. 

John Rigmaiden was master forester 
of Wyresdale ; Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), 
i, 303. 

°9 Visit. of 1567 (Chet. Soc.), 54. The 
descent is given as Thomas (1520) —bro. 
John -s. John -s. John (1567). 

30 Duchy of Lanc. Special Com. 381. 
John Calvert of Cockerham succeeded 
him. Details were given of the deer 
killed in the forest since the beginning 
of the queen’s reign. 

81 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 
87. In 1573 he had made a settlement 
on his son Walter on marrying Anne 
daughter of Edward Tyldesley. Margaret 
North, sister of John Rigmaiden, is 
named. An abstract of his will is printed 
in Fishwick, op. cit. 218. 

He was one of those summoned in 
1568 to be made an example of, because 
of his known opposition to Elizabeth’s 
regulation of religion. He answered that 
he had attended his parish church and 
heard divine service, but he had not re- 
ceived the communion ; he had enter- 
tained some of the deprived clergy, but 
was not aware he was offending ; Gibson, 
Lydiate Hall, 206, from S. P. Dom. Eliz. 
xxxvi, no. 10. He was soon afterwards 
found among those who refused to attend 
church, and was reported to have 
harboured a_ priest named ‘Little 
Richard’ ; ibid. 216, 226, 229, 231, 239, 
quoting from reports in the State Papers. 
In 1592 the sheriff was called upon to 
account for £254 of the goods of John 
Rigmaiden seized for his recusancy ; 
Exch. L.T.R. Recusant R. 34 Eliz. 

32 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, 
no. §. The inquiry as to his condition was 
made immediately after the father’s death. 

Like his father Walter Rigmaiden was 
arecusant and fined therefor; his fines 
were not excused by his lunacy ; Misc. 
(Cath. Rec. Soc.), iv, 170. 

33 Fishwick, op. cit. 219. 

34 See the account of Nether Wyresdale. 

35 Fishwick, op. cit. 220-2. The Fyfes 
held by lease, as appears below. 

36 War in Lancs. (Chet. Soc.), 42. 

37 Thid. 50. 

John Fyfe appears to have left some 
children ; Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc, 
Lancs. and Ches.), iii, 304. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


was succeeded by his brother William, a physician, 
who recorded a pedigree in 1664-5.°° On his death 
in 1671 the lord of the manor took up his residence 
there. It was sold with other of the Duke of Hamil- 
ton’s estates in 1854, and became the property of 
William Thompson of Underley and Kendal, whose 
daughter and heir Amelia married the Earl of Bective, 
who in 1870 after her death became Marquess of 
Headfort and diedin 1894. Their son Thomas Earl 
of Bective had died in 1893 and his daughter Olivia 
wife of Lord Henry Cavendish Bentinck succeeded 
to Wedacre, Greenhalgh and other estates.*? Wedacre 
and the Barnacre estate, together with Greenhalgh 
and Lingart, were purchased from Lord Bective’s 
representatives in 1899 by the late Thomas Henry 
Rushton. On his death in 1903 they descended to 
his son, the present owner, Mr. James L. Rushton 
of Barnacre Lodge.* 

Wedacre occurs as a surname.*! Of the other 
tenants there is little record.4? Stirzacre is partly in 
Catterall.*? Sandholme, Sullam and Eidsforth are 
other places in Barnacre occasionally mentioned. 

Bonds does not appear to be an ancient name, but 
in this part of the township are several estates once 
of some note. HOJ/’*4TH wasa general name for 
the southern part,*4 which, like much of Barnacre, 


was regarded as pertaining to Catterall," but the 
“manor of Howath’ was the estate of the Knights 
Ho:pitallers there. It was described as the mansion 
of St. John Baptist upon Howath with the chapel 
and lands, and about 1200 was given to the order 
by Robert son of Bernard lord of Catterall, together 
with other lands.4¢ There appears to have been 
a small hospital there.* Roger de Wedacre was the 
tenant in 1302, when the prior complained that 
goods seized in distraint for a fine imposed at the 
prior’s court had been rescued by Robert son ot 
Simon de Garstang.‘7 Afterwards it was acquired 
by Richard Shireburne of Stonyhurst together with 
S:idd,#8 and descended with his estates till the 18th 
century.49 The chapel of St. John there is not heard 
of later. The Hoghtons of Hoghton ® had lands 
in Howath and Catterall held of the Hospitallers 
by 2s. 6d. rent.5! William Baylton died in 1638 
holding a messuage, &c., in Catterall and Barnacre 
of the king as of the Hospital of St. John of 
Jerusalem.*? His son William, then thirty years of 
age, was a Royalist, and in the Commonwealth period 
had to compound for his lands.58 

Cockersand Abbey had land in Hovwath “ and 
BYREWATH,® which latter place was held by 
Brockholes of Claughton.5° 


3 William Fyre of Wedacre in 1651 
held the demesne with mill and kiln by 
lease from Lord Kilmorey. Great 
damage had been done by the incursion 
of the Scots in 1648. ‘Old Mrs. Fyte,’ 
the mother of Captain John Fyfe, had 
paid £200 a year under the lease, the 
fines and perquisites of Wyresdale Court 
being included. Mrs. Fyfe, ‘a staunch 
Parliamentarian,’ had lost two sons and a 
son-in-law in the service, at Bolton, but 
had been put out by Ewan Wall, clerk to 
the Sequestration Committee at Preston ; 
ibid. i, 162-5; Cal. Com. for Comp. ii, 
1284. 

39 Dugdale, /isit, (Chet. Soc.), r14. 
See also the account of Hackinsall 
and Preesall. There is an anecdote of 
Dr. Fyfe in Fishwick, op. cit. 220; 
Lanes, and Ches. Anti. Notes, i, 63. 

40 Hewitson, Northward, 68. The 
Countess of Bective, mother of the 
heiress, use to live at Barnacre, 

4a Taformation of Mr. Rushton. 

{1 Roger de Wedacre has been named 
in preceding notes. In 1276 he claimed 
two messuages, land, &c., against William 
de Lindsay ; De Banco R. 14, m. sod. 
He also occurs in 12923 Assize R. 408, 
m. $d. 38. 

Robert de Wedacre was plaintiff in 
1246; Assize R. go4,m. 10d. William 
de Wedacre was plaintiff in 1276; De 
Banco R. 15, m. 453 17, m. 128d. 

For an early pedigree see De Banco R. 
321, m. 294. See also notes 47, &c., 
below. 

42 John Hudson of Barnacre, a ‘delin- 
quent’ who had been ‘in arms against 
the Parliament,’ compounded for his 
leasehold tenement in 1649; Royalist 
Comp. Papers, iii, 306. 

48 See the account of Catterall. 

4 ¢Howath bridge over the Wyre’ 
shows that Howath extended over all 
Bonds, though the name is now applied 
to the south-east corner. Halecath or 
Holcath seems to have embraced both 
Howath and Stirzacre ; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents, i, 3. 

43 Stirzacre in Catterall has 
occurred, 


already 


48 Dods. MSS. lili, fol. 936; Dugdale, 
Mon. vi, 806 ; Kuerden MSS. vy, fol. 82. 
The bounds began at the bridge of 
Howath, followed the Wyre as far as the 
bridge over the Wyre towards St. Helen's, 
and so to the dyke near the donor’s 
house in Catterall ; thence to the road 
from Preston, crossing it and going along 
the road towards Slireshagh as far as land 
formerly Sparling’s, and thence to the 
Wyre. 

Howath is named in the list of Hos- 
pitallers’ lands in 12923 Plac. de Quo 
Warr. (Rec. Com.), 375. 

46a Lands situated by the Brock, be- 
tween Hecham and Duuenshaw, were 
granted to St. John and the hospital of 
Howath by Matthew son of Adam; 
Add. MS. 32107, no. 2998. 

The brethren of St. John the Baptist 
of Howath, with the consent and advice 
of the brethren of St. John of Jerusalem, 
made a gift to Hawise wife of Robert son 
of Bernard ; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 894. 

7 De Banco R. 143, m. 176. Hugh 
de Wedacre and William his brother had 
been tenantsin 1274-6 ; De Banco R. 6, 
m. 8; 13, m. 17. 

4 See the account of Stidd in Dutton. 
A rental of 1613 shows that a court was 
held and that the Hospitallers’ lands in 
Claughton, Bilsborrow and other adjacent 
townships were subject to it; Kuerden 
MSS. ii, fol. 132. 

49 Howath occurs in Richard Shire- 
burne’s lands in 1628 ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Ing. p.m. xxvi, no. 4; also among the 
Duchess of Norfolk’s possessions in 1737 3 
Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. §44, m. 13. 

50 Richard de Wedacre about 1280 
granted to Adam son of Sir Adam de 
Hozhton and his heirs all his land in 
Howath in Catterall inherited from his 
father; a rent of 3s. was to be paid to 
the Hospital of Jerusalem ; Dods. MSS. 
cxlii, fol. 61, no. 54. Richard son of 
Adam de Hoghton gave all his land in 
Howath, with part of the mill, to Richard 
de Bury and William his brother, for the 
donor’s life; the remainder was to his 
son Richard de Hoghton; in default to 
Edmund, Richard and Adam, sons of 


318 


William son of Adam de Graystock ; 
ibid. fol. 684. 

In 1351-2 Adam de Hoghton obtained 
releases from William brother of Richard 
de Bury and from Edmund son of William 
de Graystock ; Add. MS, 32106, no. 725, 
fol. 286, 3194. 

5. Lancs, Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 146, 
127. The same estate occurs in later 
Hoghton inquisitions, In 1559 it was 
said to be held of the queen as of her 
duchy in socage ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. 
p-m. xi, no, 2. 

52 Towneley MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 
54. He had compounded for refusing 
knighthood in 16313; Misc. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 222. 

53 Royalist Comp, Papers, i, 155-7. His 
‘delinquency’ was that he had refused to 
take the covenant, he living within a mile 
of Greenhalgh Castle, then one of the 
king’s garrisons, He took it in May 1646. 

The same or a later William Baylton 
was a benefactor. 

®4 Adam de Wedacre gave the canons 
half an acre in Howath on the field called 
the Lawe, the south head abutting on 
the great moor of Catterall, with ease- 
ments of the vill of Catterall ; Cockersand 
Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 276, 286. 

55 Byrewath was held, in part at least, 
of the church of Garstang, and Henry de 
Casterton (son of Gilbert) released all 
right in it to Cockersand ; ibid. i, 277. 

55 Robert de Byrewath released to 
Roger de Brockholes and Christiana his 
wife certain land, probably in Byrewath ; 
Add. MS. 32105, fol. 84; 32106, no. 1105. 

In 1268 Adam de Brockholes held the 
Cockersand parcel, paying 35. 6d. a year 
and half a mark at death ; Chartul. loc. cit. 
In 1290 Adam was stated to have held 
an oxgang of land in Byrewath in Gar- 
stang of Walter de Londe by 12¢. yearly ; 
Lancs, Ing. and Extents, i, 274- 

This estate descended in the line of 
Brockholes of Claughton, and Roger de 
Brockholes was in 1347 found to hold an 
oxgang of land in Byrewath of the king 
(in right of William de Coucy) as of the 
manor of Wyresdale, by knight's service ; 
Ing. p.m. 20 Edw. III (2nd nos.’ 20. 63. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


GREENHALGH, 2 oxgangs of land, was in 1347 
held of the lord of Wyresdale by William Banastre 
by knight’s service.” This land afterwards came 
into the possession of the first Earl of Derby, who 
in 1490 obtained the king’s licence to fortify his 
manor-house there and to inclose a park.®® Camden 
states that the earl was ‘in fear of certain outlawed 
gentlemen of this shire, whose possessions King 
Henry VII had freely given unto him; for many 
an assault they gave him and other whiles in hostile 
‘manner made inroads into his lands, until the moderate 
carriage of the good and worthy man, and process of 
time, pacified these quarrels.’ 59 The castle then 
erected became famous in the Civil War, as already 
stated, and after being destroyed the ruin remained 
in the hands of the earls till about 1865, when it 
was sold to Lord Kenlis, afterwards (1870) Earl of 
Bective.’ As above stated, it is now the property 
of Mr. Rushton. 

The ruins of the castle stand on a slight emi- 
nence half a mile or more to the east of Garstang, 
and consist of the remains of a single tower 24 ft. 
square externally, constructed of rubble sandstone 
masonry, with angle quoins, the walls of which are 
5 ft. thick. Whitaker, writing about 1822, states 
that the building had been ‘a rectangle nearly 
approaching a square, with a tower at each angle 
standing diagonally to each adjoining wall. The 
iterval between the two towers was 14 yds. on one 
side and 16 yds. on the other.’ The elevation on 
which the castle stands is said to have been originally 
surrounded by a marshy swamp, the only natural 
connexion with firm land being on the north-east 
side, but the wet land has long been drained.” It 
would, however, add to the defensive position of the 
building, and was probably a contributing factor to 
the choice of site, helping, in addition, to supply 


GARSTANG 


the moat, traces of which are still visible. Apparently 
nothing has been done to preserve the castle since 
the siege of 1645, the action of time and weather, 
supplemented by the local practice of using the ruins 
as a stone quarry, having reduced it to its present 
condition. 

The portion still standing is one of the western 
towers, the highest part of the walling of which, on 
the north-east and north-west sides, is about 25 ft. 
to 30ft. in height. It shows internally marks of a 
wooden floor ro ft. above the ground, and there was 
probably another floor above this; but the upper 
part of the walls is entirely gone and the building is 
open on the south side, the walls being only about 
5 ft. above the ground. In the east angle is a 
passage-way 3 ft. 6 in. wide, which formerly led to 
the main building, and opposite in the west wall are 
three embrasures, one in the centre and one set 
diagonally at each angle, that on the west facing 
directly towards Garstang and commanding the bridge 
or ford across the Wyre. he interior of the tower, 
which measures 14 ft. 6 in. by 14 ft., is now strewn 
over with broken masonry, large portions of walling 
having fallen within the last forty years,™° and the 
lower parts of the external angles and masonry 
bordering the window openings are broken away. 
On the north-east side are garderobes, and in the 
portion of the south-west wall which still remains 
part of an embrasure like that on the north-west. 
The top of the knoll occupied by the ruins forms a 
square of about 35 yds., the excavation of which 
would probably disclose the foundations of the 
castle. 

The Pleasington family or families frequently occur 
in the parish.” One of them was in the 16th and 
17th centuries seated at DIMPLES,® and recorded 
a pedigree in 1613. They were recusants and 


In 1496 Roger Brockholes died holding 
messuages and land in Garstang of the 
king as of his duchy by knight’s service ; 
and Byrewath, part at least of this tene- 
ment, was in the occupation of Robert 
Ambrose ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, 
no. 73, 77- The place was leased to 
Thurstan Tyldesley in 1541 ; Add. MS. 
32105, fol. 2085, 

Walter de Byrewath in 1292 claimed a 
tenement in Garstang against John de 
Rigmaiden, but was non-suited ; Assize 
R. 408, m. 37d. 

Particulars as to the later descent of 
Byrewath will be found in Fishwick, op. 
cit. 235-6. The capital messuage called 
Byrewath was in 1582 demised by Sir 
Gilbert Gerard to Edward Horsfall and 
Ellen his wife for forty years ; Towneley 
MS. C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), G 49. Byre- 
wath was sold in 1784 by William Fitz- 
herbert Brockholes to the Jackson family ; 
Mr. Jonathan Jackson of Brooklands, 
Garstang, was the owner in 1879. He 
also had Dimples, Howath and Stirzacre, 
but these (except Dimples House) were 
sold in 1902 and later ; information of 
Mr. F, Jackson. 

5 Ing, p.m. 20 Edw. III (2nd nos.), 

no. 63. 
%§ Towneley MS, CC (Chet. Lib.), 
no. 580; free warren was allowed. 
Nothing is known of an earlier castle in 
the neighbourhood, but in 1343 a robbery 
was reported at Castelhow near Garstang ; 
Assize R. 430, m. 14. 

The Derby rental of 1522 records 
76s, 8d. as received from various tenants 


of land in Greenhalgh, Barnacre and 
Ellel, ‘which lately belonged to Nicholas 
Rigmaiden.’ The same rental shows 40s. 
received from Howath, but claimed by the 
farmer as his fee as parker of Greenhalgh. 

In 1556 the Earl of Derby granted to 
Sir Richard Shireburne the custody of 
Greenhalgh Castle and park, profits, &c., 
as Thurstan Tyldesley had held the same ; 
Shireburne Abstract Bk. at Leagram. 

59 Brit, (ed. Gibson), 753. 

60 The castle is named in fines and 
recoveries of the Derby estates down to 
1776; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 623, m. 1a. 

It was probably confiscated under the 
Commonwealth, being in 1656 in posses- 
sion of Gilbert Mabbott and Martha his 
wife; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 158, 
m. 51. Mabbott purchased several parts 
of the estates of James Earl of Derby in 
the neighbourhood ; Royalist Comp. Papers, 
ii, 237-8. The castle had been regained 
by the Earl of Derby in 1667; Pal. of 
Lance. Feet of F. bdle. 179, m. 28 (William 
Fyfe v. Charles Earl of Derby and Dorothy 
Helen his wife). 

61 Hewitson, Northward, 55. 

62 The site is described in /.C.H. Lanes. 
li, 550. 

68 Richmondshire, ii, 456, where an 
illustration is given. 

64 Palatine Note-bk. iv, 130. 

65-6 Mr. A. Hewitson, op. cit. 55, 
describes the state of the castle as he 
found it on three successive visits, in 
1871, 1898 and 1900. Nearly the whole 
of the south-eastern side of the tower 
and about two-thirds of the wall on the 


319 


south-western side disappeared between 
1871 and 1898. 

87 See the accounts of Nateby, &c. ; 
Final Conc. ii, 1103 iii, 29. John de 
Pleasington had a tenement in Garstang 
in 13543 Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxii, App. 
332. Johnson of Richard son of Robert 
de Pleasington was a minor in 1355 ; 
Duchy of Lance. Assize R. 5, m. 27. 

68 An account of the family, with 
pedigree, will be found in Fishwick, op. 
cit. 230-3. William Pleasington of 
Dimples was living in 1475; Dunken- 
halgh D. The Pleasingtons named in 
the will of Thomas Rigmaiden (1521) 
are supposed to have been of Dimples ; 
Fishwick, op. cit. 215-16. 

Robert son of William Pleasington 
inherited Dimples from his father and 
was in possession before 1592 3 ibid. 231. 
Robert was a freeholder in 1600; Misc. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.),i, 232. Two- 
thirds of his estate was sequestered for 
recusancy in 16073; Cal, S. P. Dom. 
1603-10, p. 383. He was living in 
1613 (pedigree), when his son William 
was thirty-eight years old. William 
Pleasington died in 1621 holding the 
capital messuage called Dimples in the 
manor of Nether Wyresdale and town- 
ship of Garstang of Gilbert Lord Gerard 
by the hundredth part of a knight's fee. 
He had !ands in Catterall, Eccleston, 
Goosnargh and Whittingham, The heir 
was his son Robert, twenty-two years of 
age ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs 
and Ches.), ti, 24.0. 

69 Visit, (Chet. Soc.), 75+ 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Royalists,” and in 1716 the estate was forfeited, 
John Pleasington being convicted of high treason.” 
His uncle John Pleasington was a friest, residing 
chiefly at Puddington Hall in Cheshire. In the 
excitement created by the Oates Plot private malice 
caused him to be denounced and arrested. It was 
difficult to procure evidence against him, but three 
former members of his flock who had become Pro- 
testants swore to his having said mass and otherwise 
exercised his office. He was thereupon condemned and 
executed at Chester 19 July 1679.” The cause of 
his beatification was allowed to be introduced at 
Rome in 1886. 

LINGART, Lingard, or Lingarth is another estate 
of which some particulars are on record. It belonged 
in part to the abbey of Cockersand,”and gave a surname 
to the family holding it.’ A branch of the Faring- 
tons succeeded * ; a pedigree was recorded in 1567.” 

Few other references to the township occur.’ An 
inclosure award was made in 1772.” 

In 1689 the Presbyterians had a licensed meeting- 
place in Barnacre and the Quakers one in Wedacre.° 
These do nut seem to have resulted in permanent 
buildings. In 1828, however, a meeting-house for 
the Society of Friends was built in Bonds, near 
Calder Bridge, and it continues to be used.*! 

The Roman Catholic church of St. Mary and 
St. Michael was built in 1858 in Bonds, near Garstang 
Bridge, to replace the older chapel in Garstang.” 


CATTERALL 


Catrehala, Dom. Bk.; Catrehal, 1272; Kater- 
halle, 1277 ; Caterhale, Caterale, 1292. 


70 Robert Pleasington’s estate calle! 


Ling rt in 13063; ibid. 160, m. 


Catterall lies along the southern bank of the Calder 
and the Wyre, with Rohall at the extreme west ; it 
has a detached portion,' in which is Landskill, some 
distance to the north-east. This detached part lies 
upon the slope of Bleasdale Fell, and a height of 
745 ft. above sea level is reached on the east ; but 
the main portion of the township is low-lying and 
comparatively level, though the surface rises a little 
from west to east. The area is 1,741} acres,’ and in 
1901 the population was 317. 

The principal road, on which the village is situated, 
is that from Preston to Garstang and the north. The 
London and North-Western main line crosses the 
eastern end, as does the canal from Preston to 
Lancaster. 

The detached portion above named was in 1887 
added to Barnacre with Bonds.* In it is the hamlet 
known as Calder Vale, founded in 1835 by Richard 
and Jonathan Jackson, who built a cotton-mill by the 
river and added houses for the workpeople.* 

In the main part of the township a little wheat 
and oats are grown, but the land is mostly in pasture. 
The soil is heavy, with clay subsoil. A century ago 
there were large cotton-printing works at Calder 
Bridge, but they were given up in 1830.° 

A parish council governs the township. 

Earl Tostig held CATTERALL in 
1066 as part of the lordship of Preston ; it 
was assessed as two plough-lands.® After- 
wards it was included in the Garstang or Nether 
Wyresdale fee held by the Lancaster family and their 
successors.’ William de Lancaster II gave two 
plough-lands in Halecath and Catterall to Bernard 
son of Eilsi, and in 1212 Richard son of Swain (de 


MANORS 


289. Anderton of Clayton. It is named in his 


Dimples Farm was confiscated and sold 
by the Parliament in 1652; Index of 
Royalists (Index Soc.), 43. Ra'ph Long- 
worth had purchased it in 16533 Cal. 
Cum, for Comp. iv, 3134. In the fol- 
lowing year Robert Pleasington, who is 
described as ‘uf Kirkland in Garsting,’ 
desired to contract on the recusants’ Act for 
two-thirds of his sequestered estate ; ibid. 

‘| Fishwick, op. cit. 232, where the 
subsequent histury of Dimples is thus 
traced : 1719, Wiliam Greenhalgh of 
Myerscough ; 1736, by will to Edward 
Styth of Great Eccleston, who took the 
name of Greenhalgh and d. 1769 -s. 
James, d. 1799 -s. Edward, who sold to 
Henry Fielding -s. Henry Barrow Fielding 
in 1852 sold to Jonatha Jackson, one of 
the founders of the Quakers’ meeting- 
house near Dimples. It remains in his 
family (see note 56). 

"2 Challoner, .iLssionary Priests, no. 201. 
He was ‘indicted of high treason for 
having taken orders in the Church of 
Rome and remaining in this kingdom 
contrary to the statute of 27 Elizabeth.’ 
His last speech is given. 

® Pollen, fers of Martyrs, 382. 

74 Walter de Fauconberg (about 1280) 
granted to the abbey the service of 
Walter de Lingart ‘or his whole tenement 
in Garstang, his rent being half a mark ; 
Cockersand Chartul. i, 60. The rent of 
6s. 8d. was in 1451 paid ty the heir of 
pe Lingart ani in 1501 by Henry 

arington ; ibid. iti, 1272, &c. 

*$ Walter de Lingart was living in 
1276 ; De Banco R. 15, m. 41. John 
son of John de Lingart made complaint 
of waste by Ellen widow of John de 


Probably the same Jo:in, a minor, made a 
release to the Abbot of Cockersand in 
13133; Kuerden MSS. iv,G 4. William 
de Thweng in 1332 claimed land in 
Garstang against John de Lingart, Isolda 
his wife and others ; De Banco R. 290, 
m. 273d. 

In 1347 John de Lingart held 2 ox- 
gangs of land of the lord of Nether Wyres- 
dale (the Coucy moiety) by knight’s ser- 
vice ; Ing. p.m, 20 Edw. III (2nd nos.), 
no. 63. 

The feoffees in 1356 gave a messuage, 
&c., in Garstang to Robert son of John 
de Lingart and Christiana his wife ; 
Kuerden, loc. cit. Five years later the 
same Robert granted a messuage to 
Richard his brother and Roger de Cocker- 
ham; ibid. John son of Robert de 
Lingart and Ellen his wife made a feoff- 
ment in 1416; ibid. Edmund son of 
John Lingart in 1421 became bound to 
the Abbot of Cockersand ; ibid. In the 
same year John son of Robert de Lingart 
made a feoffment of his estate in Gar- 
stang and Little Eccleston ; Brockholes D. 

%® Alice (or Cecily) wife of Henry 
Farington was in possession in 1461 ; ibid. 
In 1537-8 the Abbot of Cockersand made 
a grant of the wardship of Henry son and 
heir of Nicholas Farington deceased ; 
Kuerden MSS. iv, W51. Thomas son 
of Henry Farington died in or about 
1592, bequeathing to Richard Whitting- 
ham of Goosnargh his brother ; ibid. and 
G4. From other deeds here preserved it 
appears that there ensued a division be- 
tween Whittingham and John Farington 
of York (brother of Henry), and that 
both portions were in 1601 sold to James 


320 


inquisition, 1630; Duchy of Lane. Ing. 
p-m. xxvii, no. 56. The tenure isnot stated. 

Richard Whittingham of Lingart, 
*Papist,’ was a frecholder in 1600; 
Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 232. 

In 1653 complaint was made that 
Lingart had been sequestered by the 
Parliament as James Anderton's, whereas 
it really belonged to John Preston ; Cal. 
Com. for Comp. iii, 1903. 

Richard Ackers of Claughton, as a 
*Papist,’ registered his estate in 1717; it 
consisted of a house called Lingart and 
36 acres at Barnacre; Estcourt and 
Payne, Engl. Cath. Nonjurors, 141. 

17 Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 48. 

78 John Mercer of Barnacre had had 
two-thirds of his estates sequestered for 
recusancy only under the Commonwealth 
and in 1653 desired to contract for it; 
Cal. Com. for Comp. v, 3186. 

19 Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 55. 

0 Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 
232, 230. That of the Quakers still 
existed in 17173 Gastrell, Notitia Cert, 
(Chet. Soc.), ii, 408. 

5) Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 518. 
An account of the Jackson family 18 civen. 

& Fishwick, op. cit. 1213 Hewitson, 
op. cit. 487. 

' Tt is known as Higher Catterall. 

2 1,279 acres, including 29 of inland 
water; Census Rep. 1901. 

5 Loc. Govt. Bd. Order 26697. 

4 Hewitson, Our Country Churches, $40. 

5 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1836), iv, 472- 

6 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 288. 

7 See for example Lancs. Ing, and Extents 
(Ree, Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 147-9- 


Kirktanp : Cuurcutrown Cross 


BarnacrE witH Bonps: GREENHALGH CasTLE 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Catterall), Beatrice daughter of Robert and Michael 
de Athelaxton or Ellaston held the same by knight’s 
service.8 Bernard was lord of Goosnargh, and the 
descent of that manor shows that of Catterall, the 
three daughters of his son Robert sharing the inherit- 
ance. Of the two portions of Catterall named, each 
seems to have been considered one plough-land ; 
Halecath probably included Howath, Stirzacre and 
Landskill, Catterall in its wider meaning thus ex- 
tending over the southern half of Barnacre with 
Bonds.® 

Richard son of Swain, who married Isolda or Iseult, 
one of the daughters of Robert de Goosnargh, appears 
to have had Catterall proper assigned to him in right 
of his wife, and he and his descendants assumed the 
localsurname. Richard died about 1220, and between 
1222 and 1226 it was found that his son Richard was 
of the king’s gift and in ward to Henry de Whitting- 
ton.!° He died about 1243 holding land in Catterall 
of William de Lancaster, and leaving a son Ralph, 
twelve years of age.1! Ralph de Catterall occurs in 
various ways down to 1305; his eldest son John 8 
had a son John who was living in 1346 but appears 


GARSTANG 


to have died without issue.13* In virtue of a 
settlement made in 1287 Ralph was succeeded by 
another son Alan, who obtained the manor of 
Little Mitton with Loretta 
his wife, daughter of Richard 
de Pontchardon, and died in 
1322 holding a capital mes- 
suage in Catterall, with lands 
in demesne and service, of John 
son of John de Rigmaiden 
by the eighteenth part of a 
knight’s fee and paying 3,/. 
yearly for castle ward. Richard 
his eldest son was thirteen 
years of age.!5 

Richard Catterall’s son 
Adam !° died in 1397 hold- 
ing a third part of the manor of Catterall of Thomas 
de Rigmaiden by knight’s service and paying 3d. for 
castle ward.!”_ His son and heir Richard, then fifteen 
years of age,§ proved his age in 1404.!9 The descent 
appears to be clear and uneventful from this time 2° 
until the death of Thomas Catterall in 1579, when 


Azure 


CaTTERALL, 
three mascles or. 


8 Lancs. Ing, and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), i, 3 ; also the account 
of Goosnargh, 

In 1242 Richard de Catterall, Hugh de 
Mitton and Henry de Longford held of 
William de Lancaster III by knight's 
service ; ibid. i, 154. 

At the partition of the Lancaster 
inheritance in 1281 the following were 
lords of Catterall—Adam de Hoghton, 
Hugh de Mitton and Ralph de Catterall ; 
Cal. Close, 1279-88, pp. 105-6. Eustace 
de Cottesbech in 1293 obtained a messuage 
and two plough-lands in Catterall from 
John de Knyttecote of Leicester ; Final 
Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), i, 176. 
The meaning of this fine is unknown ; 
‘plough-lands’ may be used in a sense 
other than that of the ancient assessment. 
Hugh de Mitton in 1295 did not prosecute 
his claim against Eustace de Cottesbech, 
Ralph de Catterall, John de Rigmaiden, 
John de Knightcote and Christiana his 
wife, Thomas de Singleton and John de 
Fetherby ; Assize R. 1306, m. 16d. 
Hugh de Catterall—apparently identical 
with Hugh de Mitton—claimed the manor 
of Catterall in 1306, Master John de 
Leicester and Christiana his wife being 
concerned ; De Banco R. 161, m. 145. 

9 William son of Alan de Tarnacre 
about 1220 released to Michael de 
Athelaxton and Avice his wife all that he 
and his predecessors had in the third part 
of a plough-land in Halecath, which he 
had claimed in the court of Dame Hele- 
wise de Stuteville at Garstang; Dods. 
MSS. liii, fol. 95. Richard son of John 
Perpont perhaps fifty years later released 
to Henry le Boteler son of Sir Richard 
all right in lands in Catterall, Rowall and 
‘Aleke’ ; ibid. fol. gr. 

1 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 134. 

NIbid. 159-60; his Catterall lands 
were worth 30s, 1od, a year in demesne 
and in service. He also held land in 
Goosnargh, Threlfall, Chipping, Preston 
and Wrightington. He was living in 
1242, but dead in 1244, when the king 
granted the wardship and marriage of his 
heir to William de Lancaster for 40 
marks; ibid. 154, 160. 

After Ralph had come of age two 
further iaquisitions were made in 1257-8 ; 
by one it was found that Richard had 


7 


held 5}—corrected to 54—oxgangs of 
land and one-third part in Catterall by 
knight’s service, where twenty-four 
plough-lands made a fee; also land in 
Howath of the Hospitallers ; ibid. 210-12. 
The service due was the thirty-sixth part 
of a knight’s fee. 

In 1246 Alice widow of Richard de 
Catterall was in the king’s gift and 
marriageable ; Assize R. 404, m, 22. 

2 Henry son of William de Catterall in 
1292 complained of loss of common of 
pasture caused by approvements by the 
three chief lords of the vill, Henry son of 
Richard le Boteler, Hugh son of Hugh de 
Catterall and Ralph son of Richard de 
Catterall ; Assize R. 408, m. 61. 

13 John de Catterall is mentioned in 
13023; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, i, 318. 
In 1323 Robert de Grotton and Agnes 
his wife, she being widow of John son 
and heir of Ralph de Catterall, claimed 
dower in three plough-lands in Catterall, 
Goosnargh and Wrightington ; De Banco 
R. 248, m. 229. Agnes was one of the 
co-heirs of Towneley of Towneley. An 
earlier dower claim had been made (in 
1316) against Alan de Catterall respecting 
the manor of Catterall, and against Adam 
de Catterall respecting 4 oxgangs of land 
there ; ibid, 216, m. 19d. 

13a Y7.C.H. Lancs. vi, 458. 

4 In 1287 Ralph granted to Alan de 
Catterall and his issue a messuage and the 
third part of two plough-lands in Catterall, 
with remainders to Adam and Paulin de 
Catterall ; Final Conc. ii, 124-5 ; Towneley 
MS. DD, no. 8. 

In 1305 he granted to Alan his son his 
lands in Wrightington except the portion 
already given to another son Adam ; 
W. Farrer’s D. 

ohn de Hudleston granted land in 
Arnolby in Millom to Alan son of Ralph 
de Catterall for life; Dods. MSS. xci, 
fol. 159. 

15 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, ii, 140-2. 
Lora the widow and Richard the son 
of Alan de Catterall were plaintiffs in 
1334; Coram Rege R. 297,m.3d. A 
fine already quoted indicates some dispute 
as to the inheritance, for in 1347 Richard 
son and heir of Alan arranged with John 
de Catterall, ‘cousin and heir’ of the 
Ralph of 1287 5 Final Conc. ii, 125. 


327 


Katherine widow of Johnson of Richard 
de Catterall the elder and William son 
of John occur in 1421 ; ibid. iii, 87, 123. 

The writ of diem cl. extr. after the 
death of Richard de Catterall was issued 
in 1381; Dep. Keeper’s Rep. xxxii, 
App. 353- 

16 The descent is thus stated in a 
pleading of 1511: Richard -s. Adam 
-s, Richard —s, Richard —s. Ralph (plain- 
tiff) ; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 110, m. 2, 3. 
A charter was adduced by which Richard 
de Catterall gave a messuage, &c., in 
Catterall to Adam his son and his issue. 

Adam son of Richard de Catterall in 
1392 granted land called the Slyched to 
John Boteler of Kirkland and Alice his 
wife ; Dods. MSS. Ixii, fol. go. 

7 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 66. 
The other lands, &c., were in Little 
Mitton, Goosnargh, Wrightington and 
Inskip. Isabel mother of Adam was 
living. Her name seems to identify the 
Richard de Catterall who sold a moiety 
of the manor of ‘Cundeshalgh’ in 1380 
to Alan de Catterall ; Fizal Conc. iii, 9, 42. 
This manor may have been in Goosnargh. 

18 Lancs. Ing. (Chet. Soc.), i, 67; the 
wardship and marriage were granted to 
Sir Ralph de Ipre. See also Pal. of 
Lanc. Chan. Misc. bdle. 1, file 12. 

19 Towneley MS. DD, no. 1468. 
Nicholas de Singleton was then guardian 
of the heir. Thomas de Hesketh stated 
that Richard was born in Easter week 
1382, and baptized at Garstang Church 
by Richard de Preston, the vicar, Richard 
de Winkley and Cecily the Webster 
being his godparents. 

20 Richard Catterall the elder made 
a feoffment of his manor of Catterall, &c., 
in 1432; Add. MS. 32104, no. 501, 503 
(fol. 116). He names his son William 
in a deed of 1457; ibid. no. 511. To 
Roger, another son, he gave 200 oaks in 
Mitton woods in 1460; ibid. no. 515. 
In 1467 Ellen widow of Richard claimed 
dower against his son Richard Catterall ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Writs Proton. 7 Edw. IV. 

Robert (cousin and heir of Robert) 
Shuttleworth released lands in Little 
Mitton to Richard Catterall in 1468 ; 
Towneley MS. DD, no. 30. A John 
Catterall the elder of Selby had lands in 
Goosnargh and elsewhere in Lancashire 


41 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


his seven daughters became co-heirs.°! 


. 29 
was recorded in 1567.” 


With Dorothy, one of the daughters, the manor 
had peen given to Robert Shireburne, who died in 
1572 holding a capital messuage called the Crow’s 
Orchard, xc., in Catterall of the queen as of her 
duchy by the fcrcicth part of a knight’s fee, lands 
called Conigree in Claughton, and others in Mitton. 
The heir was his son Thomas, aged six.°8 
Shireburne died in 1636 holding the manors of 
Catterall and Little Mitton by knight’s service, and 
leaving a son Robert, aged forty-four." 
Commonwealth Robert’s estate was sequestered for 
recusancy and delinquency,”> and finally confiscated 


and sold in 1652.7” 


which he forfeited by attainder in or 
before 1471 3; Chan. Ing. p.m. 11 Edw. IV, 
no. 35. He may have descended from 
the Alan of 1389, who had land in 
Goosnargh. 

There is a difficulty at the next point. 
At an inquisition in 1504 it was found 
that Richard Catterall died in 1487 
holding the manor of Catterall of the 
king as duke by knight's service, also 
Little Mutton, &c.. and that his heir 
was his son Richard, aged thirty at hs 
father's death ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
ii, no. 12. But already, in 147%, Ralps 
son and heir of Richard Catterall and 
Elizabeth hie wife had made a settlement 
of messuages, lands, &c., in Catterall ani 
other places; Add. MS. 32104, no, §13. 
The same or another Ralph and Emma 
his wife (widow of Robert Boteler) were 
in 1482 bound to William Kirkby of 
Rawcliffe to abide an arbitration ; Dods. 
M>-S. cxlix, fol. ggd. Ralph as son and 
heir of Richard Catterall made a grant of 
land in Little Mitton in 1481; DD, 
no. 36. In 1501 he exchanged a messuage, 
&c., on the west side of Howath with 
James Boteler ; ibid. no. 28. 

Ralph Catterall died on Christmas Dav, 
1515, holding his part of Catterall of the 
king as duke by the thirty-sixth part of a 
knight’s fee and a rent of 3d. He had 
in 1508 made a feoffment of all his 
manors and lands for the fulfilment of his 
will, assigning part to Katherine daughter 
of John Lang'vy, who was to marry his 
son John. The actual deed, with some 
others of the family, is in the possession 
of W. Farrer. John Cattera'l, the son, 
sicceeded, being thirty-s'x yo srs of age 5 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. it, no. 62. 
He died less than two years after his 
father (1517. and by his will made 
provision for his five sisters ; ibid. iv, 
no. 4. The descent is given as Richard 
~s. Ralph -s8. John. John’s son Ralph 
succeeded, being ten years old. 

Ralph died in or before 1526, and was 
succecded by his brother Thomas, fifteen 
years old. He was stated to have been 
born at Mitton in 1310 and baptized at 
Whalley ; ibid. vi, no. 4. The ingu‘sition 
in the Record Office {v', no. ~~) is almost 
illegible, but a brief abstract is given in 
Towneley's MS. ‘Lancs. Tenures’ (fol. 75) 
in the possession of W. Far-er ; this states 
that the manor of Catterall, with some 
other lands, was held of the king as duke 
by the sxth (thirty-sixth) part of a 
knight's fee and 3d. rent. 

A settlement of che manor was made 
by Thomas Catterall in 15357; Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R. 224, m. 2. 

* Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiv, no. 4 5 
he held the manor or capital messuage 


A pedigree 


The Shireburnes, being apparently much in det 


already, were not able to clear their estates, and about 


Thomas 


Under the 


1665 these were finally sold to Alexander Holt, 
citizen and goldsmith of London.?” His descendants 
in 1704 sold Catterall to Thomas Winckley of 
Preston ; from him it descended to Lady Shelley, 
whose trustees in 1876 sold to Joseph Smith of Lan. 
caster (d. 1889).78 
Hall estate about 1906 to Mr. Yates.*° 

Tt does not appear that any manor is now 
claimed, and it is difficult to trace the third parts 
held by the Mitton and Longford families. The 
former third seems to have been granted to a junior 
Mitton family, who assumed the name of Catterall,” 


His executors sold the Catterall 


and to have passed later to Croft,3! Winkley,® 


of Catterall, called the hall of Catterall, 
ten messuages and two water-mills, ros. 
free rent, &c., in the township. All was 
held of the queen as duke by the old 
service, the thirty-sixth part of a knight’s 
tee. He had in 1561 granted his manors 
ot Catterall and Little Mitton to Robert 
Shireburne of Gray's Inn, who had 
married his daughter Dorothy. (This 
was confirmed in 1562-3; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle, 24, mi. 235 4 25, fie $9; 
94.) Robert Shireburne died, leaving 
a son Thomas, and Dorothy, who after- 
wards married Richard Braddyll, was 
living at Catterall in 1579, aged thirty. 
The other daughters were Anne wife of 
Thomas Townley, aged forty ; Elizabeth 
wife of Thomas Procter, thirty-eight ; 
Katherine wife of Thomas Strickland, 
thirty-five ; Dame Margaret Atherton, 
then wife of William Edwards, thirty-four; 
Mary wife of John Grimshaw, thirty-two ; 
and Jane, aged twenty-five, 

Further particulars are given in the 
account of Goosnargh. The Procters 
seem to have had some claim on the 
manor of Catterall ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F. odie. 43, m. 130. 

3 is, (Chet. Soc.)}, 39. 

™ Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiii, no. 
10. There were three children in all 
Thomas, Robert and Jane. Their uncle, 
Sir Richard Shireburne, was guardian ; 
Catterall D.(W. Farrer). For an account 
of this branch see C. D. Sherborn, Family 
of Sherborn, 91-9. His widow married 
for her third husband John Whipp, and 
died in 1620 holding the manor of 
Catterall, &c., of the king as duke by the 
fortieth part of a knight's fee ; Lancs. Ing. 
pom. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), ii, 228. 

Rotert Shireburne granted land in 
Catterall (held of the queen as of her 
duchy) to William Parkinson, whose son 
Edward died in 1631 holding lands there 
and in Mverscough and Claughton, his 
heirs being William Butler and Anne 
Shireburne, widow. The former (aged 
sixteen, was son of Cecily daughter of 
Edward Parkinson, and the latter (aged 
seventeen) daughter of Isabel, another 
daughter of Edward ; Duchy of Lane. Ing. 
p.m. xxviii, no. 74 3 xxvii, no. 57. 

A deed relating to the manors is en- 
rolled in Common Pleas, Easter 1599, 
R. 9 (19). 

34 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxix, no. 43. 

A settlement of the manors had been 
made by Thomas Shireburne and Isabel 
his wife in 1629; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F. bdle. 112, no. 23. 

3 Cal. Cim. for Comp. iv, 2514-15. Sir 
Edward Mosiey of Hough End had a 
mortgage on the Catterall part of the 
estate, and secured this on the sale. 


ee 


% Index of Royalists (Index Soc.), 44. 

@ For disputes see Exch, Dep. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 49, 50. 

33 This account is from  Fishwick, 
Garstang (Chet. Soc.), 239-42, where full 
details are given. For the Holt family 
see Whitaker, Whalley, ii, 24, and for 
the Winckleys the account of Brockholes 
in Preston. 

The following reterences may be added : 
1686, William Daniell v. Robert Holt, 
manors of Little Mitton and Catterall, 
lands, &c. ; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 
216, m, 27 3 1704, purchase by Thomas 
Winckley ; Piccope MSS. (Chet. Lib.), 
iii, 318, 326; 1710, Thomas Winckley 
v. Alexander, Edward and William Holt, 
the above manors; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F, bdle. 264, m. 83 5 1745, John Winckley 
and Nicholas his son and heir-apparent, 
vouchees in a recovery of the manor of 
Catterall, &c.; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 
560, m. 2. 

#8 Information of Mr. Richard Smith. 

80 Hugh de Mitton was party to several 
suits in 1292 concerning obstruction, &c.; 
Assize R. 408, m. 57, 63d., 67, 73, 74. 
He seems to be called also Hugh son of 
Hugh de Mitton and Hugh de Catterall, 
as above. Roger brother and heir of Hugh 
son of Robert de Wedacre successfully 
claimed common of turbary in 5 acres in 
Catterall against Hugh son of Hugh de 
Mitton, alleging that his brother had been 
disseised by Hugh the father ; ibid. m. god. 
Margery widow of Ralph de Mitton 
claimed dower against Hugh son of Hugh 
de Mitton in respect of three messuages 
and 3 oxgangs of land in Catterall; 
against Henry le Boteler in respect of 
20d, rent; and against William de Wed- 
acre in respect of a messuage and 9d. 
rent ; ibid. m. 62. 

81 The mode in which this family ac- 
quired part of Catterall is unknown. 
They appear in Claughton also. 

In 1314-15 Gilbert de Southworth, 
clerk, gave Henry son of Henry de Croft 
and his issue by Joan daughter of the 
grantor free turbary in Upper Rawcliffe 
Moss for the manor of the said Henry in 
Catterall; Dods. MSS. xci, fol. 159. 
Henry de Croft the elder in 1325 demise4 
all his arable lands in Catterall Field to 
William de Tatham for three years at a 
rent of 4 marks; Add. MS. 32104, no. 
408. Edmund de Myerscough in 1344 
complained of novel disseisin by Henry 
son of Henry de Croft of Catterall ; Assize 
R. 1435, m. 37. John de Croft occurs 
in 1371; De Banco R, 443, m 370d. 

32 John son of Roger de Croft in 1374 
released to Richard de Winkley and 
Margaret his wife his manor (house) of 
Catterall, the third part of Howath water- 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Rishton 83 and Shireburne in succession. 
Richard Shireburne the estate was given to his 
brother Robert, who, as shown above, had the Catte- 


rall third with his wife.*# 


The remaining third, including ROWALL, scems 
to have been acquired by the Hoghtons* and the 
It came in 1572 into the 
hands of Sir Gilbert Gerard,®” and was later sold to 


Botelers of Rawcliffe.*6 


George Preston of Holker.*8 


STIRZACRE, partly in this township and partly 


mill, the third part of the manor of 
Catterall, and right of turbary and fishery 
in Pilling Moss in the vill of Upper Raw- 
cliffe ; Dods. MSS. xci, fol. 159. Richard 
de Winkley and Katherine his wife were 
concerned in Howath in 1383-4; ibid. 
cxlii, fol. 64. Richard de Winkley in 
1409 or later settled his third part of the 
manor on Henry son of John de Winkley, 
his next of kin, with remainders to 
Richard and Henry sons of Adam de 
Winkley ; ibid. xci, fol. 1594. 

38 Nicholas Rishton clerk in 1443 ob- 
tained a messuage called Winkley’s Place, 
a third part of the manor of Catterall, 
and various messuages, lands, &c., in 
Catterall, Howath and Garstang, from 
Richard Winkley and Margaret his wife ; 
Final Conc. iii, 109; Pal. of Lance. Plea 
R, 5, m. 5. 

A few years later, 1449, Henry Rishton 
and Agaes his wife granted their manor 
of Catterall to Margaret widow of Henry 
Rishton, grandfather of the former Henry ; 
Dods. MSS. xci, fol. 160. See also 
Towneley MS. HH, no. 116. Henry 
Rishton (of Clayton-le-Moors) and Mar- 
garet his wife were living in 1390; Final 
Cone. iii, 36. 

One Henry Rishton (perhaps the Henry 
of 1449) died about 1490 holding the 
manor of Catterall of the king in chief by 
knight’s service ; Towneley’s MS. ‘ Lancs. 
Tenures’ (in possession of W. Farrer), 
fol. 8; Dep. Keeper's Rep. xl, App. 541. 
Nicholas Rishton about 1520 held mes- 
suages, &c., in Catterall by knight’s ser- 
vice, and his son Richard Rishton later 
held messuages and lands in Little Cat- 
terall of the king by the fortieth part of 
aknight’s fee ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
vi, no. 36, 9. Henry Rishton son of 
Richard held similarly (ibid. ix, no. 30). 

34In 1557 the Rishton family’s Cat- 
terall estate was sold by Ralph Rishton 
to Sir Richard Shireburne, who in 1563 
gave it to his brother Robert; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 17, m. 243 Dods. 
MSS. xci, fol. 160. It was no doubt 
this estate which was recorded in the 
Ing. p.m. of Robert Shireburne already 
cited (note 21), 

Tn 1255-6 Adam de Hoghton was 
bound to warrant Richard le Boteler in 
the third part of the manor of Catterall, 
but Adam retained the third part of 
Howath and its mill; Dods. MSS. xci, 
fol. 1605. In 1313-14 Richard son of 
Adam de Hoghton granted his son 
Richard the homage of William son of 
Nicholas le Boteler and the yearly rent 
of 6s. 8d, from the lands held of the 
gtantor by the said William ; ibid, Alex- 
ander Hoghton in 1498 had a rent of 
6s. 8d. from the land of James Boteler 
in Catterall, and held a tenement in 
Howath and Catterall of the king as of 
his duchy by services unknown ; Duchy 
of Lane, Inq. p.m. iii, no. 66. In rgo1 
and later the tenure was described as 
socage ; ibid. v, no. 66; xi, no. 2. 


By Sir 


GARSTANG 


in Barnacre, was at one time owned by the Botelers 
of Rawcliffe, becoming an appurtenance of Rowall.%9 
It gave a surname to a family frequently occurring 


in the district.” John Leigh in 1631 held a messuage, 


Catterall.41 


&c., in Stirzacre in Catterall of the heirs of Richard 
son of Geoffrey de Stirzacre as of the manor of 
In the same year Thomas Richardson 
of Stirzacre compounded for his refusal of knight- 


hood? ; he was probably the Thomas Richardson 


In 1554-5 Thomas Catterall and Sir 
Richard Hoghton had a dispute as to 
Crakemer and Waterings in Catterall, 
also as to the mill; Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. 
Com.), ii, 153-4. Robert Shireburne in 
1566 purchased some of Thomas Hogh- 
ton’s estate in the township; Pal. of 
Lane. Feet of F. bdle. 28, m. 54. Richard 
Hoghton and Katherine his wife had 
lands in Catterall and Nether Wyresdale 
in 1598; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 
60, m. 107. 

36 Robert son of Bernard confirmed to 
William de Rowall all Rowall, i.e. 
2 oxgangs of land; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 
gos. Henry de Rowall confirmed to 
Richard le Boteler his father Henry’s 
capital messuage, with land, &c., and the 
homage of Thomas de Rowall and the 
daughters of Alexander de Elswick ; 
ibid. fol. 834. Among the witnesses were 
Hugh de Mitton, Ralph and Peter de 
Catterall. Richard son of Henry de 
Rowall released to Henry le Boteler the 
rent of 2s. due from a tenement in Rowall 
in Catterall; ibid. fol. 95d. 

William son of Alexander de Elswick 
granted his hereditary estate in Rowall 
(descending from his brother Thomas) to 
Thomas son of Alan de Singleton and 
Joan his wife; ibid. fol. 894, He also 
granted to Henry son of Sir Richard le 
Boteler the homage and service of Thomas 
his brother for a tenement in Rowall ; 
ibid. fol. 109. 

Ralph son of Richard de Catterall 
granted to Peter de Catterall, clerk, all the 
waste in Catterall between Thevethorn- 
lands and Blackbrook and another piece 
of waste ; ibid. fol. 100, 1005. Peter de 
Catterall gave Richard le Boteler certain 
land and received from him all his land 
in Thevethornlands; he also made a 
grant to Nicholas son of Richard le 
Boteler ; ibid. 100, 1004, 894, Ralph 
son of Peter the Clerk released all his 
right in the vill of Catterall to Henry 
son of Sir Richard le Boteler, and gave 
44 acres to Nicholas son of Richard le 
Boteler ; ibid. fol. 1006. Maud daughter 
of William de Winwick sold to Nicholas 
le Boteler the rent she had received from 
Rowall ; ibid. fol. 89. 

Richard le Boteler confirmed to Henry 
his son all his land in Catterall, as well 
in Rowall as in Stirzacre, with water- 
mill, &c.; ibid. fol. gi. William son 
of Richard le Boteler about 1280 con- 
ceded to Henry his brother all the land 
of Catterall, within the vill and without, 
that is to say, both in Rowall and in 
Stirzacre ; ibid. fol. 100d. 

Thus it came about that Henry le 
Boteler was one of the three lords of 
Catterall in 1292, as above stated. Ralph 
son of Peter the clerk of Aukelaund in 
that year claimed a tenement in Catterall 
against Henry le Boteler, but was non- 
suited ; Assize R. 408, m. 214d., 42. In 
1311 Roger de Wedacre, as heir of his 
brother Hugh, claimed turbary in Catterall 


323 


who in 1654 desired to compound for the two-thirds 


against Henry son of Richard le Boteler ; 
De Banco R. 184, m. 30d. The estate 
appears to have reverted soon afterwards 
to the main line of Boteler of Rawcliffe, 
and is in 1331 named among their lands, 
then held by Sir Henry de Croft and 
Isabel his wife; De Banco R. 287, m. 
307d. 

In 1443 lands in Catterall, Rowall and 
Stirzacre were held by Nicholas Boteler 
of Raweliffe; Final Conc. iii, 108-9. 
James Boteler in 1501 acquired from 
Ralph Catterall all his lands in Rowall ; 
Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 92. He died in 
1504 holding certain lands in Catterall of 
Ralph Catterall in socage, and other lands 
there of the king ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
PM. iii, no. 109. 

Sir Thomas Boteler of Warrington was 
said to hold land in Rowall in 1522; 
ibid. v, no. 13. 

37 On a partition of the Butler inherit- 
ance in 15672 the manors of Catterall 
and Rowall were assigned to Gilbert 
Gerard and Anne his wife ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Plea R. 231, m. 8. Sir Gilbert at his 
death in 1594 held the manors, with 
messuages, water-mill, &c., of the queen 
as of her duchy by knight’s service ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvi, no. 2. 

33 Dodsworth states that Sir Gilbert 
himself sold it; vol. xci, fol. 1604, 
George Preston of Holker in Cartmel 
died in 1640 holding Rowall in Catterall, 
which with Nateby Hall he gave. to a 
younger son George; Chan. Ing. p.m. 
(ser. 2), de, 122. 

89 In 1281 Ralph de Catterall allowed 
Henry son of Sir Richard le Boteler to 
bring water from the Calder across Stirz- 
acre marsh to his mill at Stirzacre, Henry 
giving land in Catterall and 4d. rent by way 
of recompense ; Dods. MSS. liii, fol. 89. 
Henry le Boteler in 1310 demised his 
water-mill at Stirzacre to William son of 
Christiana de Howath for six years; 
ibid. fol. 89. Hugh son of Hugh de 
Catterall granted the third part of Stirzacre 
with all its appurtenances in Catterall to 
Nicholas son of Sir Richard le Boteler ; 
ibid. fol. 100, To the same Nicholas 
Maud daughter of Walter de Winwick 
released all right in Stirzacre; ibid. 
fol. 89. 

40 Lawrence Stirzacre (‘Steresacre’) 
and Joan his wife in 1420 made a feoff- 
ment of their lands in Claughton and 
Catterall ; Anct. D. (P.R.O.), C 1320. 

From a plea in 1446 it appears that 
William Stirzacre granted a messuage 
and land in Catterall to his daughter 
Alice. She married Nicholas Pleasington, 
and their son William recovered the box 
containing the evidences, which had been 
detained by his mother’s second husband 
Alan Clapham of Laithwaite in Garstang ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 9, m. 205. For 
Laithwaite see the account of Cockerham. 

41 Towneley MS. C 8, 13, p- 747: 

42 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 222. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


of his estate sequestered for recusancy.43 Thomas Goose 
of Stirzacre House registered his estate as a ‘ Papist ” in 
1717; hisson Thomas had taken part in the Jacobite 
rising of 1715, and was executed at Garstang.*4 

LANDSKILL was part of the estate of Brockholes 
of Claughton.*® Other landowners occur from time 
to time in the pleadings and inquisitions, but little 
of interest is known about them. The names of 
Catterall, Rowall,#® Wedacre,* Brereworth #® and 
Myerscough *° occur in the 13th and 14th centuries, 
Brand, Pickering *! and others later.5? 

Cockersand Abbey had some land in Catterall and 
Rowall.5? 

A few recusants and Royalists had their estates 
sequestered under the Commonwealth,*4 and two 
‘Papists’ registered estates in 1717.°° 

In Calder Vale St. John the Evangelist’s was built 
in 1863 for the Church of England.*® ‘The vicars 
are collated by the Bishop of Manchester. The 
Wesleyan Methodists have a small chapel in the 
township proper, dating from 1825,°” and another, 


CLAUGHTON 


Clactune, Dom. Bk.; Clacton, 1184; Clagton, 
Clahton, 1253; Claghton, 1284. 

Local pronunciation, Clyton. 

Lying between the Calder on the north and the 
Brock on the south, this township, sometimes called 
Claughton-on-Brock, has an area of 357854 acres.! 
The population numbered 561 in tg01. At the 
western end the surface is somewhat undulating ; the 
hall with its park lies near the centre ; further east 
the ground steadily rises, till about 740 ft. above sea 
level is attained at the border of Bleasdale. There is 
no village or considerable hamlet, Matshead on the 
Brock having a few dwellings. The north road from 
Preston passes through the western end; from it 
another road goes east until near the Brock; then 
turning north-east and north, according to the 
boundary, passes into Bleasdale at the northernmost 
point. The London and North-Western Railway 
and the Lancaster Canal cross the west end of the 


built in 1900, at Calder Vale. 


8 Cal. Com. for Comp. v, 3185. 

“4 Fstcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonpuraesy VAle 

4 It was part of the estate given by 
William de Tatham to Roger son of John 
de Brockholes in 1338, having been 
acquired trom William de Southworth ; 
Add. MS. 32105, fol. 94. John de 
Brockholes had in 1324 acquired all 
Henry son of Henry de Croft’s land in 
the field called Thevethornlands below 
the forest of Myerscough in the vill of 
Catterall ; Add. MS. 32105, SS 680. 

Roger Brockholes in 1496 held three 
messuages, 40 acres of land, &c., in 
Catterall of the Prior of St. John of 
Jerusalem ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, 
no. 73. Thomas Brockholes in 1567 
held verious lands there of the queen as 
of her duchy by the service of half a 
knight's fee ; ibid. xi, no. 6. 

Landskill as a ‘chantry farm’ was in 
dispute in 1589 and 1595; Ducatus 
Lane, iii, 264, 4743 Exch. Dep. 8; Pat. 
31 Eliz. pt. v. In 1659 and 1690 it 
was in the possession of the Sheringtons 
of Worsley; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. 
bdle, 164, m. 120; 225, m. 65. 

4 Roger son of Alan de Rowall was a 
plaintiff in 1277; De Banco R. 18, 
m. $4. Henry de Rowall about 1320 
granted land in Ollershaw to William de 
Tatham, clerk; Add. MS. 32104, no.429. 
William de Bartail in 1332 complained 
that Ralph de Rowall, Maud his wife 
and Roger his son had carried off his 
goods at Catterall; De Banco R. 292, 
my 312 d, 

‘7 Hugh Wedacre in 1271-2 charged 
Benedict Gernet and others with having 
burnt his grain at Catterall ; Curia Regis 
R. 208, m. 34. Henry de Wedacre was 
defendant in 1280 (De Banco R. 36, 
m. $5 d.), while in 1292 he and Christiana 
his wife claimed dower against William 
the Clerk of Whittingham; Assize R. 
408, m. 1d. At the same time Paulin 
and William, sons of Henry de Wedacre, 
and John son of Walter de Wedacre occur 
in Catterall pleadings; ibid. m. 32d. 
54: 

In 1330 Roger de Garstang claimed 
a messuage, &c., against Thomas de 
Goosnargh, who held by demise of 
Edmund de Wedacre ; De Banco R. 282, 
m. 277d. Alexander Goosnargh held 


township. 


land in Catterall of the king in 1524, but 
the tenure is not separately given ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. v, no. 55. 

John de Pleasington as trustee granted 
lands in Catterall and Claughton to 
Edmund de Wedacre in 1349 3 Add. MS. 
32104, no.g11. The Pleasingtons them- 
selves had land in Catterall and Claughton ; 
Final Conc. iii, 29. The family occurs 
again in 1483 Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 57, 
m. 163; 63, m. 14. Isabel daughter of 
John Pleasington and widow of Sir 
Richard Sapcote was claimant in 1489 ; 
ibid. 68, m. 6d. ; 70, m. 12. 

#8 John de Brereworth the elder and 
Margery his wife claimed messuages, &c., 
in Catterall and Goosnargh in 1358 
against Sir Adam de Hoghton, Roger de 
Wedacre and others; Duchy of Lanc. 
Assize R. 6, m, 3d. The jury was 
set aside. 

*9In 1304 Christiana daughter of 
Godith and William son of Alan claimed 
a messuage, &c., against John son of 
William de Myerscough ; De Banco R. 
149, m. 266. 

50 This family seems to have succeeded 
Wedacre, for in 1515 Richard Brand 
claimed the third part of a messuage called 
Wedacre’s Place by inheritance from his 
mother Margaret; Towneley MS. DD, 
no, 20. He made a settlement of his 
estate in 1618; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 
123, m. 4d. William Brand died in 
1619 holding a messuage, &c., of the 
king as duke by knight’s service ; James 
his son and heir was nine years old; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs and 
Ches.), ii, 132, 216 (correcting). 

51 Roger Pickering in 1438 demised a 
moiety of the Cowfield in Catterall to 
John Urswick, Ellen his wife and Thomas 
their son; Anct. D. (P.R.O.), C 815. 
James Pickering in 1611 held 7 acres of 
the king as duke by the two-hundredth 
part of a knight’s fee, and left as heir his 
son John, aged fifteen ; Lancs, Ing. p.m. 
(Rec. Soc.), i, 194. 

Anthony Pickering died in 1613 holding 
his tenement of Thomas Lord Gerard by 
knight’s service and 4s. rent, doing suit 
at the manor court of Catterall. His son 
William being dead, the heir was a grand- 
son Anthony, who, though only twelve 
years of age, had been married to Cecily 
daughter of James Barnes ; ibid. i, 242-4. 


324 


Anthony Pickering as a recusant petitioned 
in 1654 to contract for the two-thirds of 
his estate sequestered for recusancy ; Cal. 
Com. for Comp. v, 3186. 

52 John Urswick, Helen his wife and 
Thomas their son had land in Catterall 
in 1438; Anct. D, (P.R.O.), C 815, 

William Bank in 1497 obtained lands 
in Catterall, &c., from Ralph Hoghton ; 
Final Conc, iit, 146. 

George Hesketh of Poulton (1571) 
held of Thomas Catterall in socage ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xiii, no. 15. 

Thomas Allanson died in 1608 holding 
of Thomas Lord Gerard in socage by 
td. rent. His son and heir Ellis was 
aged fifty; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 135. 

Alexander Rigby of Goosnargh (1621) 
held of the king in socage ; ibid. iii, 457. 

Thomas Bateson died in 1629 holding 
a messuage, &c., of the heirs of Thomas 
Catterall ; Robert, his son and heir, was 
twenty-eight years old; Towneley MS. 
C 8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 55. 

William Barnes died in 1633, leaving a 
son George, aged twenty-four ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m, xxviii, no. 21. In this 
and some other cases the tenure is not 
recorded, 

Thomas Adamson in 1640 held his 
messuage, &c., of Robert Shirebume in 
socage. His heir was his son John, 
aged forty ; ibid. xxx, no. 60, Edmund 
Adamson occurs in 15503; Ducatus Lanc. 
i, 232, 252. 

58 Ralph son of Hugh de Mitton gave 
land by the Calder, together with a 
* scaling’ in Havedargh, and Beatrice his 
mother confirmed the same ; Cockersand 
Chartul. (Chet. Soc.), i, 273- William de 
Rowall gave land there, and the gift of 
Nuncroft by Isolda daughter of Robert 
son of Bernard was probably in the samc 
part of the township ; ibid. 274-5. 

54 The cases of Shireburne, Richardson 
and Pickering have been referred to. 

55 Elizabeth Melling, widow, and David 
Cross; Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurors, 142. ; 

56 A district was assigned to it in 18645 
Lond. Gaz. 4 Mar. See Hewiteon, 
Our Country Churches, 532. ; 

57 Baines, Lancs. (ed. 1836/5 iy 472- 

1 3,788 acres, including 39 of inland 
water ; Census Rep. 1901. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


The soil is clay, and the land is nearly all in 
pasture. There was formerly some linen manufac- 
ture,? now there are file-cutting works. 

The place was thus described about forty years 
ago : ‘ For sweetness of position, richness of isolation, 
and wealth of umbrageous beauty, for sunny hillsides 
and shady dells and peaceful glades, for smiling farm- 
steads and magnificent woodland scenery and rippling 
brooks, and all that makes country life a joy anda 
talisman, commend us to Claughton. . . . To anyone 
anxious for a day’s serene pleasure, for a sweet and 
pure and unalloyed rural treat, for scenery deliciously 
pastoral and air delightfully fresh, we could not 
recommend any place in this part of the country half 
so excellent.’ Many Preston people spend their 
holidays there. Around the hall there is a park of 
about 600 acres in extent. 

The pedestal of an ancient cross remains at Char- 
nock House ?; three other cross sites are known.® 

Before the Conquest CL4AUGHTON 

MANOR was held by Earl Tostig as part of his 
Preston fee, and was assessed as two plough- 

lands.6 Afterwards it formed part of the barony of 
Penwortham,’ and for a time seems to have descended 
with Warton in Kirkham ; thus Roger le Boteler was 


GARSTANG 


concerned in it in 1184~58 and Richard le Boteler 
in 1208.9 The immediate tenants appear to have 
been numerous, four—each holding a fourth part — 
being named in 1208," and very quickly the mesne 
lordship of the Botelers! and their successors was 
forgotten, and the lords of Claughton were said to hold 
of the Lacys or of the Earls and Dukes of Lancaster.!# 

The subdivision of the manor makes it difficult to 
trace the descent. One moiety was held by the 
Singletons and their successors—Banastre, Balderston, 
Xe. The other moiety was acquired by the 
Brockholes family in the time of Edward II and 
later ; ultimately they acquired the whole manor, 
though the steps are not clearly made out. 

It has already been stated 4 that Adam de Brock- 
holes inherited Byrewath in Bonds, holding it till his 
death in 1290. His son Roger, under age, married 
Nichola daughter and heir of Isolda wife of John de 
Rigmaiden.!® Roger was dead in 1311, but he left 
two sons, John and Adam, and a division of the 
inheritance seems to have been made, John receiving 
lands in Garstang, while Adam had the manor of 
Brockholes, near Preston, from which their surname 
was derived.!© John de Brockholes held land in 
Claughton,!” but it was his son Roger who in 1338 


? Lewis, Topog. Dict. A cotton factory 
was built about 1791 on the Brock ; 
Preston Guard. 24. May 1884. 

3 Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 286. 

4 Lancs, and Ches. Antig. Soc. xx, 199. 

5 Shepherd Hill, Langtree’s and 
Catterall House ; ibid. 199, 200. 

6 V.C.H. Lancs. i, 2884, 

7 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs, and Ches.), i, 36. 

8 Farrer, Lancs. Pipe R. §6, 60 ; Roger 
desired that Richard and Robert, sons of 
Uctred, should have their tenure of two 
plough-lands in Claughton defined : was it 
in fee or only fora term? The tenants 
were of the Singleton family. 

39 Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), i, 33. Gilbert Fitz Reinfred and 
Hawise his wife (she was daughter and 
heir of William de Lancaster II) obtained 
from Richard le Boteler an acknowledge- 
ment that the plough-land he himself held 
was the fee and right of Hawise, and that 
the other plough-land, held (? lately) by 
Richard son of Uctred and Robert de 
Stanford, was also her right. 

10 Tbid. Hawise was to receive the 
services due from these tenants, who were 
Adam de Claughton, Michael de Claugh- 
ton, Walter de Winwick and Richard de 
Stanford. Here nine plough-lands were 
reckoned to a knight’s fee. 

1 As in the case of Warton this passed 
tothe lords of Woodplumpton. Quenilda 
Gernet in 1252 held two plough-lands in 
Claughton of Edmund de Lacy Earl of 
Lincoln, but received nothing from it 
except wardship and relief ; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents, i, 190. Ralph de Beetham in 
1254 held the two plough-lands, but 
received nothing because others had been 
enfeoffed freely by the fee of a hauberk ; 
ibid. i, 202, Nicholas de Eaton held 
Quenilda’s right in 1311-12; ibid. ii, 
21. 

12 In 1297 Claughton rendered 2s. 2d. 
to the Earl of Lancaster, probably for 
castle guard ; Lanes. Ing. and Extents, i, 
290. In 1324 the lord (or lords) of 
Claughton held the manor of Alice de 
Lacy (as of the fee of Penwortham) by 
the sixteenth part of a knight’s fee and 


rendering 2s. 2d. a year for castle guard ; 
Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 394. 

In 1346 Queen Isabella paid the 2s. 2d. 
rent for two plough-lands in Claughton ; 
Survey of 1346 (Chet. Soc.), 44. The 
tenants’ names were thus recorded in 
1355: Thomas Banastre, Robert de 
Haldleghs, Henry de Kuerden, Richard de 
Towneley and John de Stamford or 
Stanford, having the 128th part of a 
knight’s fee which William de Whitting- 
ham formerly held ; Feud. Aids, iii, 88. 
This return appears to be erroneous, but 
William de Whittingham had in 1323 
held land in the township of Adam 
Banastre ; Lancs. Ing. and Extents, ii, 154. 

In 1431 Richard Balderston and John 
Brockholes of Heaton held the manor of 
Claughton by the fifth part of a knight’s 
fee; Feud. Aids, iii, 95. In 1445-6 
Richard Balderston was named as sole 
tenant ; Duchy of Lanc. Knights’ Fees, 
bdle. 2, no. 20. 

13 The preceding note affords proof of 
this, William Banastre was in 1324 
found to have died seised of a moiety of 
the vill of Claughton held of the Earl of 
Lancaster (as of the inheritance of Alice 
de Lacy) by the eighth part of a knight’s 
fee and 2d. yearly. In the other moiety 
he held lands of the Hospitallers and 
Cockersand Abbey; Lancs. Ing. and 
Extents, ii, 160. The Banastre lands in 
Claughton are again mentioned in 1379 ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), i, 14, 16. 
In 1456 Richard Balderston was found 
to have held the manor of the king as of 
his duchy by 16d. rent ; ibid. ii, 63. 

The same estate is mentioned in the 
following century in the inquisitions after 
the death of Edmund Dudley, the Earl 
of Derby, Radcliffe of Winmarleigh, Sir 
Gilbert Gerard and Sir Alexander 
Osbaldeston. 

The manor of Claughton was held by 
the Earl of Derby in 1600; Pal. of 
Lance. Feet of F. bdle. 62, no. 113. It 
was sold in 1602, with other estates, by 
the representatives of Ferdinando the 
fifth earl; ibid. bdle. 64, no. 44. For 
names of tenants, &c., see Add. MS. 
32108, no. 677-8. 


325 


MIn the account of Barnacre with 
Bonds. It does not appear that Adam 
had any land in Claughton. 

15 Tsolda occurs frequently in the story 
of the Rigmaidens of Wedacre, but her 
parentage is not given, nor is it stated 
how Nichola was her heir. Various 
details as to Roger and Nichola will 
be found in the account of Brockholes. 

Roger de Brockholes acquired a mes- 
suage and land in Claughton from Godith 
de Myerscough ; Brockholes of Claughton 
D. in the possession of Mr, Fitzherbert- 
Brockholes. Roger son of Adam de 
Brockholes and Nichola his wife in 1292 
claimed a tenement in Wlgarheved and 
Garstang against John de Rigmaiden and 
Richard de Pleasington ; Assize R. 408, 
m. 46d. Nine years later (Michaelmas, 
1301) it was stated that Roger, Nichola 
his wife and John their son were all 
under age; ibid. 419, m. 13. Nichola 
widow of Roger was living in 13443 
ibid. 1435, m. 37d. 

16 See the account of Brockholes. In 
1316 Nichola widow of Roger de Brock- 
holes granted land in Garstang to John 
de Brockholes her son and Margaret his 
wife with remainder to John’s brother 
Adam ; Towneley MS. C8, 13 (Chet. 
Lib.), Br71. 

17 John son of John de Rigmaiden con- 
ceded to John de Brockholes the homages 
of certain tenants, among these being 
William de Tatham; Brockholes D. 
William son of Gilbert de Rigmaiden 
gave him lands at Turnhurst in Garstang 
for life ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13, B 173. 

In 1323 William de Tatham, then 
rector of Halton, granted various lands 
in Claughton to John de Brockholes ; 
Brockholes D. From Final Conc. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 50 it appears 
that William in 1324 received them from 
John for life at the rent of a rose, and 
that Ralph de Stirzacre put in a claim. 
In 1327 John de Brockholes quitclaimed 
to Richard son of Walter de Claughton 
all right in the Priestridding in Claughton 
which Richard had had from William de 
Tatham in exchange for land in Dikoun- 
ridding ; Brockholes D. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


received from William de Tatham, rector of Halton, 
the ‘manor’ of Claughton purchased from Adam son 
of Richard de Cli:ghton, alo a number of other 
tenements including Langscale, now Lands.ill, in 
This erant was charged with the main- 
tenance of a cha;zlain in Claughton or at Garstang 
Church, a stipend of 66s. 8¢. being payable.” 

Roger de Brockholes appears to have been killed in 
December 1341.'° His widow Ellen died in December 
1357 holding a messuage and land in Byrewath of 
the king by knight’s service and by rendering }z. 
yearly for cas:le ward ; also a messuage, 8o acres of 
land and 19 acres of meadow in Claughton, Bils- 
borrow and Catterall of the heir of William de 


Catterali. 


John de Brockholes and Margaret his 
wite were defendants in 1325 ; De Banco 
R. 258, m. 467. Margaret widow of 
John in 1333 called Nichola widow of 
Roger de Brockholes to warrant ; ibid. 
294, m. 291d. She and her son Roger 
were defendants in respect of a tenement 
in Garstang in 1336; ibid. 305, m. 


9. 

a Add. MS. z2105, fol. 94; Lang- 
scale had been obtained from William 
de Southworth. A ted rose was to be 
given to William and his heirs on 
St. John Baptist’s Day. The chaplain 
was to say mass daily for the souls of 
Witliam de Tatham and his kin, Eustace 
de Cottesbech and all the faithful de- 
parted. Should Roger die without heir 
the remainders were to John and Edmund 
brothers of Reger. It would appear from 
the grant that the Brockholes family 
were not the legal heirs of William de 
Tatham, and as land in Tatham was 
afterwards held by them it seems clear 
also that W lliam was the owner of the 
estate and not merely a trustee. 

The deeds show that William de 
Tatham had been acquiring lands in 
Claughton for many years. The follow- 
ing made grants to him: Adam son of 
Adam son of Bimme de Claughton (1d. 
rent), John son of Thomas de Stanford 
(land in Gr:ssyard in Towncroft), Robert 
son of Roger de Claughton, Robert le 
Ward (homage of John son of John de 
Bilsborrow', Godith daughter of John 
son of Walter de Myerscough (in Dere- 
tidding), Richard son of Waiter de 
Claughton and others (in Priestridding), 
Richard son of Roger de Biisborrow (rent 
of 14d. due from the Wederidding in 
Douaneshaigh Moss) and Adam son of 
Henry de Rowall (land in Catterall) ; 
Brockholes D. John de Brockholes 
attested several of the charters, which 
are undated. In 1311 Adam son of 
Richard de Claughton gave William de 
Tatham a messuage and land in Laufield 
in Clacghten; in 1325 John son of 
William de Whittingham and Margery 
his wife gave him a water-mill and a 
fulling-mill, being Margery’s dower ; and 
Richard son of Patrick de Claughton gave 
rents and the sixth part of a mill, formerly 
belonging to Roger de Bilsborrow ; ibid. 
In 1333 Adam son of Richard de Claugh- 
ton and Maud his wife confirmed their 
yTant; Fiezl Cone. ii, gt. There are 
other charters in Towneley C8, 13 
(B 148, 242). 

In 1324 Thomas de Stanford released 
to Wiiliam de Tatham his right in the 
eighth part of the lordship of Claughton ; 
Brockhules D. 

In 1325 Roger son of Robert son of 
Ralph dz Claughton gave a messuage, &c., 


said heir. 


holes.” 


to hs father with reversion to John 
de Brockholes; C8, 13, B 133. 

William de Coucy in 1339 complained 
that Roger de Brockholes, William his 
brother and four Stirzacres had broken 
his close, &c. ; De Banco R. 320, m. 449. 
William son of John de Brockholes was 
in 1343 sent to gaol for wounding, &c. ; 
Assize R..4 30, mi. 28. 

19 Ibid. m. 12 d.; William son of John 
de Bilsborrow and Adam his brother were 
implicated. In 1341 Roger de Brock- 
holes had made a feoffment (perhaps in 
view of his marriage) of his manor of 
Ccughton, with lands in Catterall, Bils- 
borrow, Haighton, Tatham and Garstang ; 
Brockholes D, The widows Nichola and 
Margaret were living. In the same year 
Rogercomplained of assault ; Coram Rege 
Re Fig, Mm. 126. 

~ Ing. p.m. 12 Edw. III (1st nos), 
no. 12. The chaplain received 66s. 8. 
from the estate as stipend. 

“'In 1341 (i.e. before the father’s 
death) Thomas de Holden and Margery 
his wife (widow of Robert de Claughton) 
claimed dower in Claughton against Roger 
son of Ji hn de Brockholes, John de 
Pleasington and John the Souter, and in 
the folowing year John de Pleasington 
called William /csther and heir of Roger 
de Brockholes to warrant him ; De Banco 
R. 327, m. 35 5 333, Mm. 213. 

This shows that Roger had been a 
posthumous son, and at his proof of age 
(1 363) it was stated that he was born at 
Satesbury 10 August 1342; Dep. Keeper's 
Ree, vil, App. 208. 

William son of Ralph de Stirzacre, as 
nephew of William de Tatham, who had 
died seised, claimed three messuages, &c., 
in Claughton and Bilsborrow in 1346 
against Richard de Towneley and Ellen 
his wife. The defendants called Roger 
son of Roger de Brockholes to warrant 
them, but he was under age; Assize R. 
1435; ™m. 3. 

%2 Final Cone. ii, 1143 the remainders 
were to William son of John de Brock- 
holes, John and Edmund his brothers, &c. 
These brothers put in their claim, as did 
Eufemia their sister. 

Salesbury, where Roger was born, was 
a manor of the Clitheroe family, Sir 
Adam having died before 1342. 

*In 1356 Roger son of Roger de 
Brockholes acquired lands in Aighton, 
and in 1363 he made a feoffment of lands 
in Tatham ; BrockholesD. Inthe latter 
year he appeared as plaintiff ; De Banca 
R. 416, m. 383d. In 1369, 1373 and 
1375 he acquired certain lands and rents 
in Claughton, the names including White 
Carr, Alcocks Field, Myerscough Field and 
Dawfeld; Brockholes D. The grantors 
were Henry de Kuerden and Isulda his 


326 


Brockholes, aged fifteen.” 
whose age might appear understated "—for in July 

342 he was contracted to marry Ellen daughter of 
Sir Adam de Clitheroe ”—occurs in various ways 
down to 1390.” 
de Brockholes all claim in the manor of Brock- 


Tatham in socage, and other land in Tatham of the 
Her he'r was Roger son of Roger de 


The younger Roger, 


In 1377-8 he released to Nicholas 


The descent of the manor or moiety is clearly 
attested * down to Roger Brockholes, who died in 
1496 holding the manor of Heaton, near Lancaster, 
with lands in Tatham, Claughton, Bilsborrow and 
Catterall, those in Claughton being held of the king 


wife, Joan daughter and heir of Henry 
de Fetherby (widow), John de Stanford 
and Robert de Pleasington, Richard son 
of William de Stirzacre. In 1390 Roger 
obtained land in Catterall from Robert 
Haneson de Stirzacre; ibid. In 1388 
Roger acquired land in Claughton from 
John the Glover and Margery his wife ; 
Final Conc. iii, 30. 

4 Towneley MS. HH, no. 1889. 

In 1420 Agnes daughter of Roger 
Brockholes deceased acknowledged the 
receipt of £10 from her mother Ellen; 
Add. MS. 32105, SS 689. 

® Roger’s son John de Brockholes in 
or before 1387 married Katherine de 
Heaton, and so obtained the manor of 
Heaton in Lonsdale, which he granted to 
feoffees in 1407; Brockholes D, From 
that time Heaton seems to have been the 
chief residence of the family for about 
200 years. In 1409 John son of Roger 
de Brockholes received lands in Claughton 
and Brockholes from John de Whitting- 
ham of Claughton; ibid. In 1431 (see 
note 12) he was recognized as joint 
Jord of the manor of Claughton—the first 
official record of his status. In 1437 
several family arrangements were made 
by him: an annuity of 5 marks to his 
son William ; lands for life to his son 
Thomas by a second wife named Joan 
(Brockholes D.) ; Alcockfield to his son 
Robert, and to Isabel his daughter ; C 8, 
13, B 145, &c.3; Add. MS. 32105, fol, 
1706, 

In the collection of deeds last referred 
to is a sworn testimony (1428) as to the 
inheritance of Sir Geoffrey Brockholes, 
whose daughter married at Colchester; 
ibid. fol. 1734. Sir Geoffrey is not known 
to have had any connexion with the 
Claughton family. 

In 1438 and 1439 lands were settled 
on Thomas (son of Roger eon of ~~ 
Brockholes and Elizabeth his wife in 
Claughton, Catterall, Garstang and 
Tatham ; Brockholes D. John Brock- 
holes had died somewhat earlier; the 
date of the writ of diem cl. cxtr. is given 
as 30 May 14373 Dep. Keeper's Rep. 
xxxiii, App. 37. In 1441 Roger his son 
received the manor of Heaton from the 
trustecs ; ibid. ; 

Thomas Brockholes (son of Roger) in 
1465 granted to Sir James Harrington 
the wardship and marriage of his son 
Roger, and in the following year Sit 
James gave Roger to be married to Elen 
daughter of William Choricy ; at the 
same time Thomas Brockholes gave her 
Byrewath in Garstang for life ; Towneley 
MSS. C8, 12%, B206, &c. Margaret 
widow of the former Roger was living a 
1465, but seems to have been dead io 
1466; Brockholes D, Thetis Brock- 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


as of his honour of Lincoln. John Brockholes, the 
His eldest 


son and heir, was fourteen years of age. 
son Cuthbert died before 
him,” and he was succeeded 
by another son Thomas, who: 
died in 1567 holding the 
manors of Claughton and 
Heaton, various lands, &c., 
the estate in Claughton and 
Bilsborrow being said to be 
held of the queen as of her 
duchy by the hundred and 
twenty-eighth part of a 
knight’s fee. Thomas Brock- 
holes, the son and heir, was 
six years old.¥ He made a 
settlement of the manor of 
Claughton in 1597,” and recorded a pedigree in 
1613, when his son John was twenty-seven years 
old.” Thomas died in 1618*' and his son John 
in 1643, when John’s son Thomas, thirty years of 


Brocknotes of 
Claughton. Argent a 
cheveron between three 
brocks sable. 


GARSTANG 


age, succeeded. Ele married Mary daughter and 
heir of John Holden of Chaigley. 

The family remained Roman Catholic at the 
Reformation, appearing on the recusant rolls from 
the time of Elizabeth.* They took the king’s side 
in the Civil War, and the estates were sequestered “ 
and then declared forfeit by the Parliament.*® As in 
other cases, the estate was recovered for the owncr, 
and in 1665 Thomas Brockholes registered a pedigree 
as ‘of Claughton.’ He was succeeded in 1668 by 
his son John, who in 1717 registered his estate as a 
“Papist.’*’ T'wo of his sons joined the Jacobite 
rising in 1715, but appear to have escaped prosecu- 
tion; the elder of them, John, died before his 
father, so that the younger, William, succeeded.® He 
died without issue, and, his three brothers having 
been priests,” the manors and lands went to his 
nephew Thomas Hesketh of Mains in Singleton,” 
who took the name of Brockholes. On his death in 
1766 they passed to his brother Joseph,*' and then to 
a third brother James ; but as all died without issue 


holes and Roger his son in 1474 granted 
Galgate House, Walgrefe Close and 
Herldonsoe upon White Carr in Claugh- 
ton to Ellen Dore for life ; ibid. Thomas 
was dead in 1476, when his widow 
Elizabeth made an agreement as to her 
dower with Roger the son and heir; 
ibid. 

%6 Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. iii, no. 73. 
Provision made for Ellen his wife and his 
five daughters is recorded, and a fuller 
statement of various settlements is con- 
tained in a later inquisition (ibid. no. 77). 
Roger Brockholes (cf 1441) married 
Margaret ; his son and heir Thomas was 
succeeded by his son Roger, who married 
Ellen Chorley, as above, and she survived 
him, 

The wardship and marriage of John 
Brockholes were in 1500 granted to 
William Smith; Dep, Keeper's Rep. 
xxxix, App. 551. 

77Tn 1527 Cuthbert son and heir of 
John Brockholes was contracted to marry 
Margaret daughter of Thomas Rigmaiden ; 
Towneley MS. C 8, 13, B 216. Twelve 
years later further arrangements were 
made as to the succession, Cuthbert and 
his wife being still alive ; the remainders 
were to Thomas, younger son of John, 
Edward second son of Thurstan Tyldesley, 
and to Mary daughter of John Brockholes ; 
ibid, B 161, 217-18. Cuthbert must 
have died soon afterwards, for in 1541 
Thomas son and Aeir of John was engaged 
to marry Dorothy daughter of John 
Rigmaiden, or Mabel her sister if she 
should die ; ibid, B 223. 

The will of John Brockholes is dated 
1546; ibid. B224. He died shortly 
after, and livery was granted to Thomas 
in 15573 Add. MS. 32105, fol. 217; 
Dep. Keeper's Rep. xxxix, App. 551. A 
settlement was then made ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Plea R. 201, m. 1. 

*8 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xi, no. 6; 
Margaret widow of Cuthbert was living 
at Hulme. The will of Thomas Brock- 
holes is recited ; Claughton was to be 
held for a term of years for the benefit of 
his daughter Elizabeth, only four years 
old, and then to his son Thomas. In 
default of issue the remainders were to 

the said daughter Elizabeth and heirs, to 
his sister Mary, another sister Katherine 
Kydde, to Robert Parker—all for life ; 
and then to the next of kin of the name 


of Brockholes. The sister Mary had in 
1541 married William Singleton of 
Brockholes ; Brockholes D, The daughter 
Elizabeth was in 1580 contracted to 
marry John son and heir of Edward 
Braddyll ; ibid. 

Livery was granted to Thomas Brock- 
holes in 1582 ; Dep. Keeper’s Rep. xxxix, 
App. 551. 

*2 Brockholes D. 

30 Visit, of 1613 (Chet. Soc.), 31 ; the 
family is described as ‘of Heaton.’ 

31 Lancs. Ing. pm. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 148-9. The manor of 
Claughton was stated to be held of the 
king as duke by the twenty-eighth part of 
a knight's fee ; various lands in Bilsborrow, 
&c., by the moiety of a knight’s fee ; and 
others ian Garstang by the like service. 
The heir was the son John, aged thirty- 
one. 

3? Pedigree of 1665; 
230. 

33 Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. i, 
306. The two-thirds of Thomas Brock~- 
holes’ estate sequestered for recusancy 
were in 1608 granted out by the Crown ; 
Pat. 6 Jas. I, pt. xxi. 

34 The papers in the case of the head 
of the family seem to have been lost, 
but the sequestration is evident from the 
record of his relatives; Royalist Comp. 
Papers (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 243-50. John Brockholes, who died 
in 1643, left a widow Dorothy (who 
married Captain John Reines) and an 
infant son Augustine, to whom he 
assigned an annuity of £10, which was 
stopped before 1651. Another son, John 
Brockholes of Torrisholme, adhered to 
the forces raised against the Parliament 
and in 1649 applied for leave to com- 
pound, A cousin, Thomas Brockholes of 
Heaton, and his mother had their lands 
sequestered for recusancy and delinquency. 
This Thomas ‘admitted at the beginning 
of the wars he had acted against the 
state, but soon seeing his error he 
subsequently did all he could in the 
parliamentary interest’; he had for two 
years been imprisoned for debt in the 
Marshalsea. 

The will of Thomas Brockholes of 
Heaton (1638) is in C 8,13, B 228. 

35 The manors of Claughton and 
Heaton were sold in 1653 ; Royalist Comp. 
Papers, i, 249. Three of the name of 


327 


C 8, 13, B 


Thomas Brockholes were in the act of 
sale of 1652—one of Chaigley and the 
others of Heaton—but none is described 
as ‘esquire’; Index of Royalists (Index 
Soc.), 42, 51. 

36 Dugdale, Visit. (Chet. Soc.), 58. 
His son John was then twenty years old. 
Two other sons were priests ; Gillow, 
Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath. i, 308. The 
continuation of the pedigree may be seen 
in Fishwick’s Garstang (Chet. Soc.), 242 ; 
Burke, Commoners, iii, 384-6. In 1699 
a settlement of the manors of Claughton 
and Heaton was made by John Brockholes 
and John his son; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of 
F. bdle. 243, m. 16. 

37 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurors, 1413 the annual value was 
£522 19s. 1d. 

88 Gillow, op. cit. i, 307. The will of 
John Brockholes of Claughton, dated 
1718, in which year he died, is in Piccope 
MSS. (Chet. Lib.), iii, 200. 

89 Of these Roger was the priest at 
Claughton and died in 17433; Thomas 
died in 1758, and Charles, a Jesuit at 
Wigan, in 1759, being the last of the 
male line; ibid.; Foley, Rec. S. J. vi, 
454.3 vii, 87. In a recovery of the 
manors in 1739 the vouchee was Cathe- 
rine Brockholes, spinster ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Plea R. §51, m. 3. She was a daughter 
of John Brockholes by his second mar- 
riage and in 1739 married Charles 
tenth Duke of Norfolk. 

40 The licence for the marriage of 
William Hesketh and Mary Brockholes 
was dated 1710; Brockholes D. Her 
sister Anne married Robert Davies of 
Gwysaney and in 1737 Mrs. Davies, as 
a widow, claimed the whole estate as 
next Protestant of kin ; ibid. It appears 
that Thomas Brockholes had made a 
conveyance to Thomas Clayton and she 
probably thought the whole would be 
sold. Her husband’s family intervened 
to prevent the claim proceeding ; though 
Protestants they objected to profit by the 
penal laws. Her descendants are the 
representatives in blood of the old Brock- 
holes family. See Burke, Landed Gentry 
under Davies-Cooke of Owston. 

41 Joseph married Cons‘ant’a daughter 
of Basil Fitzherbert and died in 1782. 
He made a feoffment of the manors of 
Claughton and Heaton in 1767 ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 377, m. 297. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


they went in 1783, by Joseph’s disposition, to 
William Fitzherbert of Swinnerton,” who also assumed 
the name of Brockholes, and dying in 1817 was 
succeeded by his son Thomas Fitzherbert-Brockholes. 
He died unmarried in 1873 and was succeeded by 
his nephew James, who in 1875 was followed by a 
second cousin William Joseph, son of Francis Fitz- 
herbert of Swinnerton, who took the surname Brock- 
holes, and is the present lord of the manor,* residing 
No courts are held, nor are there any 


at the hall. 
records of them. 


CLAUGHTON HALL ™ stands on rising ground 
facing west and commanding an extensive view over 


42 He was brother of the above-named 
Constantia. His elder brother Basil 
(d. 1797) was father of Francis (d. 1857) 
father of the present lord of Claughton. 

48 Burke, Landed Gentry. 

48a There are three illustrations in 
Twycross, Lancs, Mansions, ii, 41. The 
building was barely finished in 1817 when 
Mr. Wm. Fitzherbert Brockholes died. 
It comprises the whole of the house 
except the offices and servants’ rooms, 
which belong to the older building. 

“ The fine of 1208 (cited above) shows 
Adam and Michael de Claughton each 
holding a fourth part. Each of them was 
a benefactor to Cockersand Abbey; 
Chartul, (Chet. Soc.), 254, &c. So also 
were William son of Michael and Richard 
de Claughton ; ibid. From William de 
Tatham’s charter of 1338 it appears that 
his part of the manor had been purchased 
from Adam son of Richard de Claughton. 
Adam son of Adam lord of Claughtor 
occurs in 1329 in one of the Brock- 
holes D. 

Walter de Winwick was another of 
the lords in 1208. Later there was a 
Walter de Claughton whose descendants 
are named in the Brockholes D. Thus 
in 1327 John de Brockholes made an 
exchange of land with Richard son of 
Walter de Claughton and in 1338 John 
son of Richard son of Walter de Claugh- 
ton granted all his lands to Robert his 
son. John de Pleasington granted to 
William son of Richard son of Walter de 
Claughton all lands formerly belonging 
to John son of Richard son of Walter ; 
ibid. The date of this must be later 
than the others, for in 1356 the said 
William was claiming land against John 
de Pleasington ; Duchy of Lanc. Assize 
R. 5, m. 25. 

In 1252-3 the sheriff was ordered 
to deliver to Walter de Myerscough an 
oxgang of land in Claughton which had 
belonged to William de Myerscough, an 
outlaw ; Close R. 67, m. 3. 

Roger de Wedacre in 1284 complained 
that Maud de Claughton, William de 
Myerscough and Isolde his wife had 
disseised him of land in Claughton, and 
recovered it ; Assize R. 1268, m. 12. 

John and Robert de Myerscough con- 
tributed to the subsidy of 13323 Exch. 
Lay Subs, (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
58-9. 

Randle del Wood (Bosco) was one of 
the early owners and granted a rent- 
charge of 2s. &c., to his son William; 
Brockholes D. John son of William de 
Myerscough gave a fraction of the waste 
in Claughton to Richard son of Walter 
son of Randle del Wood ; ibid. John son 
of John de Myerscough in 1344 made a 
grant to John son of Thomas son of 
Richard de Claughton; ibid. Other 


ing. 


the Fylde. It is a plain modern stone mansion, 
three stories in height, erected in 1816-17 but 
incorporating part of an older house Probably of 
17th-century date. 
side, by a pillared porch, and on the west front the 
distinctive features are two large bow windows, one 
at each end, going up the full height of the build. 


The entrance is on the north 


Among the ancient families who appear to have 
held fractions of the manor were those of Claughton,“ 


Myerscough, Fegherby or Fetherby,* represented 


deeds of the family are preserved in the 
same collection; Horseriddington and 
Timberhurst are among the Claughton 
place-names. Other deeds are in Dods. 
MSS. cxlii, fol. 524, 58 (Brustare Croft), 
68. 

4© The name is also spelt Fotherby and 
varies to Feyreby and Ferriby. 

In 1302 Henry son of William de 
Fetherby called Ellis de Fetherby to 
warrant to him the third part of a 
messuage, &c., in Claughton claimed in 
dower by Christiana wife of Nicholas de 
Garstang; De Banco R. 142, m. 111. 
Christiana was widow of Gilbert de 
Clifton and had exchanged for land at 
Ferriby in Yorkshire ; ibid. 143, m. 107. 
Nichola widow of Ellis de Fetherby in 
1308 claimed dower in two messuages, 
&c., against Henry de Fetherby and 
Isolda his wife; ibid. 173, m. 193d. 
Isolda daughter of John de Myerscough 
in 1313-14 recovered land in Claughton 
against Isolda wife of Henry son and 
heir of William de Fetherby and others ; 
Assize R. 424, m. 7. 

Henry was living in 1331 (De Banco 
R. 283, m. 372d.; 287, m. 224d.), but 
in 1336 his widow Margery, then wife of 
John son of Adam de Hindley, claimed 
dower in Claughton against Robert son of 
John de Blackburn (of Showley) and Joan 
daughter (and co-heir) of Henry de Feth- 
erby, and against Geoffrey son of John 
son of Geoffrey de Walton and Isolda 
the other daughter ; ibid. 308, m. 3603 
310, m. 27. By 1346 Margery had 
married a third husband, Richard son of 
Robert de Parr, and made a new claim 
for dower against the same parties; ibid. 
349, m. 208d. 

Robert de Haldleghs, Joan his wife, 
Henry de Kuerden and Isolda his wife 
(in the wives’ right) claimed a messuage, 
&c., in 1355, against John son of Robert 
the Wright and Robert de Middleton ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Assize 4, m. 28d.; 
7,m.2. In 1360 Robert de Haldleghes 
and Joan his wife, Henry de Kuerden 
and Isolda his wife, sought land in 
Claughton, as the right of the wives, who 
were daughters and co-heirs of Henry 
de Fetherby; ibid. 7, m. 2. Joan (as 
above) in 1369-73 granted her lands to 
Roger de Brockholes ; Brockholes D. 

47 Tt has been shown that Richard de 
Stanford had a part of the manor in 1208 
and John de Stanford in 1355. 

Richard (son of Robert) de Stanford 
and John de Stanford were benefactors of 
Cockersand Abbey ; Chartul. i, 256-8, 
253. 

Maud widow of Thomas de Stanford 
was a plaintiff in 1312 in respect of her 
dower in Claughton; De Banco R. 193, 
mM. 403 195, m. 156. 

Thomas de Stanford occurs in 13243 


328 


by Haldleghs and Kuerden in 1355, Stamford or 
Stanford” and Whittingham.” 


The last-mentioned 


Brockholes D, Nicholas de Eaton in 
1323 granted to William de Tatham, 
clerk, the wardship of John son and heir 
of Thomas de Stanford ; Add. MS. Jz104, 
no. 1131. 

John de Stanford paid to the subsidy in 
13325 Exch. Lay Subs. 59. In 1337 
William son of Adam son of Thomas de 
Calder sought a messuage in Claughton 
held by John de Pleasington and John 
son of Thomas de Stanford; De Banco 
R. 310, m. 158. Ralph another son of 
Thomas claimed land in the same year; 
Assize R. 1424, m. 11d. Robert de 
Stanford was called to warrant in 1352; 
Duchy of Lance. Assize R. 1, m. 44.5 2, 
m. 3. 

In 1444 Lawrence Stanford and Agnes 
widow of Henry Stanford settled a mes- 
suage, &c., in Claughton through Henry 
Garstang as trustee ; Final Cone. iii, 111. 
In 1465 Henry Albyn as grandson of 
Henry Stanford complained that Joan 
widow of Richard Balderston was detaining 
a box of charters; Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 
28, m. 20. In 1469 he claimed land 
against Richard Barton, alleging that 
Lawrence Stanford had died without 
issue ; ibid. 35, m. 7d, 

48 See below under Hecham for some 
early notices. 

In 1324-5 William son of William de 
Whittingham and heir of Alice wife of 
the elder William paid gd. as relief. 
Part of his lands were held of William 
Banastre, a minor, but he held 1 oxgang 
of land of the king by the hundred and 
twenty-eighth part of a knight's fee; 20 
acres made an oxgang ; Memo. R.(L.T.R.) 
88, m. 74. 

According to the return of 1355 
William’s estate became divided among 
co-heirs. Richard de Towneley and 
Ellen his wife were associated with Joho 
de Whittingham of Claughton in defence 
in 13443; Assize R. 1435, m. 374. 
Alice widow of John de Myerscough in 
1354 claimed a rent of 5s. from Claugh- 
ton—obtaining 4s. 84d.—against Richard 
and Ellen de Towneley ; Duchy of Lanc. 
Assize R. 3, m. 1d. 

The Whittingham family was repre- 
sented in the township long after this 
time. Richard son of John de Whitting- 
ham made a feoffment of land there io 
13773 Add. MS. 32106, no. 426. In 
the preceding year dower had been claimed 
against him by Isabel widow of Nicholas 
son of John de Whittingham ; De Banco 
R. 463, m. 142d. John Whittingham 
gave messuages in Claughton and Bils- 
borrow in 1488 to his son Robert ; Pal. 
of Lanc. Writs Proton. Lent 3 Hen. VIL 
Margaret Whittingham, widow, in 1505 
claimed dower against John Woittingham; 
Pal. of Lanc. Plea R 99, m. 24.5 Final 
Conc. iii, 156. 


Craucuton Ha. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


Rawcliffe,” Singleton of Chingle Hall" and others 
of the neighbouring landowners had possessions in 
Claughton. Among the smaller local holders appear 
Parkinson, Wilkinson © and others.” 


had Royalist representatives in the Civil War 
The Hollands of Denton had an estate 
at Matshead which was in 1564 sold to Barton,” 
who were succeeded by Whitehead.” 


time." 


48a Richard Whittingham compounded 
with the Parliamentary authorities in 
1649 for his estate in Claughton. A 
son Thomas had been killed at New- 
bury in 1643 fighting for the king ; but 
his widow Anne afterwards married John 
Molanus, a sergeant-major for the Parlia- 
ment ; Cal. Com. for Comp. iii, 2055. 

49 John de Bellew and Joan his wife 
in 1318 claimed dower in two messuages 
and half a plough-land against Thurstan 
son of Margaret de Worsley ; De Banco 
R, 225, m. 170d. 

In 1325 William de Multon and Joan 
his wife (as widow of William de Holland) 
claimed the same against Thurstan son 
of William de Holland ; ibid. 258, m. 3845 
261, m. 2d. 

In 1403 it was found that Richard de 
Holland of Denton held a place called 
Mateshed in Claughton of the king by a 
rent of 14d. to him and 4s. to William de 
Balderston; Towneley MS. DD, no. 1461. 

50 Hugh and Edward Barton (his son) 
purchased two messuages, &c., from 
Edward Holland in 1564 ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 26, m., 222. Edward 
Barton died in 1595 holding the messuage 
of Lord La Warre in socage, and leaving 
a son Hugh, one year old; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvii, no, 23, 88. The 
tenure seems incorrectly stated. John 
Barton died in 1633 holding what appears 
to be the same property, but the tenure 
is not recorded. Hugh his son and heir 
was fifteen years of age, and there were 
other children, Richard, Elizabeth and 
Jane; ibid. xxvii, no. 7. Margery his 
widow afterwards married Cuthbert Tyl- 
desley of Stirzacre and in 1652 claimed 
the two-thirds of a tenement sequestered 
for the recusancy of Elizabeth Barton, 
spinster ; Royalist Comp. Papers, i, 150. 

5l They had Matshead; see the ac- 
count of the family and pedigree in 
Fishwick, op. cit. 253 ; also Upper Raw- 
cliffe in St. Michael’s. Mr. Whitehead 
of Garstang town raised a company for the 
Parliament in 1643; Lancs. War (Chet. 
Soc.), 42. He was a member of the 
Presbyterian Classis in 1646. 

52 James Boteler in 1504 held mes- 
suages, &c., in Goosnargh and Claughton 
of the king by knight’s service ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. iii, no. 109. The 
Claughton land appears to have descended 
to Standish of Duxbury, but the tenure 
was not recorded in 15993 ibid. xvii, 
no. 
eS) John Singleton held of the king as 
duke in 1530 by the ninety-secondth part 
of a knight’s fee, but his successors by the 
fortieth part ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
Vi, no. 323 viii, no. g3 xiii, no. 16 
(1570). 

Gabriel Hesketh purchased messuages, 
&c., in 1541 from John Singleton, and 
sold to William Kirkby in 1563 ; Pal. of 
Lane. Feet of F. bdle. 12, m. 60; 25, 
mM, 200. 

4 Tn 1491 William Skillicorne sold to 
Thomas Earl of Derby the lands in 
Claughton which had formerly belonged 
to William Bradkirk, and before that to 
John Warburton ; Knowsley D. 2/13. 

Henry Kighley of Inskip (1554) and 
his son held messuages and lands of the 
queen as of her duchy by knight’s service ; 


“4 


Butler of 


Duchy of Lane, Ing. p.m. x, no. 49 3 xi, 
no, 10. 

John Kighley of White Lea in Goos- 
nargh in 1616 held in Claughton of the 
Hospitallers (dissolved) by 6d. rent ; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and 
Ches.), ii, 31. 

George Kirkby of Upper Rawcliffe 
(1558) and his brother William held of 
Thomas Brockholes by a rent of 3d.3 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xi, no. 8 ; 
xvii, no. 16. Gilbert Latus of Goosnargh 
(1568) held the fourth part of four mes- 
suages, &c., by the same service ; ibid. 
xii, no. 11, 

Robert Shireburne of Catterall held the 
Conigree in Claughton of the queen as 
duke by knight’s service in 15723 ibid. 
xiii, no. 10, 

Ewan Browne of Ribbleton in 1545 
held a messuage in Claughton as part of 
his Ribbleton estate, but in 1568 and 
later the tenure was described as of 
Thomas Stirzacre by services unknown ; 
ibid. vii, no. 24.5 xi, no. 43 xiv, no. 42. 

John Starkie, Anne his wife, Henry 
Starkie and Isabel his wife held their 
messuages, &c., in 15583 Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 19, m. 38. Afterwards 
(1577) Henry and Isabel were said to 
hold the third part of the manor of 
Claughton ; ibid. bdle. 39,m. 120. Henry 
Starkie (of Aughton near Ormskirk) was 
at his death said to hold messuages, &c., 
of the queen as of her duchy by the 
fortieth part of a knight’s fee ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvii, no. 70. 

Robert Walmesley of Coldcoats in 1612 
held three messuages, &c., of the king as 
duke by the two-hundredth part of a 
knight's fee ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), 
i, 219-23. 

William Hesketh of Mains in 1622 
held in Claughton of the Earl of Derby 
in socage ; ibid. iii, 364. 

The tenure of the land of William and 
Thomas Richardson of Myerscough is 
not recorded. 

35 Edward and Lawrence Parkinson in 
1584 obtained messuages, &c., in Claugh- 
ton and Catterall from Thomas Richard- 
son and Thomas his son and heir ; Pal. of 
Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 46, 12. 94. 

Richard Parkinson (son of John son of 
Richard son of John) died in 1621 without 
issue, holding Enfield House, the Oatfall, 
&c., of John Brockholes by 1d. rent; 
Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), ii, 250-2. 
His heir was his half-brother George, aged 
fifteen, Edward Parkinson in 1631 held 
lands in Catterall and Claughton which 
had belonged to the Hospitallers and then 
to Shireburne ; Towneley MS. C8, 13 
(Chet. Lib.), 993. In 1653 John Parkin- 
son, recusant, desired to compound for the 
sequestered two-thirds of his estate ; Cal. 
Com. for Comp. iv, 3175. 

56 Robert and Lawrence Wilkinson in 
1592 made a settlement of seven mes- 
suages, &c., in Claughton ; Pal. of Lanc. 
Feet of F. bdle. 54, m. 149. Lawrence 
(son of Thomas) Wilkinson in 1637 held 
two-thirds of a messuage, with the rever- 
sion of the other third after the death of 
Janet his father’s widow, of Richard 
Shireburne as of his manor of Howath, 
parcel of the possessions of the late dis- 
solved priory of St. John of Jerusalem in 


329 


GARSTANG 


England. His son and heir Thomas was 
six years old, and his widow Ellen was 
living at Thornley ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. 
p-m. xxx, no. 79. Janet Wilkinson, 
widow, as a recusant in 1654 desired to 
contract for the two-thirds of her estate 
sequestered ; Cal. Com. for Comp. v, 3193. 

57 John Arthwright died in 1625 hold- 
ing land late of the Hospital of St. John ; 
William his son and heir was fifty years 
of age ; Towneley MS. C 8, 13, p. 8. 

George Bradshaw died in 1638 holding 
a messuage, &c., of Lord la Warre in 
socage, His son John was twenty-two 
years old ; Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. xxx, 
no. 87. 

Lawrence Cottam in 1607 held his 
messuage, &c., of Edward Osbaldeston, 
and left as heir his son Richard, aged 
twenty-one ; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 99. Richard’s lands 
were sequestered (as to two-thirds) for his 
recusancy under the Commonwealth and 
in 1654 he applied for leave to contract. 
He died soon afterwards and was suc- 
ceeded by a son Lawrence, but Thomas 
Beesley of Goosnargh claimed part; 
Royalist Comp. Papers (Rec. Soc. Lancs, 
and Ches.), ii, 81. The Cottams were 
of Bannister Hey in Claughton. 

James Eckersall died in 1608 holding 
partly of the king as of the dissolved 
Hospital of St. John (by 24d. rent) and 
partly in chief by knight’s service. His 
heir was a brother Thomas, aged thirty- 
six 3 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc.), i, 136. 

John Heritage held a messuage, &c., 
of Richard Shireburne as of the Hospital- 


“lers; he died in 1629, leaving a son 


Hugh, aged thirty; Towneley MS. C 8, 
13, p» 17. John Heritage purchased at 
the sale of the Derby estate in Claughton 
in 1602. His son Hugh died about 
1643, leaving a widow Margery; she 
being a recusant had two-thirds of her 
tenement sequestered under the Common- 
wealth in 1646. John Heritage, their 
son, having attained his majority in 1652, 
and ‘being a Protestant, his father having 
been a Protestant, and he (petitioner) 
having been so brought up from a child, 
being also well affected to the Parliamen- 
tary Government,’ desired the discharge 
of the sequestration. He was church- 
warden of Garstang in 1653-4, Royalist 
Comp. Papers, iii, 181-4. 

Thomas Hodgson died in 1627 hold- 
ing of the heirs of John Stanford ; 
Edward, his son and heir, was fifteen 
years old; Towneley MS. C 8, 135 


: The Leigh died in 1631 holding of 
ohn Brockholes as of his manor of 
Claughton ; Thomas, his son and heir, 
was forty years old ; ibid. 747. 

Christopher Walmesley held lands in 
1623 of Thomas Richardson in socage by 
16d. rent, and had a son and heir William, 
aged eighteen ; Lancs. Ing. pom (Rec. 
Soc.), iii, 402. William Walmesley died 
in 1638 holding two messuages, &c., of 
the king as of the dissolved priory of 
St. John ; the heir, his son Thomas, was 
of full age; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. 
xxx, no. 61. Thomas Walmesley, recu- 
sant, in 1653 petitioned to contract for 
the sequestrated two-thirds of his estate ; 
Cal. Com, for Comp. v, 3178. 


42 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


HECHAM™® or Heigham, called a manor, and 
Dowanshargh * were estates that gave surnames to the 
owners. 

The Knights Hospitallers® and the canons of 
Cockersand ® held lands in Claughton. 

Several of the inhabitants, in addition to Brock- 
holes, had their estates sequestered for political or 
religious reasons under the Commonwealth.” A hist 
of proprietors in 1689 has been printed.* A number 
of ‘ Papists’ registered estates in 1717. 

The commons were inclosed in 1730. 

The chapel implied in the grant of William de 
Tatham in 1338 stood on Chapel Croft, and was 
still existing in the time of Elizabeth.* It may have 
been closed when the chantry in Garstang Church 
was founded. The principal family and many of the 
people remaining attached to Roman Catholicism at 
the Reformation, it is probable that mass was said in 
the township even in the time of Elizabeth and 
onwards. There was a large number of convicted 
recusants in Claughton in the time of Charles II.” 
From about the Restoration the succession of priests 
is on record ; the list begins with Thomas Walmesley 
and includes Roger Brockholes, 1707-43; John 
Barrow, 1766-1811 ™ ; Robert Gradwell (afterwards 
bishop), 1811-17"; and the late Mgr. Robert 
Gradwell, 1860-1906.” A priest’s house, its upper 
room being used as a chapel, was built about 1682,” 
and the present church of St. Thomas the Apostle 


brought from Mains Hall is preserved and in use 
here. The vestment chest and a small oak tabernacle 
that belonged to the Ven. Thomas Whitaker, who 
had ministered in the district and was executed at 
Lancaster in 1646, are also preserved. 


BILSBORROW 


Billesburgh, 1212 ; Billesburg, 1226; Billesburch, 
1266 ; Billisburgh, 1297. he spelling Bilsborough 
is still in use. 

This pleasantly wooded township on the south 
side of the Brock occupies land which rises gradually 
from west to east, from about 70 It. above sea level 
to about 250 ft. The area is X52 acres,' and in 
1go1 the population was 181. 

The main road from Preston to the North goes 
along the western boundary. From it a road through 
Bilstorrow goes east into Goosnargh, with a branch 
crossing the township north-westward, and passing 
into Claughton by Higher Brock new bridge. The 
London and North-Western Railway’s main line 
runs across the western end, and has a station named 
Brock? on the boundary of this township and 
Claughton. 

The soil is clay and gravel ; wheat, oats and potatoes 
are grown. There is a large paper-mill at Matshead. 

This place does not occur by name in 
MANOR Domesday Book, having at that time 


was built in 1794; it has since been enlarged and 
A mediaeval chalice 


richly adorned internally.” 


58 William de Claughton granted land 
in Claughton, the Hecham road forming 
part of the boundary ; Dods. MSS. cxlix, 
fol. 684. William de Havile, vicegerent 
of the order of St. John of Jerusalem in 
England, granted land in Hecham and 
Henryfield to William son of Geoffrey 
de Whittingham ; ibid. fol. 69. William 
son of Geoffrey de Whittingham received 
the manor of Heigham in 1279 from 
John de Tatham; Final Conc. i, 156. 
Ralph de Hecham in 1287 granted land 
in Hecham to William de Whittingham, 
clerk, and Ellen his wife; Dods. MSS. 
cxlix, fol. 686. Adam de Whittinghim 
afterwards released all his right there to 
John de Tatham ; ibid. fol. 694. 

Candelay son of Madoc granted land 
in Hecham to William his son, and 
William about 1228 granted it to Walter 
son of Richard the rector of Tatham, 
while Alice de Hecham, widow, gave 
Walter de Tatham land in Henryfield ; 
ibid. fol. 70. The above-named Ralph 
(son of Roger) de Hecham gave lands in 
Dowanshargh (?) to John son of Walter 
de Tatham in 1274; ibid. fol. 694. Sir 
Randle de Dacre, sheriff, and other 
prominent men attested this charter. 

Ralph son of Roger de Hecham demised 
land in Hecham to Joan (?) daughter of 
Hugh de Mitton, and she in her widow- 
hood transferred to Roger de Wedacre 
and Maud his wife; Add. MS. 32104, 
No. 1309, 933. Ralph de Hecham also 
granted Roger de Wedacre land the 
bounds of which touched Fardenshaw 
Brook, Anedarewelache, Wanesnape and 
the Brock ; ibid. no. 932. 

John de Hegham contributed to the 
subsidy in 1332; Exch. Lay Subs. 59. 

William de Southworth in 1322-3 
granted the manor of Hecham in Claugh- 
ton to his daughter Elizabeth ; she married 
John de Bardsey, who in 1355 farmed 


the manor to Robert de Haldlegh ; Dods. 
MSS. cxlix, fol. 70b-714, 

Jane Beesley of Goosnargh (widow of 
Henry) in 1585 held the moiety of a 
messuage called Rigmaiden House, alias 
the Fell House, but the tenure is not 
stated ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. xvi, 
no. 24. The charters copied by Dods- 
worth, and quoted above, in 1632 be- 
longed to Richard Chrichley or Critchlow 
of Rigmaiden House in Claughton, In 
the Civil War he took the king’s side, 
and his estate was sequestered ; he com- 
pounded in 1649 by a fine of £7 105.3 
Cal. Com, for Camp. iii, 1951 3 Vy 3290 

There is a farm called Heigham. 

*' This name seems to have disappeared. 
Avice daughter of Richard son of Adam 
de Claughton granted to the Hospitallers 
land which Peter de Dowanshargh held 
by her father’s gift; Add. MS. 32104, 
no. 1307. The Dowanshargh family 
appear to have granted their land to 
William de Tatham ; ibid. no. 401, &c. 

© Some grants to the order have 
been mentioned already, but it appears 
that they were already in possession of 
land in the township in 1208, in the 
half plough-land of Adam de Claughton ; 
Final Conc. i, 33. The Prior of St. John 
in 1334 claimed 4 acres against Richard 
de Myerscough; De Banco R. 298, 
m. 273. 

The lands in Claughton were regarded 
as part of the manor of Howath, and so 
passed to Shireburne of Stonyhurst ; 
Duchy of Lance. Ing. p.m. xxvi, no. 4. 
Many tenants’ names can be gathered 
from preceding notes. 

®1 Cockersand Chartul. i, 253-62. 
Several of the benefactors have been 
named already. Others were Walter de 
Winwick, Grimbald son of William de 
Slyne, Robert son of Paulin de Bilsborrow 
and Adam son of Roger de Eccleston. A 


339 


probably been part of Barton.’ In 
1212 BILSBORROW, or part, was held of the 


number of place-names occur in the 
charters, including Akenehead, Rede- 
lache, Wlveley Brook, Huntersti, Nun- 
house Stead, and Whitewell Brook ; 
“scaling ’ is used as a common noun, 

6? See notes on Barton, Cottam, 
Critchlow, Heritage, Parkinson, Walmes- 
ley and Wilkinson. 

68 Fishwick, op. cit. 28-30. 

64 William Arthwright, James Barnes, 
Hugh and Thomas Barton, Lawrence 
Caton, Lawrence Cottam, Margaret 
Cottam (her son Hugh under age), 

ohn Green, Thomas Sweetlove and 
Robert Wilson; Estcourt and Payne, 
High Cath. Nonjurors, 97, &c. 
> Act 3 Geo. II, cap. 3, private. 

6 In 1590 inquiry was made as to 
Thomas Brockholes’ title to Langscales 
in Catterall ; it was supposed to be held 
for ‘superstitious uses,’ in connexion 
with the chapel; Exch. Dep. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), 6, 7. This no doubt 
refers to William de Tatham’s chaplain. 

& Misc. (Cath. Rec. Soc.) v, 176-9. 
Notes are given on the families of Barton, 
Baines, Cottam and Whittingham. 

88 Gillow, Bibl. Dict. of Engl. Cath, 
i, 145. 

® Dict. Nat. Biog. 

70 See the account of Preston. 

In 1748 Thomas Brockholes gave 
Claughton House (later Butt Hill) to the 
secular clergy priest who should assist the 
Catholics of Claughton ; Brockholes D. 

72 There is a full account in the 
Liverpool Cath, Annual for 1885 ; 
Hewitson, Our Country Churches, 286-96 ; 
Fishwick, op. cit. 121-2. 

1 Scr acres, including 8 of inland water; 
Census Rep. 1901. ; 

2 For the old station there see Hewit- 
son, Northward, 32. . 

3 Cockersand Chartul, (Chet. Soc.) iy 


3346 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


king in chief by a rent of 6¢., being assessed 
as 2 oxgangs of land. Alan son of Richard 
(de Singleton) and John de Bilsborrow were the 
tenants! Afterwards the grant seems to have been 
enlarged and the service changed and augmented, for 
in 1226 Alan de Singleton held 2 oxgangs of land 
there in drengage by a rent of 2s.,° while a century 
later, in 1346, his heir Thomas Banastre held half 
a plough-land in Bilsborrow by the twentieth part 
of a knight’s fee and 2s. a year, payable at the 
four terms. Several free tenements existed in the 
13th century.’ The manor descended, like other 
Singleton manors,’* to the heirs of Balderston, and 
on the division in 1564 was assigned to Gilbert 
Gerard. Afterwards the manor was held with 
Barton by the Shuttleworth family.° 


GARSTANG 


The Bartons of Barton, predecessors of the Shuttle- 
worths, had long held lands in Bilsborrow."” 

In 1324 it was stated that the Banastres held the 
hamlet half in demesne and half in service." The 
latter half seems to have been held for several cen- 
turies by a family named Cottam. Thus Richard de 
Cottam held an oxgang of land in 1227," and a 
later Richard in 1548 held a third part of the manor 
by the fortieth part of a knight’s fee and 6d. rent— 
i.e, a moiety of the military service and a fourth part 
of the rent." The principal estate passed to the 
Parkinsons, but the Cottam family are found in 
the township down to the beginning of the 19th 
century." 

There are numerous references to families using 
the local surname, but they are disconnected. 


4 Lancs. Ing. and Extents (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 48. 

5 Tbid. 140, In 1244 Alan died seised 
of 2 oxgangs of land in  Bilsborrow, 
held in chief of the king by 2s. rent ; 
ibid, 160. 

The Earl of Lancaster in 1297 had 
2s, a year from this vill ; ibid. 289. 

In 1324 Adam son and heir of William 
Banastre held the manor of Bilsborrow 
by the service of 2s. yearly; Dods. MSS. 
exxxi, fol. 393. 

§ Survey of 134.6 (Chet. Soc.), 50. 

7 Alan de Singleton about 1220 granted 
all his land in Bilsborrow to his brother 
Richard for a rent of two iron spurs, 
reserving timber from the wood for 
building his house, &c.; Dods. MSS. 
exlix, fol. 52. 

Adam son of John de Goberthwaite 
granted Richard de Singleton an acre of 
land ; ibid. fol. 514. Alice widow of 
Richard de Singleton gave Thomas son 
of Gilbert de Hetom a release of her 
right in the lands held by Thomas ; ibid. 
Avice daughter of Richard de Singleton 
in her widowhood gave her son Henry 
all her land; ibid. fol. 52. This grant 
was attested by William de Singleton and 
Alan his son. 

Alan de Singleton about 1280 granted 
to his son Thomas all his land in Bils- 
borrow with its appurtenances; also a 
fourth part of the wood. Heybote and 
mast for pigs were reserved for the grantor 
and his men of Singleton. The services 
of the following free tenants were ex- 
cepted: Geoffrey de Cottam, Eustace 
de Bilsborrow, Michael de Greenhalgh, 
William son of Roger son of Maud, 
Richard son of William Pelle. The 
service from land held by Sir Richard le 
Boteler of John de Bilsborrow was also 
excepted ; ibid. fol. 52. 

7a Land here was among Joan Banastre’s 
possessions in 13033; Final Conc. (Rec. 
Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), i, 201. Thomas 
Banastre acquired 2 acres from Henry 
son of Avice de Singleton and a release 
from Walter son of Jordan de Goosnargh ; 
Dods. MSS. cxlix, fol. 46, 48. 

Richard Balderston in 1445-6 held 
half a plough-land for the twentieth part 
ofa knight’s fee ; Duchy of Lanc. Knights’ 
Fees, bdle. 2, no. 20. 

In the 16th-century inquisitions Bils- 
borrow is named among the Balderston 
lands in those of Edmund Dudley, Rad- 
cliffe of Winmarleigh, the Earl of Derby 
and Sir Alexander Osbaldeston. 

8 Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 216, m. 10. 
Gerard obtained an increase of his pos- 
sessions in the township on the partition 
of the Butler of Rawcliffe inheritance in 


1571 3 ibid. 231, m. 8. Gilbert Gerard 
and Anne his wife made a settlement of 
the manor in 15743; Pal. of Lanc. Feet 
of F. bdle. 36, m. 269. 

James Anderton of Lostock acquired 
the manors of Clitheroe and Bilsborrow 
from Sir Thomas Gerard in 1602 ; ibid. 
bdle. 64, no. 70. 

° Both manors were held by Richard 
Shuttleworth in 1709, by Richard Shuttle- 
worth and James his son and heir-apparent 
in 1742, and by Robert Shuttleworth in 
17733 Pal. of Lanc. Plea R. 490, m. 63 
$57; Me 73 618, m. 6. 

10 John de Barton in 1299 claimed 
moieties of small parcels of wood in Bils- 
borrow against a number of persons; 
De Banco R. 130, m. 213d. John was 
called to warrant in 1304; ibid. 152, 
m.22d. In 1370 there was a suit as to 
the manors of Barton and Bilsborrow 
between Katherine daughter of William 
de Barton and Richard de Catterall ; ibid. 
438, m. 253. Gilbert Barton of Barton 
in 1476 released to Katherine Urswick a 
messuage, &c., in Bilsborrow; Pal. of 
Lanc. Plea R. 45, m. 14. 

In the first inquisition after the death 
of Gilbert Barton (1516) his estate in 
Bilsborrow was said to be held of Edmund 
Parkinson in socage by 1d. rent, but in 
the later inquisition the tenure was un- 
known; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. iv, 
no. 81; v, no. 33. Thomas Barton in 
1554 was said to have held three mes- 
suages, &c., of Henry Cottam in socage, 
as also was Richard Barton in 1572 ; ibid. 
x, no. 50; xiii, no. 8. 

John Barton of Claughton in 1623 
held a little land in Bilsborrow, tenure 
not recorded ; ibid. xxvii, no. 7. 

1 Lancs. Ing. and Extents, ii, 160. 

12 Geoffrey de Glazebrook and Edith 
his wife in 1227 released to Richard de 
Cottam an oxgang of land in Bilsborrow ; 
Final Conc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 
i, 47. He is believed to be the Richard 
son of Robert who granted land to Cocker- 
sand Abbey (Cariul. [ Chet. Soc. ] i, 269), 
Robert being son of Uctred and brother 
of Richard de Singleton, also benefactors 
of the abbey; ibid. 264, 268. John 
de Cottam was plaintiff in 1304 and 


William de Cottam defendant in the 
following year; De Banco R. 152, 
m. 22d.3; 155, m. 144. William de 


Cottam was again defendant in 13113 
ibid. 184, m. 23d. He contributed to 
the subsidy of 1332; Exch. Lay Subs. 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 60. 

Sir Adam de Hoghton (as guardian of 
Thomas the heir of Sir Adam Banastre) 
gave Adam de Singleton the wardship of 
John son and heir of John de Cottam 


ay 


of Bilsborrow, the tenure being of Banastre 
by knight’s service ; Dods. MSS. cxlix, 
fol. 118. 

The Cottams then fall into obscurity, 
but from a pleading of 1570 it appears 
that in the time of Henry IV Richard 
son of William Cottam married Margaret 
daughter of John de Fleetwood and then 
had land in Bilsborrow settled on him. 
The descent continues: s. Oliver -s. 
Richard -s. John ~s. Richard —sons 
Richard (who had a son John), Nicholas 
and Henry. Henry’s daughter Elizabeth 
married Christopher Parkinson, and these 
were plaintiffs in 1570, Joan Topping, 
widow, being defendant; Pal. of Lanc. 
Plea R. 228, m. 10d. The duchy rent 
was claimed by the king’s bailiff in 1522 5 
Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), i, 212. 

18 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. ix, no. 24. 
He had married Margaret Clerk of Preston, 
and left a son John, two years old. Dubber- 
field, Holecroft and Wheatfield are named ; 
also a water-mill. 

Christopher and Henry Poulton in 1552 
obtained land from Nicholas Cottam ; Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 14, m.75. A 
settlement of twenty messuages, &c., in 
Bilsborrow, Scotforth and Lancaster was 
in 1585 made by Christopher Parkinson 
and his wife Elizabeth daughter and heir 
of Henry Cottam ; ibid. bdle.47, m.127. 

Thomas Parkinson (son and heir of 
Edmund) was defendant in 1564 ; Ducatus 
Lance. ii, 299. He had lands, &c., in 
15873; Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 49, 
m. 260, William Parkinson of Goosnargh 
in 1592 held Holme and Scotsholding in 
Bilsborrow ; Duchy of Lanc. Inq. p.m. 
xvii, no, 21. The tenure is not given. 
He purchased from Richard Walton (Pal. 
of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 40, m. 188), 
whose father William had had a rent of 
3s. from Bilsborrow; Duchy of Lane. 
Ing. p.m. xi, no, 27. Edward Parkinson 
in 1617 held achief messuage of the king 
as duke by knight’s service ; Lancs. Ing. 
pom. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), ii, 
215. 

hi William Cottam and Oliver his son 
registered their estates as ‘ Papists’ in 
17173 Estcourt and Payne, Engl. Cath. 
Nonjurors, 136. 

There is a short continuation of the 
Cottam pedigree in Fishwick’s Garstang 
(Chet. Soc.), 256. 

1 John de Bilsborrow in 1212 has 
been named. He was probably the John 
son of Matthew who gave land to Cocker- 
sand Abbey (Chartul. i, 262), for Paulin 
de Garstang, a contemporary, in granting 
land in Stiholmes mentions land formerly 
belonging to Matthew de Bilsborrow as 
adjacent ; Add. MS. 32104, fol. 231. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Several of the neiyhbouring landowners, great and 
small, had estates in Bilsborrow,'® but there are few 
inqui-.tions relating solely to this place.” 

Co.kersand Abbey,'® Lytham Priory? and the 
Knights of St. John of Jerusalem ” held lands in the 
township. The estate of the last-named was con- 
sidered a manor, and was held by the Balderstons by 
12d. rent.” 

Joseph Wad:worth’s Bilsborrow estate was forfeited 
for taking part in the Jacobite invasion of 1715.” He 
was one of the three hanged at Garstang ; another was 
Thomas Cartmell of Bilsborrow. Thomas Walmesley, 
innkeep:r, was acquitted.” 

The Wesleyan Methodist chapel was built in 
1815." 

ve school was founded by John Cross in 1718.” 


PILLING 


Pylin, 1194. 

This large township, containing 6,060 acres,’ is 
level and lies very low, the highest ground within it 
scarcely exceeding 25 ft. above sea level. A large 
part is moss-land, much of which has been reclaimed. 
A small detached portion lies within Preesall to the 
west, and another within Cockerham to the north.’ 
The principal village lies in the northern end, near 
the place where the central brook runs into More- 


cambe Bay, the boundary on that side; in the 
southern half is a hamlet called Eagland Hill, where 
33 ft. above sea level is reached ; on the border of 
Upper Rawcliffe lies Fskham. The population ia 
1go1 numbered 1,407. 

From the village roads branch out in several dire:. 
tions—to Cockerham, Garstang, St. Michael's, Knott 
End and the shore of the bay. A single-line railway 
from Garstang, opened in 1870, has its terminus 
near the village, from which the connexion with 
Knott End (for Fleetwood) was completed and opened 
in 1908. 

About half the land is arable, and turf is taken 
from the moss for fuel. 

Damage was done in 1719 by the sea breaking in.* 
An outbreak of part of the moss near Eskham took 
place in 1745. A road across the moss called 
Kate’s Pad or the Danes’ Pad was made of oak 
planks resting on sleepers.‘ The local proverb said, 
‘God’s grace and Pilling moss are endless,’ 

In 1765 a quadruple birth was recorded at Pilling. 
The children lived for three weeks.® 

The village was formerly isolated from the rest of 
the parish by the moss-lands. The road to Preesall 
and Stalmine was formed in 1780 and that to 
Garstang was made passable in 1808.° There isa 
parish council for administering the affairs of the 
township. 


In 1266-7 Avice widow of William 
son of Hamnet de Bilsborrow claimed 
dower against Paulin de Wedacre and his 
brother Roger (or Richard) and against 
Alice widow of Thomas de Grimsargh 
and Gilbert her son ; Curia Regis R. 179, 
m. ¢d.3; 180, m. 3d. A later William 
de Bilsborrow granted Thomas son of 
Alan de Singleton the homage of William 
son of Roger de Bilsborrow and the rent 
of 12d. due from his 6 acres of land in 
the vill; Add. MS. 32104, no. 939. 
Isabel daughter of Richard de Bilsborrow, 
with her sisters Edusa and Avice, claimed 
a messuage, &c., against Thomas son of 
Alan de Singleton in 1289; De Banco 
R. 79, m. 66d. 

Matthew de Bilsborrow was plaintiff 
in 1302 and later against Richard de 
Morley (who called Joan widow of John 
de Fulburne to warrant), William and 
Robert sons of Grimbald and others ; 
ibid. 143, m. 1314.3 145, m. 9 dog 
152,m, 22d. 3 153, m. 29; 155, m. 144. 
The pedigree was thus given: Matthew 
-8s. John -s. Tancard ~s, Matthew, 
plaintiff ; ibid. 158, m. gid. 

Hugh de Bilsborrow and Richard de 
Morley were residents in 13323; Exch. 
Lay Subs. 61. Hugh son of William son 
of Eustace de Bilsborrow had claimed 
common of pasture in 1308-9; Assize 
R. 423, m.2d.4. The above Matthew 
was plaintiff and Hugh and others de- 
fendants in pleas of 1311-14; De BancoR. 
184, m. 23d.; 189, m. 188d.; 205, 
m. 241d. 

Adam de Bilsborrow was a benefactor 
of Cockersand Abbey and Lytham Priory 
and Matthew son of Adam of the former 
house, as were John son of Richard and 
William son of Roger de Bilsborrow. 

16 Some have been referred to already. 

William Vavasour and Isabel his wife 
in 1490-1 claimed messuages, &c., in 
Claughton, Bilsborrow and other places ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Writs Proton. 6 Hen. VII. 

Hugh Shireburne of Stonyhurst in 
1528 held two messuages, &c., of the 


heir of Richard Balderston in socage by 
a pair of white gloves yearly ; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. vi, no. 65. 

George Kirkby of Upper Rawcliffe 
held land in 1560 of Thomas Hoghton 
by a rent of 2s. 4d.; Towneley MS. 
‘Lancs. Tenures’ (in possession of W. 
Farrer), fol. ror. Sir Richard Hoghton’s 
tenure in 1630 was not recorded ; Duchy 
of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvii, no, 13. 

Gilbert Latus of Goosnargh (1568) 
held the fourth part of messuages, &c., 
in Bilsborrow of Edward Osbaldeston in 
socage by a rent of 12d.; ibid. xii, no. 
ET. 

James Harrison of Woodplumpton 
(1612) held land of Thomas Lord Gerard 
as of his manor of Bilsborrow by 14d. 
tent; Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), ii, 6. 

Henry Kighley died in 1629 holding 
a messuage, &c., of the heir of John 
Osbaldeston. Hugh, his son and heir, 
was twenty-four years old ; Towneley MS. 
C8, 13 (Chet. Lib.), 723. 

Bilsborrow is named in the Hesketh 
inquisitions, but the tenure of the lands 
there was unknown. Richard Sollam in 
1555 purchased messuages, &c., from Sir 
Thomas Hesketh and Alice his wife ; 
Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 16, m. 164, 
Henry Sollam in 1635 held six messuages, 
&c., of Dutton Lord Gerard ; George, his 
son and heir, was of full age; Towneley 
MS. C 8, 13, p. 1074. 

Thurstan Tyldesley died in 1634 hold- 
ing four messuages and the moicty of a 
wat r-mill. Edward, his son and heir, 
was forty-four years old; Duchy of 
Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvii, no. 29. Richard 
Tyldesley son of Thurstan died in the 
same year holding six messuages, &c., of 
John (sic) Gerard as of his manor of 
Bilsborrow. He left two daughters, Jane 
and Mary, aged ten and six in 1638 ; 
Towneley MS. C8, 13, p. 1186. 

James Walker also died in 1634 hold- 
ing a messuage of Dutton Lord Gerard 
in socage by 8s, 6d. rent. His heir was 


332 


his son Henry, aged fourteen ; Duchy of 
Lance. Ing. p.m. xxvii, no. 22. 

18 Several of the gifts have already been 
referred to. Richard son of Richard and 
William son of Alan de Singleton, also 
William de Slene, were other bene- 
factors. The place-names include Black- 
lache, Dernerakes, Fernyhurst, Foxhole- 
hurst, Kirkfurlong, Morilegh, Stanrays 
and Wernigshurst ; Cockersand Chartul, 
i, 262-9. 

19 Adam de Bilsborrow before 1244 
granted 4 acres of land from his woed, 
with easements in the vill of Bilsborrow ; 
Lytham D, at Durham, 2a, 2ae, qae, 
Ebor. no. 44-6, The Prior of Durham 
was defendant in 1302 in respect of 
4 acres, Matthew de Bilsborrow being 
plaintiff ; De Banco R. 143, m. 9. John 
de Normanby, Prior of Lytham, in 1369 
leased the Bilsborrow land to John White- 
shank for fifteen years at a rent of 1.5 
Lytham D. no, 47. 

® Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 375+ 

21 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Chet. Soc.), ii, 63. 

22 Lancs. and Ches. Rec. (Rec. Soc. 
Lancs. and Ches.), i, 175. 

3 Fishwick, op. cit. 72. 

4 hid. 124. 

35 End. Char, Rep. for Garstang. 

16,175 acres, including g of inland 
water ; Census Rep. 1901. There are 
also 1,801 acres of foreshore. 

2 The former of these detached portions 
was added to Precsall under the Divided 
Parishes Act of 1882, the latter to 
Cockersand Abbey in 1887 by Loc, Govt. 
Bd. Order 20099. 

3 A brief was issued for a collection for 
those injured ; Arch. Aliana, xvii, 81. 

3a Letter from Legh Richmond, vicar 
of Garstang, in Fishwick’s Garstang 
(Chet. Soc.), 40. ; 

4 Rev. R. Bannister in Journ. Brit. 
Arch. Assoc. vi, 338-40. He states that 
‘does’ were found wild on the moss till 
a late period. 

5 Fishwick, op. cit. 275. 

6 Ibid. 109. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


PILLING is not named in Domesday 
MANOR Book, being then, it is supposed, a member 
of Garstang. It was not granted to the 
Lancaster family, but retained by the Crown with 
the hundred, so that it was ‘Theobald Walter who 
about 1194 granted it as ‘the hey of Pilling’ to the 
canons of Cockersand.’ This grant was confirmed 
or renewed by King John in 1201,° and again by 
Henry III in 1227.° The canons were called upon 
to prove their title in 1292," and continued to hold 
Pilling down to the Dissolution.” In 1543 the 
Crown sold the grange to John Kechyn or Kitchen 
of Hatfield,” who also acquired parts of the Whalley 
Abbey estates. 

Kitchen settled Pilling or some part of it upon 
his son John and Grace his wife, but the younger 
John dying, the widow, in conjunction with her 
second husband William Hameldon, granted the 
estate to John Kitchen the father in 1548.'% Settle- 
ments were made in 1557 and 1561,*° by the former 
of which a daughter Anne wife of Robert Dalton had 
Pilling. She died without issue in 1593, having 
survived her husband, and the heir was her brother 
Barnaby Kitchen, aged fifty-eight."° He died ten 
years later, leaving three daughters as co-heirs : Alice 
wife of Hugh Hesketh of North Meols, Anne wife 


Penwortham, widow, complained that 


GARSTANG 


of Thomas Ashton of Croston and Elizabeth wife 
of Nathanicl Banastre of Altham.” A partition was 
made in 1649, and the manor for over a century 
descended in thirds. 

The Banastre share was in 1678 bought by Edmund 
Hornby of Poulton, and his descendant, the Rev. 
Geoffrey Ilornby, is stated to have purchased a further 
share; this part has descended to Mr. Edmund 
Geoffrey Stanley Hornby of Dalton, near Carnforth.'® 
The Heskeths'™ about 1770 seem to have sold their 
third to the other lords, so that the manor was held 
in moieties, the Rev. Geoffrey Hornby presenting 
to the curacy." The Ashton part descended like 
Croston to the Traffords,"" and it was afterwards 
sold. In 1825 the lords of the manor were Edmund 
Hornby, John Gardner and William Elletson, and in 
1850 Edmund Hornby, the owner of the hall, John 
Gardner and Daniel Elletson.”” The last-named 
died in 1856, but had about 1840 sold his share to 
John Gardner of Sion Hill, Garstang, his brother-in- 
law, whose son the Rev. John Gardner, LL.D., rector 
of Skelton 1857-86, succeeded. He bequeathed it 
to his cousins, the Misses Margaret Jane and Emily 
Elletson, daughters of Daniel.” The advowson of 
the chapel goes with the lordship. No courts are 
held. Nothing remains of the old hall.?! 


143 — same and Robert Hesketh; 


1 Cockersand Chartul, (Chet. Soc.), ii, 
375; a facsimile of the charter serves as 
frontispiece. The grant was made for 
the souls of Henry I, Richard I, John 
Count of Mortain, Ranulf de Glanvill 
his beloved, Hubert Archbishop of Can- 
terbury his brother, Harvey Walter and 
Maud, his father and mother, &c. It 
was to be held in free alms, quit of 
‘deerward’ of the forester and all secular 
exactions, 

8 Ibid. i,44. Theobald Walter’s grant 
seems to have been ignored. 

9 Ibid. 45. The bounds of the demesne 
of Pilling Hey are given ibid. 47-9. 
An agreement was made with the monks 
of Leicester as to the land and tithes 
between Wrampool and Pilling, the land 
being divided equally ; ibid. ii, 379. For 
a further agreement see ibid. 390. 

1 Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 
379. A later summons de quo warranto 
was issued in 1498 ; Pal. of Lanc, Writs 
Proton. 13 Hen. VII. 

There are rentals 1451-1537 in 
Cockersand Chartul. iii. 

™ Pat. 35 Hen. VIII, pt. iii, A 
further grant was made to Edward 
Wymark in 1588; Pat. 30 Eliz. pt. 
vii. 

% Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 13, 
m. 162, From pleadings of 1590-1 
(printed by Fishwick, op. cit. 245) it 
seems that the younger John had a 
posthumous child which did not survive 
long, and that he had bequeathed his 
estate in Pilling to a cousin, William 
Copwood of Totteridge, whose heirs were 
the claimants, Grace was then the wife 
of John Barker, clerk. 

4 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 17, 
m. 63 the estate is described as the 
manors of Cockersand and Pilling, 100 
Messuages, water-mill, two dovecotes, 
3,000 acres of moss, &c., with a free 
fishery in the water of Lune. 

_ \6 Ibid, bdle, 23, m. 167; three mes- 
suages, dovecote, water-mill, lands, &c., 
in Pilling. John Kitchen is said to have 
died about ‘that time. In 1579 his 
daughter, described as Anne Dalton of 


her father’s widow, Jane Kitchen of 
Forton (previously wife of Roger Dalton), 
had possession of part of her estate in 
Pilling. Jane answered that it had been 
settled upon her younger son Roger 
Dalton ; Fishwick, op. cit. 244, giving 
the pleadings. 

A survey of the manor was desired in 
15833; Exch, Dep. (Rec. Soc. Lancs, and 
Ches.), 3. 

16 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xvi, no. 43. 
Robert Dalton was the son and heir of 
William Dalton. 

1 Lancs. Ing. p.m. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 24. The manors, &c., in 
Pilling, Garstang and Cockerham were 
together held of the king in chief by the 
twentieth part of a kmight’s fee and 
£3175. rent. Settlements made between 
1599 and 1602 are recited in the inquisi- 
tion, Pilling was divided into three parts 
and Ulkrigge Meadow into two (for 
Banastre and Hesketh). Of the co-heirs 
Alice Hesketh was aged fifty, Anne Ashton 
twenty-two and Elizabeth Banastre 
seventeen. 

18 Fishwick, op. cit. 246. In a 
recovery of the manors of Dalton and 
Pilling in 1810 the Rev. Geoffrey 
Hornby and his wife and Edmund Hornby 
were vouchees; Pal. of Lanc. Lent 
Assizes, 50 Geo, III, R. 6. 

The descent is thus given in Burke’s 
Landed Gentry: Edmund Hornby -s. 
Geoffrey —s. Edmund ~s. (Rev.) Geoffrey, 
d. 1812 —-s, Edmund, d. 1857 -s. Edmund 
George, d. 1865 -s. Edmund Geoffrey 
Stanley, b. 1839. 

18a Hugh Hesketh died in 1625 hold- 
ing in right of Alice his wife a third part 
of messuages, water corn-mill, &c., in 
Pilling and Ellel and a moiety of Ulkrigge 
Meadow in Pilling ; Duchy of Lanc. Ing. 
p.m, xxv, no. 16. See North Meols. The 
following fines refer to the Hesketh third : 
1600, Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 62, 
no. 247—Hugh Hesketh and Alice his 
wife ; 1611, bdle. 79, no. 71—same ; 1664, 
bdle. 173, m. 71—Thomas Selby and 
Anne his wife; 1668, bdle, 181, m. 


due 


1670, bdle. 184, m. 15—Robert Hes- 
keth and Ursula his wife ; 1710, bdle. 
264, m. 72—Roger Hesketh and Mary 
his wife. 

19 In 1794 the lords were the Rev. 
Geoffrey Hornby and John Trafford ; 
Preston Guard. Local Sketches, no. 1129. 
The Hesketh demesne lands were divided, 
one moiety being held by the late Richard 
Cardwell Gardner of Fluke Hall, Pilling, 
and the other by G. T. R. Preston of 
Ellel Grange ; information of the Rev. 
James Cardwell Gardner. 

1%a Anne Ashton died in 1618 and her 
husband Richard in 1621, leaving a son 
Thomas, aged seventeen. Her third part 
was held by knight’s service ; Lancs. Ing. 
p.m. (Rec. Soc, Lancs. and Ches.), ii, 291. 

Thomas Ashton died in 1632 holding 
the third part of the manors of Pilling 
and Ellel, with messuages, lands, &c., 
including sixty salthouses, of the king by 
the twentieth part of a knight’s fee ; 
Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxix, no. 6. 
See the account of Croston for the suc- 
cession. The following refer to the 
Ashton third: 1692-3, Pal. of Lance. 
Feet of F. bdle. 230, m. 38—John Trafford 
of Croston, Katherine his wife and Anne 
Trafford, widow; 1771, Pal. of Lanc. 
PleaR. 613, m. 10 (recovery)—Humphrey 
and John Trafford ; 1797, Aug. Assizes, 
R. 11 (moiety of manor)—John and 
Humphrey Trafford. 

20 Raines in Noritia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), 
ii, 413. 

41 Information 
Ambleside. 

2la ‘In making excavations near the 
present hall (which is used as a farm- 
louse) many beautifully carved stones 
have from time to time been exhumed 

. and about ten years ago (from 
1879) in the centre of the barn was 
discovered an oval hole or pit, some 
18 ft. deep and from 6ft. to g ft. wide, 
covered with rafters having over them 
about 3 ft. of sand.’ Above the door of 
one of the barns was a stone dated 1675 ; 
Fishwick, op. cit. 246. 


of Miss Elletson, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


The marsh and sea frontages have lately been sold 
by the duchy to the Rev. James Cardwell Gardner 
of Fluke Hall.” 

Ulkrigge or Ulrick Meadow was in part acquired 
by Robert Hawes,” and William Hawes, who died 
at Bromley in Middlesex 1625, held 80 acres there. 
He left two daughters as co-heirs.” 

Robert Bindloss acquired messuages in Pilling and 
the neighbourhood in 1587.” 

The three coparceners of the manor all suffered 
as ‘delinquents’ in the Commonwealth period.” 

The owner of Eskholme Houses in 1734 com- 
plained that his right of way through Nateby to 
Garstang and Preston had been denied.” 

The small detached portion of the township ad- 
joining Cockersand has resulted from an agreement 
in 1340 between the canons there and the monks of 
Leicester. It is in the hundred of Amounderness 
but in the parish of Cockerham.” 

The canons of Cockersand probably 

CHURCH established the chapel of ST. JOHN 
THE BAPTIST near their grange when 

they were placed in possession.” Agnes Shepherd 
had in 1493 the bishop’s licence to live a solitary in a 
cell at Pilling chapel.” After the dissolution of the 
abbey it seems that £2 a year was allowed for the 
maintenance of a curate,®! but as this was obviously 
insufficient it is probable that the chapel was used 
only irregularly during the latter half of the 16th 
century.’ In 1621 some sixty of the inhabitants 
petitioned the king about the neglect of service, com- 
plaining that though they had to pay tithes there 
was no curate provided. The £2 granted out of the 
duchy revenues was to be renewed; Sir Robert 
Bindloss, the lay rector, promised {10 a year from 
the tithes, the inhabitants were ordered to provide 
another £8, and the farmer of the demesne £6 135. 4d." 


+2 Other owners of land, &c., have put 
forward claims to easements in the 
Marsh. 

28 Ducatus Lanc. (Rec. Com.), iii, 286, 
338, 355. The suits related to the part 
of the estate held by Jane Kitchen the 
widow, as mentioned in a former note. 


levied, 
ibid. 113. 


Ij P2Gie 


inhabitants and the farmer could not be 
Bishop Gastrell does not mention 
them. The registers go back to 1621; 

84 Misc. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. and Ches.), 


35 Commonw. Ch. Surv. (Rec. 


How far this award became operative is uncertain, 
but Mr. Lumley was curate in 1639™ and remained 
there till in the Commonwealth time he was ‘ silenced 
for several misdemeanors.’* In 1650 the chapel was 
vacant, and there was no proper maintenance™ 
Early in 1652 it was ordered that {£50 a year be 
paid to the curate out of ‘delinquents’ ’ estates,” 
The list of curates shows that the chapel was served 
regularly from about that time. The certain income 
in 1717 was {11 135. 44. It was then found 
necessary to build a larger chapel, and the present 
site was chosen, about a mile west of the old one, for 
the greater convenience of the inhabitants.” This 
was built in 1717 and consecrated in 1721; it 
is a small rectangular structure with a bellcot over 
the west gable. Additional endowments were obtained 
from Queen Anne’s Bounty and other sources.” A 
census of religions was made by the wardens in 
1755. They reported ‘about 100 families, most 
in communion of the Church of England, two 
Protestant Dissenting families, six or eight single 
persons who are Papists.’ ‘' A new church was built 
in 1887, and consists of chancel, clearstoried nave 
with north and south aisles, south porch, and western 
tower and spire. It is in the Gothic style and the 
spire forms a prominent landmark. The lords of the 
manor present alternately. The net value is given 


as £250." 


The following is a list of curates and vicars :— 


1676 Oswald Croskell * 
oc. 1686 Richard Hardy “ 
1687 Gabriel Dawson * 
oc. 1701 Thomas Hunter 
1715 John Anyon “ 
1731 John Coulton” 
1758 George Holden “ 


‘4 Rector of North Meols 1689- 
1708, One of these names graduated 
from Pembroke Coll., Camb.; M.A. 
1674. 

‘5 Of St. John’s Coll., Camb., but did 
not graduate; Mayor, Admissions to St. 


Soc. John’s, ii, 93. He was licensed to Pilling 


44 Duchy of Lanc. Ing. p.m. xxvi, no. 
323 the heirs were Anne Hawes, aged 
twenty-one, and Susan, aged eighteen, 

2 Pal. of Lanc. Feet of F. bdle. 49, 
m. 213; the deforciants were Richard 
Bold, John Fleming and Roger Dalton. 

?6 Richard Ashton’s rents in Cockerham 
and Pilling in 1652 amounted to 
£25 125. 2d.5; Royalist Comp. Papers 
(Rec. Soc. Lancs, and Ches.), i, 97. 
Richard Banastre of Altham ; ibid. i, 126. 
Thomas Hesketh of North Meols ; Cal. 
Com. for Comp. iii, 2051; iv, 2934. 

77 Cal. Exch. of Pleas, P 94. 

38 Cockersand Chartul. ii, 385. 

® The petition presented to the Bishop 
of Chester in 1716 records an ‘ancient 
tradition’ that the old chapel was built 
in or about 1209, when there were but 
seven families in the township; Ch. P. 
at Chester Dioc. Reg. 

3° Cockersand Rental (Chet. Soc. lvii), 


30. 

31 This appears from the petition of 
1621, 

32 The chapel is not mentioned at all 
in the list of 1610 in Hist. MSS. Com. 
Rep. xiv, App. iv, 8. 

3 Fishwick, op. cit. 105-8. 
probable that the payments 


It is 
by the 


Lancs. and Ches.), 150. 

86 Ibid. 

37 Plund, Mins, Accts. (Rec. Soc. Lancs. 
and Ches.), i, 110, 247. James Threl- 
fall, ‘a godly and orthodox divine,’ was 
then minister ; the maintenance did not 
exceed 20 nobles a year (£6 135. 4d.), 
and there were 120 families, 

3° Gastrell, Noritia Cestr. (Chet. Soc.), 
il, 4133 the Crown gave £1 135, 4d. and 
the impropriator £10. 

39 The petition has been cited above. 
It states as a reason for changing the site 
that ‘such of the inhabitants as live 
westward of the present chapel [were] 
forced to go above two miles on lands not 
well to be ridden upon, being soft and 
mossy.’ It was added that ‘there is not 
one Dissenter in the chapelry.’ The 
agreement made is printed by Fishwick, 
op. cit. 109-11. 

40 Ibid. 112, where a brief description 
is given, with a notice of the monuments. 

41 Visit. Ret. 

42 Manch. Dioc. Dir. 

8 Visit. List of 1677 at Chester. 
Short notices of the curates will be found 
in Fishwick, op. cit. 113-203 some of 
the following details are derived there- 
from. 


334 


28 Jan. 1686-7 ; Visit. List of 1691, He 
was ‘conformable’ in 1689 ; Hist. MSS. 
Com. Rep. xiv, App. iv, 230. He died 
in 1692. 

46 The records in the church papers at 
Chester Dioc. Reg. begin with this curate, 
He was nominated on the death of 
Thomas Hunter by Roger Hesketh and 
Edward Hornby, two of the lords of the 
manor, ‘the third lord being a reputed 
Papist.’ Anyon was afterwards curate of 
Ribby and Lund in Kirkham. 

In 1731 he was still at Pilling and 
presented for incontinence; Visit. Ret. 
at Chester. 

47 Nominated by Roger Hesketh and 
Geoffrey Hornby on the resignation of 
J. Anyon. He resided at Pilling in 
1743, but also ministered at Shireshead 
every other Sunday afternoon; Visit. 
Ret. at Chester. 

48 Nominated by Roger Hesketh and 
Edmund Hornby on the death of J.Coulton, 
Holden was under-master at Bentham 
School. He became curate at Tatham Fell 
1767 and compiled Holden's Tide Table, 
still published at Liverpool, He had a 
son George, whose son George Holden 
was curate of Maghull in Halsall 1811- 
65; Fishwick. 


AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED 


176 
ee Camb.) 
1774 John Hunter” 
1781 William Bateson * 
1797 Thomas Godfrey * 
1802 James Potter * 
1825 James Dawson Banister “ 
1876 
Coll., Oxf.) 
1893 Richard Titley Gardner, 


manuel Coll., Camb.) 


49 Nominated by Roger Hesketh and 
Geoffrey Hornby, two of the lords of the 
manor, the third (Humphrey Trafford) 
being ‘a reputed Papist.’ Mr. Harrison 
was of the Singleton family. 

80 Cyrate of Broughton; nominated 
by Geoffrey Hornby of Preston, sole 
patron, on the resignation of C. Harrison. 


Cuthbert Harrison, B.A.” (Trin. Coll, 


John Wilson Waithman, M.A. (St. John’s 


1897 


GARSTANG 


Thomas Pearson, M.A. (Christ’s Coll., 


Camb.) 


There is a mission chapel (St. Mark’s) at Eagland 
Hill, built in 1869. 
The Wesleyan Methodists have a chapel, built in 


1813. 


M.A. (Em- 


51 Son of Anthony Bateson of Wray in 
Melling ; nominated by Geoffrey Hornby, 
rector of Winwick, on the death of 
J. Hunter. 

52 Nominated by G. Hornby on the 
death of W. Bateson. He was ‘ minister’ 
in 1793. 


335 


The Roman Catholic church of St. William was 
opened in 1891. 


A free school was founded and endowed by Robert 
Carter in 1710.” 


588 Nominated by G. Hornby on the 
death of T. Godfrey. 

5{ Nominated by Edmund Hornby, 
John Gardner and William  Elletson, 
lords of the manor, on the death of 
J. Potter. He resigned in 1876. 

55 End. Char. Rep. for Garstang. 


INDEX TO VOLUMES VI AND VII 


NotE.—The following less obvious abbreviations are used :—adv., advowson; b., brother; cast., castle ; 
chant., chantry ; chap., chapel; coll., college ; ct., court; ctss., countess ; d., daughter; dchss. duchess ; dk., 
duke; D. and C., Dean and Chapter; f., father; hund., hundred ; ind., industries; man., manor ; mchnss., 
marchioness; m., mother; mon., monastery; par., parish; pop., population; sch., schcol; sis., sister ; sts. 
streets; vsct., viscountess ; w., wife; wap., wapentake. : 


& 


Abbey (Withnell), vi, 49 

Abbot House (Mellor), vi, 262 

Abbott (Abbot), John, vi, 192”, 
283; Rich., vi, 263 ; R., vii, 96 x ; 
Rev. Phil, vi, 440; Phil. vi, 
535, 558; Thos., vi, 162, 263, 
298 n, 299; fam., vi, 246 ”, 262 

Abbott’s Delf (Mellor), vi, 260 

Abingdon, abbot of, vi, 218 ” 

Abingdon, Caroline, ctss. of, vi, 
509 ; earls of, vi, 411, 460, 509 

Abney, Sir Thos., vii, 138 

Abney - Hastings, Chas. F., see 
Donington, Ld. 

Abraham, Will., vi, 88 

Abram, Joan de, vii, 120 ; Matth. 
de, vii, 120m; Maud de, vii, 
120”; Rob., vi, 284”; Will. A., 
vi, 245 

Abrenebume (Studlehurst), vi, 324 

Acclamby (Aglaby), Agnes, vii, 
258; Joan, vii, 257; John, vii, 
259”; Mabel, vii, 257, 258; 
Nich., vii, 257; Thos., vii, 257, 


258 

Accrington (Old and New), vi, 349, 
356 m, 411, 423-7, 434, 486; adv., 
vi, 426; chap., vi, 426; chant., 
vi, 426; char., vi, 416; ch., vi, 
426; hosp., vi, 424; ind., vi, 
423 ; labourers’ wages, vi, 424 7 ; 
mnan., vi, 232, 233 ”, 361”, 411 7, 
424, 425, 428, 489; mkts. and 
fairs, vi, 426; mill, vi, 424; 
mines, vi, 423, 425; Nonconf., 
vi, 427; pks., vi, 426; quarries, 
vi, 423, 523”; Rom. Cath., vi, 
427; sch., vi, 426, 427; town-hall, 
vi, 426 

Accrington, forest of, vi, 232, 424, 
425 

Accrondley, see Acornley 

Ackers, Rich., vii, 320 

Ackhurst Clough, vii, 13” 

Acornhurst (Leagram), vi, 379%, 
380 n 

Acornley (Foulridge), vi, 544, 546 

Acornley, Ad. de, vi, 546; Hen., 
vi, 547; John, vi, 546 

Acranley, see Acornley 

Acre (Haslingden), vi, 427 

Acre Mill (Bacup), vi, 439 ”, 441 ” 

Acres, Ad. del, vi, 131 2 

Acrinton, see Accrington 

Acroid, see Ecroyd 

Acton, see Aighton 

Adam, vi, 366 ”, 401 , 443, 446, 
480n, 481, 485”; vii, 9472, 
98 n, 100 n, I7I n, 279 n, 282 », 
318 n; abbot of Evesham, vi, 
65 ; abbot of Kirkstall, vi, 
480”; the calfherd, vii, 316 7; 
chaplain, vi, 402"; vii, 59”; 
the chapman, vi, 474 ”, 475”; 
the clerk, vi, 109 n; curate 


7 


Adam (cont.) 
of Low Chapel, vi, 299; dean of 
Kirkham, vii, 1457”, 146; the 
ferryman, vi, 58”; the gold- 
smith, vi, 56”; the harper, vi, 
365; janitor of Clitheroe, vi, 
365”; the miller, vi, 3077”; 
prior, vii, 59»; rector of Black- 
burn, vi, 239; the reeve, vi, 428”; 
the serjeant, vi, 96 ”; the smith, 
vi, Im, 364”; the studherd, 
vii, 131”; the tailor, vi, 2467, 
470”; the wright, vi, 209 ” 

Adams, Mary, vi, 187; Rob., vii, 
259: Theophilus, vii, 259 ” 

Adamson, Ad. vii, 158”; Edm., 
vii, 324 ”; Ellen, vii, 135; Jane, 
vii, 206 n; Rev. John, vi, 546”; 
John, vi, 416, 496; vii, 200%, 
2057, 324”; Rob., vii, 121%, 
135; Sanford J. C., vi, 495%, 
496; Thos., vii, 206”, 324” 

Adcockson, see Atkokson 

Addelynton, see Adlington 

Addison, Anne A., vi, 325; Rev. 
Jas. S., vi, 440; John, vi, 325; 
Pet., vii, 123; Thos., vii, 90”, 
102 ”; Thos. B., vii, 102 ”, 153 ” ; 
fam., vii, 102 

Addlington, Adelventon, see Adling- 
ton 

Adkinson, see Atkinson 

Adlington (Adlincton), vi, 58%, 
182, 187”, 217-20; ch., vi, 220 ; 
man., vi, 217; Nonconf., vi, 220 

Adlington, Agnes, vii, 158”; Alice 
de, vi, 218”; Cecily de, vi, 
218; Chris., vi, 218”, 219”; 
Eleanor, vi, 218 ; Eliz., vi, 218 » ; 
vii, 233; Ellen de, vi, 218%; 
Gilb., vi, 218 n; Hugh, vi, 143 7, 
182”, 215”, 217, 218, 218%, 
2Ign, 220n, 224; Vii, 233, 
233; Jas., vi, 219m; John de, 
vi, 143 2, 185 2, 213, 218, 218”, 
219gn; Kath. vi, 218; vii, 
233; Marg., vi, 218”; Pet., 
vi, 217 7, 218, 451”; Randle de, 
vi, 218”; Rich. de, vi, 2187”; 
Rob., vi, 215”, 218, 218%, 
219 n; vii, 233”; Rog. de, vi, 
218; Sibyl, vii, 233; Thos. de, 
vi, 143, 218”; Walt. de, vi, 
217; Will. de, vi, 218” 

Adlington Hall (Standish), vi, 183, 


219 
Adlinton, see Adlington 
Admarsh (Preston), vii, 141; ch., 
vii, 142 
Admergill (Yorks), vi, 527 ” 
Admergill Water, riv., vi, 541 
Adreancroft (Hapton), vi, 510” 
Agamund, monk, vii, 68 » 
Agemundrenesse, see Amounderness 
Aghton, see Aighton 


337 


Aglaby, see Acclamby 

Agmundernes, see Amounderness 

Agnes, d. of Hen., vii, 2277” 

Agnesson, Ad., vii, lor 2; Amery, 
vii, IOI n 

Agotehole, see Haggate 

Ahmuty, Maria E., vi, 168” 

Aighton (Aighton, Bailey and 
Chaigley), vi, 230, 375 ”; vii, I-14, 
27M, 33%, 43%, 50%, 54, 57%, 
59”, 657, 6on, 189, I97n, 
326; char., vii, I9 ”; man.,, vi, 
381”; vii, 2, 288”; mill, vii, 
13, 13”, 16”; Rom, Cath., vii, 
7; well, vii, 2 

Aighton (Acton, Aghton), Ad. de, 
vii, 200 2, 201 », 286”; Alan de, 
vii, 15”; Ellen de, vii, 57”; 
Ellis de, vii, 15; Eva de, vii, 
13”; John de, vii, 15”; Jordan 
de, vii, 15 2; Maud de, vii, 15 2; 
Nich. de, vii, 15 1; Ralph de, vii, 
13”, 15”; Rich., vii, 18, 200”, 
201 2; Thos. de, vii, 15 ~; fam., 
vi, 559”; see also Haighton 

Aighton Ing (Clitheroe), see Orchard 
Ing 

Ailsi (Eilsi), vi, 258, 314, 317, 320, 
324, 330; vii, IOI, 232, 320 

Ailsi, Rich., vi, 214” 

Ailsison, Alice, vi, 214”; John, 
vi, 214”; Ralph, vi, 214” ; 
Will., vi, 214” 

Ainscough (Ainscoe), Hugh, vi, 
176”; John, vi, 237%; Mary, 
vi, 215”; Radley, vi, 215”; 
Thos., vi, 215 ; see also Ayscough 

Ainsdale (Preston), vii, 130” 

Ainsworth (Aynesworth), Agnes, 
vi, 267; Cath., vi, 287; Chris., 
vi, 285; Claudia, vi, 267; 
Dorothy, vi, 267; Edm., vi, 
287; Edw., vi, 267 ; Elias (Ellis), 
vi, 267; Eliz., vi, 12 2; Geo., vi, 
405”, 407”, 408; vii, 295%, 
298; Hen., vi, 266, 267; Vii, 
298n; Isabel, vi, 28”, 408 2; 
Jas., vi, 269, 2807, Jane, vi, 
267; Jenet, vi, 293; Joan, vi, 
276-7; John (de), vi, 12”, 267, 
268, 331, 406m, 408; Laur., vi, 
28", 207, 281, 288n, 293, 
4o8n; Lettice, vi, 317; Marg., 
vi, 267; Nich., vi, 267”, 277; 
Ralph, vi, 267»; Rich., vi, 12”, 
269; Rob., vii, 116, 26755 
Thos., vi, 267, 268, 269, 283”, 
317; T.S., vi, 260 

Aintree, vi, 419 ” ‘ 

Aiston, Rob. J. B., vii, 275”; Rob. 
J. F., vii, 275 

Aitken, —, vil, 104 ” 

Akame (Barton), vii, 127” 

Akenehead, vii, 330”, 

Akeringtone, see Accrington 


#3 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Akerlandeleve, see Acornley 
Akeroyd, Akecroyde, see Ecroyd 
Akovere, see Okeover 

Akryngton, see Accrington 

Alan, vi, 154”, 552”; vii, 264, 
283, 324”; the baker, vi, 
365; the clerk, vi, 335%”, 
405; the forester, vil, 192”; 
the miller, vii, 134”; monk, vu, 
215%”; seneschal, vi, 291”; the 
turner, vi, 400 n 

Alan’s Dyke (Preston), vii, 131 ” 

Alansfield (Wrightington), vi, 174” 

Alanson, see Allanson 

Albemarle, Eliz. Monk, dchss. of, 
vi, 233; Chris. Monk, dk. of, vi, 
233; Geo. Monk, dk. of, vi, 233, 
361, 361 n, 459, 525; fam., vi, 362 

Albert, vit, 165 7 

Albert Edward Dock (Preston), vi, 
55n; Vil, 129” 

Albin (Albyn), Ad., vil, 97”; 
Chris., vii, 234”, 245; Hen., vii, 
328 n; Joan, vii, 63 »; Rob., vii, 
234n; Will, vii, 62 n, 63,977; 
—, vii, 2447” 

Albus, Albi, see Blount and White 

Alcancotes, see Alkincotes 

Alcockfield (Alcocks Field) (Claugh- 
ton), Vil, 326" 

Aldburne, Ralph de, vii, 24 

Alddall (Duxbury), vi, 211” 

Aldearth (Longton), vi, 71” 

Aldefield (Kirkham), vii, 166 ” 

Aldeleme, John de, vi, 132; Kath. 
de, vi, 132 

Aldelin, vi, 291 n 

Alden, man., vi, 233” 

Alden, reeve of Tottington, vi, 
435 

Alderbarrow (Trawden), vi, 548 

Alderhurst (Trawden), vi, 548 

Alderson, Mary, vii, 155; Thos., 
vil, 155” 

Alderthlegh (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 
290 

Aldeschalecloht (Cuerdale), vi, 301 ” 

Aldeware (Aldware), Amery, vii, 
99; Rich. de, vii, 99; Will., 
vii, 99” 

Aldfield (Charnock Richard), vi, 
205 n, 207” 

Aldfield (Clitheroe), vi, 365 n 

Aldfield (Cuerden), vi, 26 1 

Aldfield (Garstang), vii, 314” 

Aldford (Clitheroe), vi, 305” 

Aldred Sowerby, see Sowerby, Little 

Aldware, see Aldeware 

Aldwath ford (Poulton-le-Fylde), 
vii, 226 

Aldwayn, Ad., vii, 152; Nich., 
vii, 152” 

Aldwin, vii, 92 ” 

Aleke, vii, 321 ” 

Alexander IV, pope, vi, 240 

Alexander VI, pope, vi, 122” 

Alexander, 474, 475 »; the chap- 
lain, vi, 375%; vii, 59”; the 
clerk, vi, 365"; vii, 178%, 179 n, 
209”; rector of Poulton, vii, 
226" 

Aleyn, see Allen 

Alghton, see Haighton 

Alice, vii, 273; d. of Amery the 
clerk, vi, 92,95”; d.of Ivette, 
vii, 98”; d. of Kettel, vi, 158 n- 
gn; d. of Rob., vi, 267, 96n; 
d. of WilL, vii, 132”; sis. of 
Joan (of Longton), vi, 72”; sis. 
of Joan Redissh, vi, 267; w.of 
Albred, vii, 92 2; w. of Amery, 
vil, 55”; Ww. of Orm, vii, 179; 
w. of Rich. the miller, vi, 95 7; 
w_ of Rob., vi, 21 2, 193 n 

Alff, John, vi, 159 


Alimun, vii, 54” 

Alison, Hen., vi, 206; Mrs., vi, 206 
Alkenkotes, see Alkincotes 

Alker, John, vi, 237” 

Alkincotes (house) (Colne), vi, 526, 


533% . 

Alkincotes (vill) (Colne), vi, 523, 
524, 525, 534” . 

Alkincotes, Ad. de, vi, 525, 526%, 
535; Ellen de, vi, 526”; John 
de, vi, 526; Pet. de, vi, 525, 
526, 538; Rich. de, vi, 525, 
526; Will. de, vi, 525 

Allan, see Allen 

Allanson (Alanson), Ellen, vi, 111 m; 
Ellis, vii, 324”; Geo., vi, 217, 
217m", 219m; John, vi, 553”; 
Marg., vi, 111 »; Reg., vi, 217 ”, 
219n; Rog., vi, 217%; Thos., 
vi, 129; vii, 324%; Will, vi, 
III m, 155 

Allanson’s charity, vi, 148 

Allen (Allan, Alen, Aleyn), Rev. 
Ebenezer B., vi, 435; Edw., vi, 
489, 525; Eliz., vii, 236, 239”; 
Ellen, vi, 481%; Gabriel, vii, 
237n; Geo., vil, 174m, 175”, 
190 nN, 223”, 227N, 236, 2397, 
241, 247; Isabel, vi, 5567; 
vii, 236”; John, vii, 234”, 236, 
247; John T., vi, 371; Marg., 
vu, 236; Mary, vi, 228”; Rich., 
vi, 556; Rog., vi, 481 ”; Sibyl, 
vi, 556; Rev. S. J., vi, 238, 
255 n, 259 n, 446 ; Thos., vii, 12 n, 
247m”; Cardinal Will., vi, 40, 
228; vii, 135, 155, 185, 219, 
236; —, vii, 181” 

Alleys, The (Clitheroe), vi, 364, 


3057 

Alley tithing (Whittingham), vii, 
2077 

Alleytroyds (Church), vi, 399, 402 n, 
403% 

Allicock’s Riddings 
vi, 97” 

Almarica, see Amery 

Almery, see Amery 

Almond, Fran., vii, 289 ” ; Margery, 
vil, 231; Rich., vi, 337; Rob., 
vi, 199 2; Thos., vii, 231 

Almond’s Croft (Broughton), vii, 90 

Almscroft (Clitheroe), vi, 377 ” 

Almundernes, see Amounderness 

Alot, vii, 209 n 

Alpham (Barton), vii, 127 ” 

Alreneburne (Studlehurst), vi, 324 ” 

Alrene-snape (Studlehurst), — vi, 
3247 

Alsergate (Staynall), vii, 252 ” 

Alsop, Chris., vii, 42 

Alston (Alston with Hothersall), vi, 
230; vii, 36, 37, 51, 52, 61-67, 
68, 90; man., vi, 38 ”, 41 n, 303; 
vii, 61; Rom. Cath., vii, 67 

Alston (Alstun), Ad. de, vii, 63”; 
Alice de, vii, 63”; Amery de, 
vii, 63  ; Grimbald de, vii, 63 ” ; 
Hen., vii, 17”; Hitchcock de, 
vii, 63”; Joan de, vii, 63”; 
John (de), vi, 7, 399; vii, 30m, 
62 n, 63 n; John J. de, vii, 627; 
Kath. de, vii, 63; Mabot de, 
vii, 62”; Maud de, vii, 637; 
Rich. (de), vi, 270, 271; vii, 31, 
32, 35”, 63; Capt. Rob., vii, 
31%; Rob. (de, of), vii, 30 n, 32, 
62"; Rog. de, vi, 270, 271; vii, 
63”; Thos., vi, 521; Walt. de, 
vii, 63 n ; Will. de, vii, 30 n, 637; 
Will. J. de, vii, 62; see also 
Austen 

Alstonfield (Alston), vii, 63 

Alston Hall, vi, 39”; vii, 62” 

Alstonholme (Alston), vii, 63 


338 


(Mawdesley), 


Alstun, see Alston 

Alt, Ellis de, vi, 247; John de, 
vi, 24” 

Alta Ripa, fam., see Hautrey 

Altcar (Euxton), vi, 18” 

Altencote, see Alkincotes 

Altesty (Longton), vi, 71 » 

Altham, vi, 349, 356m, 411-16, 426, 
538; adv., vi, 413, 415; chap, 
vi, 357", 412, 414; char., vi, 416; 
ch., vi, 413; cross, vi, qtgn; 
ind., vi, 411; man., vi, 411; 
mines, Vi, 411 ; quarries, vi, 4tr 

Altham, Ad. de, vi, 412 n, 5ltn; 
Alan de, vi, 411, 412n, 41 : 
Alex. de, vi, 400; Alice e, 
vi, 499”; Ellen de, vi, q12n; 
Emma de, vi, 512”; Hen. de, 
vi, 412”, 413 , 414”; Hugh de, 
V1, 411M, 412, 413”, 417, 4245 
Jas., vi, 512”; Jesse, vi, 47In; 
Joan de, vi, 412; John de, vi, 
231, 397 %, 400 m, 412, 488, 497 n, 
499 2, 511; Kath. de, vi, 497 n; 
Margery de, vi, 412 n; Maud de, 
vi, 506”; Rich. de, vi, 4o9n, 
411m, 412, 414”, 417; Rob. de, 
vi, 512"; Rog. de, vi, 400, 511; 
Sim. de, vi, 412, 326n, 41gn, 
506 n, 511 2; Thos. de, vi, 402 n, 
403m, 411m, 417, 511; Will. de, 
vi, 326 n, 331m, 411M, 412, 413, 
414”, 417, 424, 511n 

Altune (Studlehurst), vi, 324 2 

Alum Crag (Pleasington), vi, 266 

Alum House Brook, see Arley, 
brook 

Alum mines, vi, 37, 266 

Alum Scar (Pleasington), vi, 266 

Amabel, d. of John, vi, 66”; d. of 
Rog., vi, 266; w. of Thos., vii, 
48n 

Ambler, Lawr., vi, 534 

Ambrose, Alex., vii, 198, 288n; 
Alice, vii, 287 » ; Eliz., vii, 288 n ; 
Ellen, vii, 35, 288”; Ewan, 
vii, 288%; Geo., vii, 288n; 
Godith, vi, 34 ”; Hen., vii, 288 n; 
Rev. Isaac, vii, 265 n ; Isaac, vii, 
86, 104”, 298, 299; Isabel, vii, 
288; Joan, vii, 288”; John, 
vi, 91”; Leonard, vii, 288n; 
Marg., vii, 198 n, 238m, 288n; 
Maud, vi, 332; Nich., vi, 61”; 
vii, 200 n, 288%; Rich., vii, 86 n, 
287 n, 288; Rob., vii, 319”; 
Rog., vii, 288”; Thos., vii, 
288 n; Will., vi, 34, 61 n, 332; 
vii, 35”, 152m”, 183, 200n, 
238 n, 287 n, 288 n, 308 n 

Ambrose Acre (Wrightington), vi, 


173” 

Ambrose Hall (Woodplumpton), 
vii, 285, 288 

Ambrye Meadows (Leyland), vi, 6 

Ambwell (Foulridge), vi, 545 

Amelcote(s), Ingelram de, vi, 24; 
Rob. de, vi, 24; fam., vi, 291” 

Amery (Almarica, Americus, Amu- 
ria), vii, 54 ”, 55,57; the clerk, 
vi, 92, 95”; d. of Rich., vi, 
977; vii, 159n; d. of Walt. the 
judge, vi, 117”; rector of Preston, 
vii, 84 2; w. of Ad., vi, 225"; w. 
of Rog., vii, 47” 

Amery (Almery), Geoff., vi, 204” 

Amethalgh (Anyetehalgh), Avice de, 
vii, 65”; Christiana de, vii, 65”; 
Rich. de, vii, 59”, 65”; Kob. 
de, vii, 52” 

Ametehalit (Ribchester), vii, 46” 

Amherst, Eliz., vii, 245; John, 
vii, 245 ” 

Amice, d. of Rich., vii, 285” 

Amoria, Fran, Petre, bp. of, vi, 259 


Amotson, Ellen, vii, 131 2; Thos. 
J., vii, 131 # ; see also Annotson 
Amounderness, forest of, vii, 68 x, 
116 #, 137”, 138 a 
Amounderness, hund., vii, 68; 
bailiwick, vii, 69, 201 ~; deanery, 
vi, 2343 vii, 70, 128”; Idshp., 
vii, 69, 176; serjeanty, vil, 69 n, 
118 n ‘ 
Amounderness, Ad., dean of, vii, 
qo; Rich. Parker, dean of, vii, 
25; William de Slaidburn, dean 
of, vii, 147 2 : ; 
Amricson, Hen., vii, 125; Will, 

vii, 125” 
Amunderness, see Amounderness 
Amuria, see Amery , 
Anabaptists, vi, 298, 535 ”; Vil, 43, 


I 

Agatti, w. of Rich. the serjeant, 
vi, 229” 

Anderson, Cath., vi, 167”; John, 
vi, 167 ” 

Anderton, vi, 58%, 76, 182, 1877, 
220-2; char., vi, 191; halls, vi, 
220; man., vi, 75, 220; Rom. 
Cath., vi, 222 

Anderton, Ad. (de), vi, 12, 220; 
Agnes, vi, 22, 64”; Alethea, 
vi, 366”; Alice (de), vi, 12%, 
20, 221; vii, 49”; Almarica 
de, vi, 200, 220; Anne, vi, 
12, 31m, 219; Vil, 177”; 
Avice de, vi, 220; vil, 54”; 
Bern., vii, 42; Cath., vi, 207; 
Sir Chas., vii, 296; Chris., vi, 


3I1n, 50m, 217, 219M, 221, 
366, 366", 367, 428"; vii, 
83n, 170”, 239m”, 296, 207; 


Dorothy, vi, 30”, 31”, 106”; 
vii, 169”, 170”, 281”; Edm., 
vi, 12”; Eliz., vi, 12”, 20n, 
429”, 517; Ellen (de), vi, 12%, 
140”, 142, 221, 428”; Frances, 
vi, 21; Fran., vi, 20”, 21 n, 221, 
222, 366”; Grace, vi, 20 n, 337”; 
vii, 169 m, 275; Hen., vi, 3067; 
Hen. I., vi, 21; Hugh, vi, 18, 
19, 20, 30, 31”, 33%, 106, 142, 
174”, 207 nN, 208 n, 428 n, 513 Nn, 
517; vii, 169”, 181 n, 275, 297, 
298; Isabel (de), vi, 3”, 12”, 
20, 227”, 513”, 517; Jas., vi, 
3, 12N, 19, 20, 22”, 29, 30, 
31, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 50n, 
57”, 64n, 65%”, 106n, 107%, 
108", IIo#, 140, 142, 152%, 
166, 213, 219, 221”, 227n, 
229”, 285, 3657, 426, 428 n, 
429n; vii, 98, 123”, I26n, 
169”, 170 n, 177 ”, I8I n, 193 ”, 
275”, 281, 293”, 297, 298, 
314m, 320, 331”; Jas. F., 
vii, 126; Jane, vi, 31”; John, 
vi, I2”, 221”, 416, 518; vii, 
49”; Jos. H., vi, 371; Lambert 
de, vii, 54 2 ; Magdalen, vi, 219 n, 
221n; Marg., vi, 12”, 207, 
19, 174”; vii, 177”; Mary, 
vi, 20 n, 536; vii, 314”; Matth., 
vi, 31”; Maud, vi, 226; Capt. 
Nich., vii, 293 x; Nich., vi, 31”; 
Oliver, vi, 12”, 19, 140, 142, 
182 ”, 221, 428”; Pet., vi, 142 ”, 
218 n, 221 ; vii, 297”; Rich., vi, 
12”, 48; Rev. Rob., vi, 20”; 
Rob. (de), vi, 12 n, 220”, 221 n, 
222”; Rog., vi, 219, 221; vii, 
131; Sibyl de, vi, 220”, 221”; 
Steph., vi, 416”; Thos. de, vi, 
12 n, 19 n, 20n, 31 nN, 220, 221 7, 
295 %, 331 1 ; vii, 298 ” ; Thomas- 
ine, vii, 131 ; Thurstan, vi, 31 ”, 
118 n, 140, 142 N, 191, 221, 226”, 
428; vii, 83.” 3; Wilfrid F., vii, 


INDEX 


Anderton (cont.) 
126; Will. (de), vi, 12 ”, 20, 21, 
22, 31m, 142, 182, 200n, 
218, 219n, 220, 221, 222n, 
493, 494”, 513 ”, 517; vii, 131; 
Maj. Will. A., vi, 21; Will. L., vi, 
19, 21, 23; Maj. Will. M. I, vi, 
21”; Mrs., vi, 367, 528; —, vi, 
249; vii, 75, 292, 293; fam., vi, 
372; Vil, 126 

Andreness, see Amounderness 

Andreton, see Anderton 

Andrews, Abigail, vi, 150; John, 
vi, 150”; Randal, vii, 87, 124; 
—, vii, 87” 

Angelholme (Poulton), vii, 225 

Angersholme (Norbreck), vii, 246, 
247 

Anglesea, Henrietta M., ctss. of, 
vli, 281”; John, earl of, vii, 
2818n 

Anglezarke, Alice de, vi, 2122; 
John de, vi, 212 », 213 2; Rob. 
de, vi, 48, 213; Rog. de, vi, 
213; Will, vi, 213” 

Angotsmoss, see Angersholme 

Angram Green (Worston), vi, 373 

Angrum (Church), vi, 4o1 

Anion, see Anyon 

Anne, Eliz., vii, 309”; Geo., vii, 
309 n; Mary, vii, 309 ”; Michael, 
vu, 309 

Annel Cross, see Hannel Cross 

Annot Cross (Whalley), vi, 470 

Annotson, Amery, vi, 143 ~; Hugh, 
vi, 143”; Will. vi, 1437”; see 
also Amotson 

Ansdell (Lytham), vii, 213 

Anstehalgh (Ribchester), vii, 29 7 

Antishaw (Leyland), vi, 7” 

Antley (Accrington), vi, 233 ”, 423, 


4242 
Antley, Higher (Accrington), vi, 


425 

Antley, Macock de, vi, 424 ; Matth. 
de, vi, 424 ”; Rich. de, vi, 424; 
Will. de, vi, 424 

Antley Gate (Trawden), vi, 548 

Anyetehalgh, see Amethalgh 

Anyon (Anion), Ad. de, vii, 2307”; 
John, vii, 250”, 255, 334; 
Margery, vii, 231”; Thos., vii, 
231” 

Apaldsyke (Longton), vi, 70 ”, 71 2 

Appleton, Anne, vi, 378”; Marg., 
vi, 378”; Nowell, vi, 3787; 
Will., vi, 378 x; Mrs., vi, 378 ” 

Appley Bridge (Wrightington), vi, 
169; ch., vi, 178 

Appley Wood (Wrightington), vi, 
I7In 

Aqua Blanca, Peter de, vii, 264 

Arbalaster, Ad. le, vi, 203 ”; Alice 
le, vi, 203”; Eva, vii, 1897”; 
Geoff. (the), vii, 189”, I90n, 
256; John, vii, 190 n, 257 

Arbury (Winwick), vi, 67” 

Archer, Jas., vii, 782; Laur., vii, 
238 12 

Arches, Beatrice de, vi, 507 x; John 
de, vi, 507”; Maud (Matilda) 
de, vi, 320, 507”, 509”; Pet. 
de, vi, 317%”, 320”, 5077; 
Reyner de, vi, 396, 507, 511”; 
Rich. de, vi, 291 ; Will. de, vi, 
320, 396, 507, 509”, 511 

Arderne, Agnes, vi, 276-7 ; Alice de, 
vi, 276”; Eleanor, vi, 276-7; 
Eliz., vii, 253”; Joan de, vi, 
131, 132, 276, 397; VU, 3, 43 
John de, vi, 2”, 26, 213, 276, 
277; vii, 147; Kath., vi, 277; 
Marg., vi, 276-7; Nathan, vii, 
253”; Rob. de, vi, 26”, 140%, 
276, 397; vii, 3; Sir Thos. de, 


339 


Arderne (cont.) 
vi, IOI n, 136”, 140 n, 276, 287, 
398 ; vii, 3, 4, 15; Thos. de, vi, 
131, 132, 276, 397}; vii, 3, 15 2 

Argarmeols, vii, 285 

Argaythel, Ad. de, vi, 116 

Argham, see Arrom 

Arghole (Stalmine), vii, 252 ” 

Argholestan (Stalmine), vii, 252 

Arkestanheved (Barnacre), vii, 316 ” 

Arkholme, fam., see Arrom 

Arkwright, John, vii, 121”; Sir 
Rich., vii, 80; Rob., vii, 121”; 
Will., vii, 77, 121”; fam., vii, 
98 n 

Arley (Blackrod), vi, 193 ” 

Arley (Mellor), vi, 262 

Arley, brook, vi, 260, 263, 266, 303 

Armetriding (Armetridding) (Chaig- 
ley), vii, 18 

Armetriding (Armetridding) 
(Church), vi, 400 ” 

Armetriding (Euxton), vi, 21”; 
mill. vi, 18 

Armetriding, le (Mellor), vi, 263 

Armetriding, Nether (Leyland), vi, 


37” 

Armetriding, Ad. del, vi, 21”; 
Agnes de, vi, 21”; Hugh, vi, 
22 n; Rev. Jas., vi, 22 n, 23; 
Jas., vi, 22”; Joana J., vi, 237; 
John (de, del), vi, 8x, 21 n, 22 n, 
23”, 51, 207”; vii, 245; Marg. 
(Margaretta), vi, 9 2, 23 2; Rich., 
vi, 22”; Sarah M., vi, 237; 
Steph. de, vi, 18”; Thos., vi, 8, 
gn, 22; Will. de, vi, 21” 

Armitstead (Armistead, Armisteed, 
Armitsdale, Hermitstead), Lawr. 
del, vi, 92”; Marg., vii, 25”; 
Thos., vi, 404 ; Will., vii, 25, 218 
312 

Arncliffe, vi, 507 2, 508 ” 

Arnolby (Millom), vii, 321 ” 

Arnulf, vii, 84 

Arom, fam., see Arrom 

Arom House (Preston), vii, 100 ” 

Arpifield (Simonstone), vi, 499 

Arram, fam., see Arrom 

Arran, earl of, vi, 180 ” 

Arrom (Argham, Arkholme, Arom, 
Arram, Erghum), Anne, vii, 
100”; Hen., vii, 99”; Isabel, 
vii, 99”; Ralph de, vii, 85; 
Will. de, vii, 74, 99 ”, 100 

Arrowsmith, Edm., vi, 189”; F., 
vi, 430; Ralph, vi, 182, 216”, 
217; Rich., vii, 128”; Rev. —, 
vii, 164 ” 

Arthur, vil, 132 ” 

Arthwright, John, vii, 329 2; Will., 
vii, 329 ”, 330% 

Artwin, Ad., vii, 153 

Arundel, Rich. Fitz-Alan, earl of, 
vi, 265 7” 

Arundell of Wardour, Jas. E. 
Arundell, Ld., vii, 12 

Ascam, John de, vii, 71 ” 

Aschetil, vii, 247; Will., grandson 
of, vii, 247 

Ascitiis, Humbert de, vii, 41 

Ascroft, Hen., vii, 98 ” 

Asellison, Cecily, vii, 99 2; Hugh, 
vii, 99 ” ' 

Ash (Ashes, Asshe, de Fraxino), 
Alex. del, vii, 57”; Cecily de, 
vii, 172; Edw., vil, 17, 57%, 58, 
60; Eliz., vii, 57”; Ellen del, 
vii, 57 2; Geo., vil, 17, 50%, 57% 5 
Hen. del, vii, 15”, 17; Hugh 
(del), vii, 17, 50”, 57”; John 
de (del), vii, 17, 17%, 57%; 
Margery de, vii, 177; Rich. (de. 
del), vi, 257; Vii, 17%, 57%; 
Rob. (del), vii, 15 #, 17, 18, 57%, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Ash (cont.) 
55; Thos. (del), vil, 17”, 572”; 
Will. del, vil, 57 ”, loon 
Ashbrennerhurst (Leyland), vi, 38 # 


Ashburner, Rob., vi, 36; Sarah, vi, 


36 


Ashburnham, John Ashburnham, 


earl of, vi, log” 
Ashburnham library, vi, 352 ” 


Ashenclogh (Lower Darwen), vi, 


276 

Ashenflat (Habergham Eaves), vi, 
4562 

Ashes, man. (Kirkham), vii, 195 

Ashes, fam., see Ash 

Asheton, see Ashton and Assheton 

Asbheys (Preston), vii, 134” 

Ash House (Ribchester), vii, 58 

Ashhurst, Hen., vi, 177; Will, 
vi, 102, 173 #, 177 m, 202" 

Ashlar House (Higham), vi, 513 

Ashley (Goosnargh), vii, 163 ” 

Ashley (Whittingham), vii, 
207, 208 n, 209 n, 210, 212 

Ashley, Avice de, vii, 212 ”; Chris- 
tiana de, vii, 114”; Gilb. de, 
vil, 212; John de, vii, 212"; 
Margery de, vil, I14m, 2127; 
Rich, de, vil, 114 #2, 212 2; Rob. 
de, vii, 212 m; Will. de, vii, 114 7, 
2129" 

Ashley Clough (Whittingham), vii, 
207 n, 210n 

Ashton (Ashton-upon-Ribble), vi, 
39%; vii, 09, 72, 731, 76, 79, 
80, 83”, 91m, Tol, 106n, 1167, 
129, 132, 133, 135, 273, 301, 
309; char., vil, gt; ch., vii, 136; 
dock, vii, 80; ind., vii, 129 ; man., 
VI, 412%; Vil, 106”, 129, 3037, 
309 n; Nonconf., vii, 137; Rom. 
Cath., vii, 77 ”, 137 

Ashton (Ayston), Ad. de, vii, 133 7; 
Agnes, vi, 94”; Alice, vi, 93, 
937, 94M, 227; Vil, I00n, 
134”; Anne, vi, 93”, 94; vii, 
333, 333”; Arth. de, vii, 132, 
134, 134”; Avice de, vii, 1337; 
Bridget, vi, 94; Cecily de, vi, 
224%; Dorothy, vi, 94”; Eccles, 
vi, 282; Edith de, vii, 1347; 
kdm., vi, 322m", 410, 4947, 
5Ion, 511, 559”; Eliz., vi., 
176, 505m, 5007; Ellen de, 
vl, 93”; Eva de, vii, 132”; 
Gilb. de, vii, 130 x, 133”, 1347; 
Hamlet (Hamnet), vi, 505», 
500; Hamo de, vi, 224n; 
Hen., vii, 75; Hilary, vi, o4n; 
Hugh, vi, 94; Isabel de, vii, 
133”; Jas, vi, 94n, 4107, 
film, 510n; vii, 173; Jas. N., 
vi, 176m; Jane, vi, 35.7, 977; 
John de, vi, 48m, 94, 1767, 
227, 51ON; vil, 92”, IoOn, 
133”, 152m, 255”; Kath. de, 
vl, 170; Lettice, vi, 5107; 
Luke, vi, 127; Mabel de, vii, 
133”; Mabot de, vii, 132”; 
Marg., vi, 94, 2127; Mary, vi, 
252; Maud de, vii, 132”; Orm 
de, vi, 169, 171 ; Phil., vii, 276N ; 
Ralph, vi, 93”, 2227; vii, 
132”; Ratcliff, vi, 290, 295; 
Rich., vi, 35, 72, 94, 95, 97, 
98 n, 99”, I1O nN, II2, 212; vii, 
T32, 132, 133", 134m, 333 n, 
334; Rob. de, vii, 132 ; Rog. 
de, vi, 169”, 176n, 224n; vii, 
132, 133m”, 134”; Susan de, 
vu, 132”; Sir Thos., vii, 115 2, 
116", 126; Thos. (de), vi, 70 n, 
TUM, 72, 72 n, 73 n, 82, 82, 88n, 
93. 94, 95”, 96, 97 n, 99, IIOn, 
TIun, 130, 132, 282; vii, 333, 


29n, 


Ashton (cont.) 
333"; Sir Will. (de), vi, 72 n, 93, 
94”, log n, t10n; Will, vi, 92”, 
94m, 170N, 212 Hn, 224"; Vil, 
100, 130”, 132”, 134”; —, 
vi, 366, 510, 512; fam., vi, 84, 
130, 170m; Vil, 102, Io2m; see 
also Assheton 

Ashton Bank (Preston), vii, 129; 
chap., vii, 87 ” 

Ashton Hall, vi, 421 

Ashton-under-Lyne, man., vi, 40 

Ash-tree planting, vi, 110” 

Ashworth, Rev. Caleb, vi, 438; 
Hen., vi. 507; John, vi, 436”; 
Lawr., vi, 440; Miles, vi, 441; 
Nich., vi, 438; Rob., vi, 438; 
Will, vi, 438 

Aske Marsden, see Marsden 

Askew, Askue, see Ayscough 

Aslacton, Avice de, vil, 192; Hen., 
vil, 193 ” ; Mich. de, vii, 192 

Asland, riv., see Douglas 

Asley, John, vi, 130 

Asmall, Asmoll, see Aspinall 

Aspden, brook, vi, 401 » 

Aspden, man. (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 


407 

Aspden, the hard (Altham), vi, 
4130 

Aspden, Ad, de, vi, 402, 405 n, 
407, 508; Alice (de), vi, 407 2, 
4112; Awyn, vi, 402”; Edm., 
VI, 407, 515; Ellen, vi, 407”; 
Geoff., vi, 402”; Isabel, vi, 
407n;, Jas., vi, 325, 407”; 
John de, vi, 346, 402m, 407 n, 
451, 452, 475", 515; Lawr., 
vi, 515; Marg., vi, 330; Ralph, 
vi, 411”; Rich, vi, 278n, 
447; Rob., vi, 325, 336; Rog. 
de, vi, 340 ”, 402 , 407 n, 429, 
515; Thos., vi, 411, 4687; 
Will, vi, 343; Mrs., vi, 515; 
fam., vi, 262, 263 n, 283 

Aspelcarr (Ribchester), vii, 64 ” 

Aspenhaugh, Miles, vi, 560 ” 

Aspenhurst (Kirkham), vii, 
199” 

Aspen valley viaduct, vi, 345 

Aspinall (Asmall, Asmoll, Aspin- 
wall), Ad. de, vii, 269; Agnes, 
V1, 377 ”, 394”; Alex., vi, 278 n, 
395; Caroline, vi, 59”, 717, 
74"; Cath. vi, 246, 377n; 
Edw., vi, 192”; vii, 154”; 
Eliz., vi, 246; vii, 269”; Geo., 
vi, 229”; Grace, vi, 246n; 
Hugh, vi, 1982; Jas., vi, 198 n, 
277", 377%, 395%, 396; Jane, 
vil, 246; John, vi, 55, 59, 62 n, 
7E Nn, 74, 389, 395, 396; Lawr., 
vi, 278 m; Marg., vi, 191 n, 198 n, 
377”; Mary, vi, 377”; Miles, vi, 
246n, 377; Col. Ralph J., vi, 
389, 395; Thos., vi, 246”; Will, 
Vi, 395; vil, 154”; Mrs. Wal- 
shaw, vi, 272; Serjeant, vi, 61; 
—, Vl, 425; fam., vi, 366” 

Aspley Greaves (Penwortham), vi, 
55n 

Asshaw (Asshawe, Asshehou), Ad. 
de, vi, 143 ”, 214, 214 nN, 215 Nn, 
216m; Alice, vi, 141”, 215”; 
Anne, vi, 215; Ant., vi, 215”; 
vu, 114”; Cecily de, vi, 214, 
214 n, 216; Eliz., vii, 15; Hen. 
de, vi, 214, 215”, 216n; Hugh 
de, vi, 136 , 143”, 2147; Jane, 
vl, 267; vii, I1Im; Joan, vi, 
215”; vil, 114”; John de, vi, 
214”, 215%; Jordan de, vi, 
214”; Lawr., vi, 215, 2197”; 
vu, 15; Leonard, vi, 215, 215 n, 
267 7; Marg., vi, 218»; Margery 


340 


191, 


Asshaw (cont.) 
de, vi, 136 ” ; Rich. de, vi, 214m; 
Rob. de., vi, 7, 214n, 215m; 
Rog., vi, 141 n, 143 , 182 n, 214, 
215m, 217n, 218 HN, 219m: Vii 
Ilia, 114"; Thos., vi, 215, 
215", 217; vu, 113m; Will, de, 
vi, 215” 

Asshe, see Ash 

Asshehou, see Asshaw 

Asshelegh, see Ashley 

Assheton, par., see Ashton 

Assheton (Asheton), Agnes, vi, 
337; Anne, vi, 383; Dorothy, 
Lady, vi, 557; Sir Edm., vi, 344, 
355”, 382, 388, 555”; vu, 
74; Eliz., Lady, vi, 558; Eliz., 
vi, 302; Frances, vi, 554; 
Isabel, vi, 513”; Jane, vi, 382 m, 
459”, 554”; Jerome, vii, 2 
Joan, vi, 554”; vii, 307m; Sir 
John, vi, 383; John, vi, 555; 
Marg., vi, 4077, 554; Mary 
(Marie), vi, 306, 383; vii, 23; 
Nich., vi, 189”, 359, 374m, 
554; Radcliffe, vi, 236, 295, 302, 
303, 555; Sir Ralph, vi, 256, 
307 7, 382, 383, 384, 386, 387, 
388, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558; 
vii, 6”; Ralph, vi, 295 n, 297, 
302, 358m, 360, 368 m, 382, 452, 
459 %, 506 ”, 514, 554, 555) 557; 
vii, 307 » ; Ralph C., vi, 294, 302, 
555; Sir Rich., vi, 306 ; Rich., vi, 
302, 302", 359m, 382, 383m, 
407%, 513", 554, 555, 550M, 
560 » ; Sarah, vi, 297; Sir Thos., 
vi, 337; Will., vi, 294, 297, 302, 
514, 555, 550; Col., vi, 421; vii, 
76; Mrs., vi, 298 n, 557; —, vi, 
298 n, 340”, 387, 395, 560n; 
fam., vi, 295, 356”; see also 
Ashton 

Astbury, Chas. J., vi, 74 

Astenthwaite, John de, vii, 173 
Marg. de, vii, 173 

Astecrley (Whalley), vi, 387, 387” 

Astewaldis (Preston), vu, 131 ” 

Astley, man. (Astley), vii, 
306” 

Astley, man. (Chorley), vi, 136 

Astley, Ad., vii, 297; Rev. Geo., 
vi, 265, 288, 313; Geo., vi, 265, 
282 n, 285m, 287; vii, 211; 
Hen. de, vi, 139; Jas., vi, 269”, 
337; Jane, vi, 287; Jennet, vi, 
287; Mary, vi, 287; vii, 2119; 
Rich., vi, 260, 287”; Thos. de, 
vi, 7, 265 ”, 278 n, 287, 288 ; vil, 
82, 116; Will., vi, 265, 282n, 
287; fam., vi, 263 , 277 

Astley Hall (Chorley), vi, 129, 130, 
136 

Aston, Thos. de, vi, 7 

Athelaxton, see Ellaston 

Atherton, Beatrice de, vi, 221”; 
Edw., vi, 128 ; Hen. de, vi, 221”; 
Hugh de, vi, 201 ; Isabel, vi, 
312, 315-16; John, vi, 294, 394, 
396; Marg., vii, 183”, 193%, 
322”; Maud, vi, 99”; Nich., 
vii, 183 2; Rich., vii, 74; Thos., 
vii, 25, 183 ; Sir Will., vi, 312, 
315-16, 362 n; —, Vi, 394 

Atherton’s Well (Preston), vil, 97 % 

Athoyl, Ad., vi, 134; Maud, vi, 


134.7 . se 

Atkinson (Adkinson), Alice, vil, 
227; Apne, vi, 226"; Vu, 
132m; Ant, vi, 21”; Chas 
E. D. H., vii, 157; Chnis., vu, 
227; Geo., vi, 132; Rev. I., vi, 
297; John, vi, 237 n, 283%; 
vii, 43, 310; John R., vii, 85” 
Thos., vii 227% 


306, 


Atkokson (Adcockson), Cecily, vii, 
48"; Hen., vii, 99 7; Hen. R., 
vii, 48 2; John, vii, 48 n; Rich., 
vii, 48; Rob., vii, 99”, Will, 


vii, 48 7 

Atough (Ribchester), vii, 43 ” 

Atough (Aythalgh, Aytough), Hen., 
vi, 273, 280%”; Joan, vii, 357”; 
Rob., vii, 35 7; Will., vi, 413 % ; 
es! vi, 413 n ‘. 

Attilgre, John de, vi, 159 

Attownend, see Townsend 

Auchterlony, Sir Jas., vii, 187 

Auckley (Yorks), vii, 17 

Audley (Blackburn), vi, 240 

Audley Hall, vi, 240, 245 

Aufray, Vi, 555 

Auger, vii, 132 

Aughton, vii, 169”, 231 

Aughton (Awton), Anne, vi, 219”; 
Ellen, vi, 61%; Hugh, vii, 1807 ; 
Jas., vi, 219”, 3667; John, vi, 
213,219 ”, 306; Marg., vi, 219”, 
555 »; Sit Rich., vi, 151 ; Rich., 
vi, 122 m, 555%; Vu, 13”; Rob., 
vi, 60, 61; Thos., vi, 219, 
306”; fam., vi., 151; see also 
Haighton and Hoghton 

Augmonderness, see Amounderness 

Aula, Ad. de, vii, 29”; Will. de, 
vii, 29 n; sce also Hall 

Aulton, see Haighton 

Aumonderness, Aumundemeys, 
Aundernesse, see Amounderness 

Austen (Austin), Rich., vi, 1603 7; 
vii, 31 ; see also Alston 

Austin and Paley, vi, 532 ”; vii, 122 

Auti, vi, 25,26” 

Autrey, see Hautrey 

Avenams (Newton), vii, 166 ” 

Avenel, Emma, vii, 172 ” ; Gervase, 
vii, 172 ” 

Avenham (Preston), vii, 79 ”, 87, 
IoI n, 185 

Avenham (Singleton), see Enam 

Avenhamends (Preston), vii, 99 # 

Avenham Park (Preston), vii, 91, 


115 

Avergate (Ribchester), vii, 43 ” 

Avice, d. of Bern., vii, 196 ”; d. of 
Rich., vii, 229 , 285 ; d. of 
Rob., vii, 192; w. of Ad., vi, 365” 

Avignon, Will. de, vii, 264 

Award, Ad., vii, 57”, 58”; Alice, 
vii, 58”; Rich., 57”, 58” 

Awton, see Aughton, Haighton and 
Hoghton 

Ayanson, Ralph, vi, 407 

Aykescogh, Aykescough, Aykys- 
kowe, see Ayscough 

Ayneslack (Colne), vi, 523, 528 ” 

Ayneslack Head (Colne), vi, 525 ” 

Aynesworth, see Ainsworth 

Ayothalgh (Ribchester), vii, 64 ” 

Ayrdale, Ad. de, vi, 538”; Rob. 
de, vii, 197”, 198”; Walt. de, 
vii, 197”, 198” 

Ayre, Ad., vi, 525; Rich., vi, 525; 
W., vi, 471 ” 

Ayrie, Rich., vii, 121 ” 

Ayscough (Akescough, Askew, 
Askue, Aykescogh, Aykescough, 
Aykyskowe, Ayscow), Ad. de, vi, 
16”; Alice de, vi, 16, 65n, 
110”; Christiana de, vi, 110”; 
Hugh, vi, 100”; Jas., vi, 617”; 
Joan de, vi, 16”; John (de), vi, 
16, 65”; Maud de, vi, 110”; 
Ralph, vi, 491, 529; Rich. de, vi, 
16; Rob. de, vi,65 ”; Rog. de, 
vi, 110”; Thos., vi, 16”, 65, 
65”; Will. de, vi, 16”, 65”; 
see also Ainscough 

Ayster (Pendleton), vi, 393 2 

Ayston, see Ashton 


INDEX 


Aytay, John, vi, 425” 
Aythalgh, Aytough, see Atough 


Babel, Hen., vi, 326 » 

Bache, Sim., vi, 87”; Will. C., 
vii, 67 

Backclough (Cliviger), vi, 482 

Backhouse, Rev. Thos. H., vi, 334 

Backman, Rob., vii, 131; Will, 
vii, 131 ” 

Back-o’-th’-Bowley (Gt. Harwood), 
Vi, 344 

Bacon, Hen., vi, 273; —, vii, 117 ” 

Bacop, see Bacup 

Bacsolf, see Bashall 

Bacup, vi, 437-9, 479; ch., vi, 
441; mkts. and fairs, vi, 437, 
439; Nonconf., vi, 441; Rom. 
Cath., vi, 441 

Bacup Booth, vi, 438 

Badby, Edw., vii, 158, 184, 259 ” 

Baddebridgegate (Preston), vii, 
130” 

Badger, Nich., vii, 1707; Thos., 
vli, 170n 

Badsberry (Myerscough), vii, 138, 


139” 

Badsworth (Yorks.), vii, 269; ch., 
vi, 314” 

Bagganley (Chorley), vi, 130 

Bagganley Hall (Chorley), vi, 142 

Baggerburgh (Myerscough), vii, 
139” 

Bagin, brook, vi, 140 

Bagot, Alex., vi, 299 ”; vii, 255”; 
Nich., vu, 3 ” 

Bailey (Bailegh), vi, 230; vii, I, 2, 
16, 54, 56”, 59”; chant., 16, 
17”; char., vii, 19,20; ch., vil, 
19; man. house, vi, 254 ; mill, vii, 
16” 

Bailey (Baley, Bayley), Ad. de, 
vii, 15 2, 16”; Agnes de, vii, 4; 
Alice (de), vi, 390, 391%; vii, 
16”; Amery de, vii, 16; Amice 
de, vii, 4”; Avice de, vii, 16”; 
Cecily de, vii, 16”; Rev. John, 
vi, 435; John (de), vi, 244, 
377"; vii, 3, 4, 13, 16, 16%, 
17”, 27”, 55”, 248; Jordan de, 
vii, 4, 16; Lawr. (de), vi, 390, 
391 n; Mabel de, vii, 4; Marg. 
de, vii, 4; Miles, vi, 367; Otes 
(Eudo) de, vii, 16”; Ralph (de), 
vi, 217”; vii, 4”, 16”; Randle 
de, vii, 15; Rich. de, vii, 4, 
47, 16,172; Rob. de, vii, 4 7, 
16”, 57”; Walt. de, vii, 4, 13, 
16”; Will, vii, 202”; fam., vi, 
39 n; see also Baillie 

Bailey Hall, vii, 17, 17”, 51, 59%” 

Bailisti (Dutton), vil, 56” 

Baillie, R., vii, 194 ; see also Bailey 

Bainbridge, Dr., vi, 118 

Baine (Bayne), Anne, vii, 141”; 


Arth., vii, 253”; Edm., vii, 
289; Jas., vii, 253”; Janett, 
vii, 131”; John, vil, 131”, 


Marg., vii, 253 ” re 
Baines, Edw., vi, 290; Jas., vu, 
225; John, vii, 291”, 304%; 


Ralph, vii, 267”; Will, vu, 
292”, 304%; —, Vil, 222”, 
305% 


Bairstowe, John, vii, 30” 

Baker, Will. the, vii, 254” | 
Balbanridding (Ribchester), vil, 577 
Balden Hall (Clitheroe), vi, 233%, 


305 2 : 

Balderston (Balderstone), vi, 235, 
313-17; vii, 107%”, 199”; adv., 
vi, 318; char., vi, 319; ch., vi, 
318; man., vi, 314; mill, vi, 
313; Rom, Cath., vi, 319 


341 


Balderston (Baldeston, Baldreston), 
Agnes de, vi, 19m, 314, 314%, 
315; Alice de, vi, 301”, 315; 
vii, 98”; Annice de, vi, 3152”; 
Constance de, vi, 315; Eliz., vi, 
315, 316, 321; Ellen, vi, 315; 
vu, 307”; Hugh de, vi, 314; 
Isabel, vi, 312, 315, 315”, 310; 
Joan (de), vi, 314”, 315, 315%, 
316, 335”; Vu, 185”, 328”; 
John de, vi, 314, 315, 320; 
vii, 98m, 209; Kath. de, vi, 
315, 5082; Marg., vi, 316; vii, 
119g”; Sir Rich. de, vi, 19”, 
315, 321; Rich. (de), vi, 105”, 
233%, 301%, 312, 314, 314%, 
315) 315%, 316, 317, 318, 320, 
5082; vil, 32”, 69n, 118 n, 
11g”, 125, 169”, 178, 185 n, 
232, 233, 272, 307”, 325%, 
328, 331 2, 332”; Roesia de, 
vi, 315; Rog. de, vi, 314 ”; Sim. 
de, vi, 314, 377%, 559”, vil, 
264; Thos., vi, 315”; Will. (de), 
Vi, 104”, 262”, 314, 315, 310, 
317 2, 318, 320, 335”; vil, 116”, 
IIQ9 7”, 265, 209 n, 280 n, 329n; 
—, vii, 69; fam., vi, 231”; vii, 
207 n, 283 n 

Balderston Moss, vii, 116 ” 

Baldeston, Baldreston, see Balder- 
ston 

Baldwin, the kirkman, vii, 1oo ” 

Baldwin, Ad., vi, 15”; Agnes, vi, 
15”; Anne, v1, 174; Chris., vi, 520, 
542 ”; Rev. Gardner, vi, 8; Rev. 
Hen., vi, 174; Hen., vi, 520, 546”; 
Rev. John, vi, 174; John, vi, 520; 
vii, 226”; Nich., vii, 226”; 
Rev. Nich. R., vi, 8, 440; Rev. 
Octavius de L., vi, 6, 8, 52; 
Rich., vi, 542, 544”; Rev. 
Rigbye, vi, 174; Col. Rob., vi, 
6; Rev. Thos., vi, 6, 8, 16, 52, 
283, 313; Thos., vi, 128, 237”, 
358, 359; Rev. Thos. R., vi, 8; 
Will, vi, 8, 246, 520; vil, 
2260 

Baldwin Hall, see Balden Hall 

Baldworth, man., vi, 233 ” 

Baley, see Bailey 

Balgerfield (Sowerby), vii, 282 

Balgreen (Cuerden), vi, 24 ” 

Balholt, Rob., vi, 542 ” 

Ball, Alice, vi, 34”; vii, 57”; 
Emma, vi, 34”; Eve, vi, 34”; 
Geo., vii, 175”; Hen., vi, 34”; 
Rich., vii, 57”; Sim., vii, 577”; 
Will., vi, 33 ”, 34” 

Ballam (Higher and Lower) (Kirk- 
ham), vii, 163 %, 174, 175” 

Ballard, Anne, vii, 283 »; Dorothy, 
vii, 283”; Ellen, vii, 283”; 
Janet, vii, 283%; John, vii, 
283”; Thos., vii, 283”; Will., 
vii, 71 2; —, vii, 283 

Balliol, Ada de, vii, 302; John de, 
vii, 302 

Balloclaw (Whalley), vi, 367 

Balschagh, Balshagh, fam., see 
Balshaw — 

Balshagh (Walton), vi, 291 ” 

Balshaw, Gt. (Withnell), vi, 48 ” 

Balshaw (Balschagh, Balshagh), 
Ad. de, vi, 291, 436”; Agnes de, 
vi, 438”; Hen. de, vi, 259”; 
John (de), vi, 28 ”, 259 ”, 4247; 
Kath., vi, 28; Rich., vi, 8, 9; 
fam., vi, 296 

Balthroppe, Rob., vi, 486 

Balyden (Whalley), vi, 438 7. 

Bamber (Bawmber), Alice, vii, 
249n; Anne, Vil, 245, 247% 5 
Edm., vii, 250”; Edw., vi, 
199”; vii, 231; Jas., vil, 231; 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Bamber (cont.) 
John, vii, 227 , 231, 241”, 245, 
247m, 250”; Marg., vil, 247%, 
248; Nich., vi, 298”; Rich., 
vil, 231, 242m”, 247m, 245 n, 
250n; Rob., vil, 241”, 250n; 
Kog., vii, 231”; Thos., vii, 
PION, 225 N, 228, 230-2; 249 5 
Wil, vil, 175”, 231, 247%, 
250n; —, vii, 242”; fam., vil, 


198 

Bamber Bridge (Walton-le-Dale), 
vi, 289, 290; ch., vi, 300 

Bamford, Alex. de, vi, 547; Ellen 
de, vi, 98”; Hen. de, vi, 98”; 
Jas., vi, 167; Mary, vi, 1677”; 
Nich., vi, 55; Rob. de, vi, 175”; 
Will, vi, 118 

Bamford House (Mawdesley), vi, 
98n 

Banastre (Banaster, Bannester), 
Sir Ad., vi, 103 1, Iogm, 1057, 
199”, 276, 327”; Vii, 524%, 
53m, 201, 226, 331”; Ad., vi, 
2gn, 48n, 69n, 103, Io4n, 
105”, 106, 113m, I16, II7 7”, 
I13I, 143”, I5Im, 1647, 199%, 
208, 213%, 214:-n,; 360% Vil, 93; 
137, 16, 79, 735 118, 125, 139, 
132 n, 160n, 165 n, 169 n, 185 2, 
207 M, 2122, 232, 234%", 247%, 
283, 284 n, 257 n, 325", 3317"; 
Agnes, vi, 10g”, 106”, I51 7, 
527; Vii, 15, 69m, 173 2; Alesia 
de, vi, 291; Alice, vi, 24, 173 %, 
174m, 175", 291m, 293, 470, 
539; vii, 15; Almarica (Amiria), 
Wi, IT3i, 1753 Amee, va, 
413”; Anne, vi, 106, 165”, 167, 
252m, 412”, 543”; Ant., vi, 
167”; Avice, vi, 105”; Chas., 
M1; 5433 Chris:, vi, 23, 24-2; 
25, 106, 106n, 398 Nn, 472, 543, 
553”, 556; Clemency, vii, 130; 
Constance, vi, 104”, 315; Vii, 
118”; Dorothy, vi, 106”; vii, 
250n; Edw., vi, Io4n, 105”, 
315; wil, 118”; Eleanor, vi, 
116”; Eliz., vi, 16”, 25, 106, 
112m, 412M, 413, 429”, 470, 
555%; Vil, 270, 333; Ellen, vi, 
12 n, 105n, 106n, 543; Ellis, vi, 
175”; Emma, vi, 105”; Fran., 
Vi, 12”, 16”; Geoff., vi, 105”, 
107m, 175m, 178”, 241, 243, 
291, 291 n, 293; Geo., vi, 293, 
294, 298 n; vii, 100 n; Gilb., vi, 
155, 175”, 180 n, 413; Grace, 
vi, 398; vii, 100”; Hen., vi, 
24, 32”, 61m, 65n, O69n, 82, 


99”, Io4m, 105, 105%, 106, 
106", 107, 108m, 113, 116, 
117m, 118m, 14%, 170, 1747, 
1757, 200, 229n, 291, 291 n, 


320, 413, 525 , 538”, 539, 5435 
Vu, 94”, Toon, 234”, 270, 
286n; Hugh, vi, 105”, 106n, 
107, 142; Isabel, vi, 64”, 105 n, 
106m, 293, 412”, 413, 528n, 
543; Vu, I00on; Jas., vi, 488, 
490, 492 2, 519, 524, 539%, 5435 
Jane, vi, 293; Janet (Jenet), vi, 
142, 293; Joan de, vi, 104n, 
T16m, I4Im, 142, 412, 527%, 
528 n, 543, 555”; Vil, 15, 527, 
76n, 97", 118, 169", 185%, 
208 n, 212”, 272, 284, 2877, 
331; John, vi, 11%, 96, 96n, 
100, 104”, I05m, I13%, 116, 
151”, 174", 175”, 180n, 293, 
295, 412, 470, 504”, 521 n, 527, 
528, 5387, 539, 543, 5552; 
Vu, 41”, 52”, 70, 118 n, 1857, 
269; Kath. vi, 302, 3157, 
320; vil, 15; Lawr., vi, 250, 


Banastre (cont.) 
293, 294, 412; vil, 100m, 2867; 
Marg., vi, 26, 105 n, 106”, 131, 
131m, 143", 1I90N, 201 m, 213%, 
214M, 270, 306%; Vi, 3, 13%, 
15, 16m, 121; Margery, vi, 
96, 106n, 164”, 206m, 412 7, 
504; Mary, vi, 413; Maud 
(Matilda) de, vi, 293; vu, 285 2; 
Nath., vi, 413, 422; vil, 333; 
Nich., vi, Io04”, 105”, 4IIn, 
412, 413, 419m”, 429M”, 4947n, 
vii, 527, 70, 88, 89n, 185”, 
269 n, 257”; Pernell, vi, 104 7 ; 
vii, 119, 287; Philippa, vi, 
104”; Ralph, vi, 11 2,12 ”, 16%, 
32, 167m, 293; Rich. vi, 
237, 29n, 48m, 64n, 69N, 103, 
105”, 106, 106m, 107, 107%, 
108 n, 112 ”, 113 m, 116 n, 118 2, 


174m, 175”, 177, 179M, 180, 
180, 205", 252”, 293, 295, 
336, 412, 413, 499%, 528, 


535 %, 542, 543, 5473 Vu, 100 n, 
160 2, 173 M, 215", 234%, 315%, 
334; Sir Rob., vi, 120”, 296; 
Vili, 135, 286, 287”; Rob., vi, 
237, 24”, 29M, 57”, 057”, 
173", 174%, 175", 179%, 199, 
204, 249, 260, 270, 276, 279, 290, 
291, 293, 294, 295, 297%, 519, 
521, 524, 539, 549%, 542, 543, 
544”; vil, 120”, 130”; Rog., 
vi, 17 n, 32 n, 175 n, 178 n, 180 n, 
262, 458m, 477”, 409; Sibyl, 
vi, 113”; Sir Thos., vi, 65%, 
103, 104-5, 105 ”, 315; Vil, 69”, 
118 7, 169 n, 189 n, 208 n, 233”, 
254”, 283; Thos. (de), vi, 
64, 72, 93%, 103K, 1047, 
105 ”, 113, 116, 117 n, 127%”, 
140, 150”, I5I Mm, 174”, 1757, 
213, 2147, 290, 293, 302, 300%, 
315, 320, 321, 412; vii, 52%, 
53”, 85n, 972, 98, I00n, 
118, 125, 137”, 169”, 185n, 
208 n, 232, 254”, 268n, 269n, 
272, 283", 287, 325”, 331, 
331”; Thurstan, vi, 105 ”, 106; 
108 n, 193, 291 , 295, 296, 470, 
521”; Warine, vi, 97”, IoI n, 
295; Wilfrid, vi, 398”, 499”; 
vii, 254; Sir Will, vi, 104”, 
19g, 218%”; vii, 52”, 1187, 
1z2n; Wil, ‘vi; 29, 94 n, 
103”, loqn, 105%”, 106, 113%, 
Ilun, 117”, 118, 165”, 175”, 
204, 213%, 214%n, 291, 293, 
306 n, 398 Nn, 412, 493, 527; 
vu, 70, 76”, Ioon, 118, 121 n, 
125, 169”, 181 n, 185”, 207n, 
232, 233", 234”, 247, 283, 
284 2, 315, 319, 328", 3317; 
—, vi, 524; vii, 52, 69; fam., 
V1, 73, 231%, 411, 494%, 535, 
538, 540, 544; vii, 102, 1997”; 
see also Banister 

Banastre Holme 
438 n 

Banastre House (Penwortham), vi, 
60n, 619” 

Banckes, see Banks 

Bancroft (Padiham), vi, 493 

Bancroft, Anne, vi, 456”; Jas., 
vl, 447, 549”; Nich., vi, 447, 
456, 468n; —, vi, 549 

Bangor Sabell (I. of Man), bar., 
vi, 6 

Banister (Bannester, Bannister), 
Alex., vi, 540; Alice, vi, 5437”; 
Ann, vi, 3”; Chas., vi, 517; 
Dorothy, vii, 271n; Edm. D., 
vii, 204, 205; Eliz., vi, 543”; 
Evan, vii, 115 ”; Fran., vi, 543”; 
Geo., vi, 177; Hen., vi, 114, 


342 


(Whalley), vi, 


Banister (cont.) 
293, 517, 540; vii, 88 n, Son; 
Jas., Vi, 152"; Jas. D., vii, 335; 
John, vi, 130, 447"; Nich., vi, 
419m; Rich., vii, 271"; Rob., 
Vi, 113, 114m, 175", 5457; see 
also Banastre 

Banister Hall (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 
293, 294, 421 0 

Banister Heald (Rudley), vi, 490 

Bank, the (Bretherton), vi, 105 

Bank, the (Broughton), vii, 112 » 

Bank, fam., see Banks 

Bankend farm (Whalley), vi, 387 

Bankfield (Singleton), vii, 183, 
1877 

Bank Hall (Bretherton), vi, 103, 
106 

Bank Hall (Broughton), vii, 120, 
1219” 

Bank Hall (Bank Head), (Burn- 
ley), vi, 444 

Bank Hey (Blackpool), vii, 250n 

Bank Hey (Little Harwood), vi 
251 

Bank Hey (Lower Darwen), see 
Bank o’ th’ Hey 

Bank Hey (Wrightington), vi, 177 ” 

Bankheys (Ribchester), vii, 43 

Bank House (Burnley), vi, 445 

Bankhouses (Altham), vi, 413 

Bankhouses (Warton), vii, 1527, 
172,173”, 216” 

Bank o’ th’ Hey (Lower Darwen), 
vi, 275; 284 

Banks, the (Barnacre), vii, 315 

Banks, the (Briercliffe), vi, 471 

Banks (Banckes, Bank, Bankes), 
Ad. del, vii, 157”, 166%, 
173”; Anne, vii, 29”; Hen. del, 
vi, 34”, 35”; Isabel, vi, 498n; 
John (del, de), vi, 34”, 35”, 174m, 
206 n, 498, 530; Rich. de, vi, 
35 2; Rob. del, vii, 173 ; Thos., 
vii, 188; Will. (de, del), vi, 35 n, 
371; vii, 29”, 157”, 166n, 


, 


324” 
Bankside (Bacup), vi, 441 
Banktop (Burnley), see Bank Hall 


Bannastre, see Banastre and 
Banister 

Bannerhurst (Myerscough), vii, 
139” 


Bannester, Bannister, see Banastre 
and Banister 

Banyon, Alex., vii, 181 ” 

Baptists, vi, 147, 248, 275, 334, 
344, 350, 372, 404, 409, 411, 
423, 427, 435, 439, 449, 441, 453, 
468, 473, 478, 496, 535, 541; 
vii, 53, 103 , 104, 190, 218, 251, 
279, 282, 311 

Barber, Geo., vi, 119 

Barber’s Moor, see Barbles 

Barbing, vii, 59 ” 

Barbles Moor, vi, 108, 111, 165” 

Barclay, Rob. C. C., vii, 142 

Barcroft (Cliviger), vi, 479, 482 

Barcroft (Berecroft), Alice, vi, 
468 n, 482”; Amb., vi, 525%, 
530”, 545”, 547; Capt. Amb. 

., vi, 545”; Anne, vi, 482%, 

483; Eliz., vi, 246m, 467%, 
468 n, 483, 484, 545”; Gilb. de, 
vi, 480”; Hen., vi, 467”, 482”, 
545”; Isabel, vi, 482 7; Jennet, 
vi, 447; Joan de, vi, 482"; 
John (de), vi, 468%, 475%, 
482", 545”, 547”; Lucy, vi, 
482; Martha, vi, 530”, 545%, 
547; Mary, vi, 472; Matth. 
de, vi, 481”, 482”; Rich. de, 
vi, 480; Rob., vi, 246, 408 n, 
482, 490; Ruth, vi, 483; Sarah, 
vi, 483, 490; Susan, vi, 483; 


Barcroft (cont.) 
Thos., vi, 349, 447 %, 452, 472”, 
483, 486, 489 2, 490, 517, 530”, 
545%, 547, 548; Will., vi, 246 x, 
447%, 468 n, 474 2, 475%, 477%, 
482, 484, 486, 490, 517, 530%, 


545% i Aeates 
Barcroft Hall (Cliviger), vi, 483 
Barden (Burnley), vi, 441 
Bardsea, man., vi, 31 ” 

Bardsea Hall, vi, 31 ” : 
Bardsey, Dorothy, vi, 307”; Eliz. 

de, vii, 330”; John de, vii, 

297 %, 330% 
era, Herb. J., vii, 128 
Barelegh, see Barley 
Bareston, Paul, vi, 518 ” 

Baret, see Barrett ; 
Bargargate (Chatburn), vi, 372 
Barker (Higher and Lower), mans. 

(Goosnargh), vii, 163 ”, 198 
Barker, Ad. the, vii, 99”; Albred 

the, vii, 99; Barth., vii, 58” ; 

Eliz., vii, 273; Geo., vi, 557; 

Grace, vii, 333 ” ; John, vi, 237 2 ; 

vii, 333”; Ralph (the), vi, 74, 

99”; Rich, vi, 283”; Rob. 

(the), vi, 114; vii, 99”; Sam., 

vii, 273; Thos., vi, 128, 416, 

445”; Will., vii, 19 ; —, vi, 74 
Barkerfield (Wrightington), vi, 


174” 

Barkers lands (Tockholes), vi, 283 

Barkhouse Hill (Preston), vii, 94 ” 

Barley, vi, 349, 518-9 

Barley (Yorks), see Berleye 

Barley Booth (Barley), vi, 518, 519 

Barley Green (Barley), vi, 518 

Barlow, Rev. John, vi, 343, 344; 
John, vi, 404”, 535; Thos., vi, 


535 2 

Barmskin (Heskin), vi, 166 

Barnacre (Barnacre with Bonds), 
vii, 291, 292, 293, 301, 304, 305, 
311 n, 315-8, 319”; char., vii, 
300; man., vii, 315; Nonconf., 
vii, 320 

Barnard, Dan., vi, 525, 530; 
Josiah, vi, 274”; see also Bay- 
nard and Bernard 

Barnard House (Goosnargh), vii, 
198 

Barncross field (Longton), vi, 71 ” 

Barndehurt (Whittingham), vii, 
209 7 

Barneley, man., vi, 233 ” 

Barnes, Cecily, vii, 324 » ; Dorothy, 
vi, 220 n ; Geo., vii, 324 2; Hen., 
vii, 26”; Rev. Jas., vi, 313; 
Jas., vi, 334; vii, 324”, 3302; 
John, vii, 200”; Jos., vi, 423; 
Thos., vii, 200  ; Will., vi, 220 ” ; 
vii, 200, 201, 324”; Rev. Will. 
L., vi, 313 ; 

Barnett, Hen., vii, 255 ; Joshua, vi, 
274, 283 

Barnland (Read), vi, 506 ” 

Barnoldswick (Hurstwood), vi, 476 

Barnside (Barnsett) (Foulridge), 
“in M, 250, 356M, 534, 544, 

4 

Barnside, Rich. de, vi, 547 

Barmside Knarr end (Colne), vi, 
5257 

Barnton, man., vi, 500” 

Baron (Barron), Anne, vi, 403”; 
Chris., vi, 406; Dav., vi, 167; 
Edm., vi, 272; Ellen, vi, 406; 
Geo., vi, 406, 408 ; Hen., vi, 273, 
277%, 406, 406”; Hugh, vi, 406%, 
408; Jas., vi, 272, 403”; John, 
vi, 272, 278n; Marg., vi, 406 7; 
Ralph, vi, 271; Rich., vi, 272; 
Rob., vi, 272, 2737, 406”; 
Thos, le, vi, 272, 406”, 408; 


INDEX 


Baron (cont.) 

Will. (le), vi, 272, 403”, 406, 
408 ; fam., vi, 283 2 

Baron’s Ouldlande (Over Darwen), 
vi, 272 

Barouford, Barouweford, see Bar- 
rowford 

Barrett (Baret), Edm., vi, 211 n, 
224m; John, vii, 138”; Rog., 
vi, 211 x, 224; Thos., vi, t00 7; 
vii, 138%” 

Barron, see Baron 

Barrow (Wiswell), vi, 396 ; ind., vi, 
396 ; Nonconf., vi, 399 

Barrow, Andr., vii, 13; Jas., vii, 
175; John, vii, 144, 330; Letitia, 
vii, 207 n; Thos., vii, 276; Will., 
vii, 176 

Barrowclough (Whalley), vi, 382 

Barrowford, par., see Barrowford 
Booth 

Barrowford, Nether and Over, vi, 
233M, 542, 543 

Barrowford (Barouweford), John 
de, vi, 249 

Barrowford beck, vi, 541 

Barrowford Booth, vi, 349, 517, 
522, 527, 537, 540, 540n, 
541-4; ch., vi, 544; cross, vi, 
542; ind., vi, 542; man., vi, 
542; Nonconf., vi, 544; Rom. 
Cath., vi, 544; ‘White Bear 
Inn,’ vi, 542 

Barry, Sir Chas., vi, 464 

Bartail (Bartaill, Bartle), Anabil, 
vi, 97”; Thos. de, vii, 277; 
Will, de, vi, 97”; vii, 2272, 
277, 324” 

Bartle (St. Michael-on-Wyre), vii, 
285, 288 ; Rom. Cath., vii, 285 

Bartle, fam., see Bartail 

Bartle Moor, vii, 285 

Bartlett, Eliz., vii, 35%; John, vi, 
88; Will., vii, 35” 

Barton, vii, 72, 73”, 76, 79, 831, 
II2", 123, 127-8, 161”, 163%, 
I9I, 193m", 198, I99M”, 300; 
char., vii, 90; ch. vii, 128; 
crosses vii, 127; man., vii, 127; 
mill, vii, 127, 128”; Old Hall, 
vii, 127; Rom. Cath., vii, 77” 

Barton, brook, vii, 127 

Barton (Berton), Ad. de, vii, 198 » ; 
Agnes, vii, 198”; Alice de, vii, 
127”, 192”, 198”; Andr., vi, 
109M, 150%, 151, 163 , 246M, 
252, 405; vii, 128”; Anne, vii, 
128, 198”; Ant., vii, 127”; 
Barbara, vii, 257”; Chris., vii, 
127", 128%”; Clemency, vii, 
127”; Constance, vii, 127%”; 
Denise de, vii, 127 ; Dionisia de, 
vi, 271, 301; Edm,, vii, 200”; 
Edw. (de), vii, 200”, 329”; 
Eliz., vii, 128, 135”, 329”; 
Ellen, vii, 314%; Etheldreda, 
vii, 127”; Fleetwood, vii, 128 ; 
Gilb. de, vii, 127, 128, 128%, 
198", 314%”, 317M, 331%; 
Grimbald de, vii, 127”; Hen., 
vi, 153 23 vii, 183 2, 257”, 300; 
Hugh (de), vii, 127”, 135%, 
3II n, 329”, 330%; Isabel, vii, 
127n; Jas., vi, 17, 55, 59, 61, 
65, 67, 74”, 151”, 174m”; Jas. 
G., vi, 153”; Jame, vii, 329%”; 
John (de), vi, 110”, 246”, 271, 
301 ; vii, 30”, 127, 128 n, 163 n, 
192 ”, 198 n, 329 n, 331 2; Kath. 
(de), vi, 180 7; vii, 127”, 331”; 
Lawr., vii, 127, 128”; Marg., 
vi, 463; vii, 127 ”, 128”, 198"; 
Margery, vi, 252”, 406”; Vil, 
329 n; Maud, vii, 128”; Miles, 
vi, 153, 153”; Orm de, vii, 


349 


Barton (cont.) 
193”; Randle (Ralph), vi, 
252m, 406n, 408; Rich. (de), 
vi, 463; vii, 127”, 128, 193 n, 
198 n, 317 n, 328 n, 329 n, 331 2; 
Rob., vi, 111”, 150 n, 252n, 
495%, 4062, 407 n, 408, 463; 
vu, 195 2; Robinson S., vii, 204; 
Rog., vi, 153, 496; Sam., vi, 
153; Sir Thos, vi, 150 n, 406 7 ; 
Thos., vi, 246 n, 271, 407, 408 n ; 
vil, 85, 108”, 127, 128, 198 n, 
330 %, 331 n; Walt. de, vii, 127 n, 
192m; Rev. Will, vi, 313, 334, 
344; Will. (de), vi, 518 ; vii, 127 n, 
331"; —, vi, 119”; vii, 193; 
fam., vi, 95, 109, 163; vii, 138, 
194” 

Barton Cross (Barton), vii, 127 » 

Barton Hall (Barton), vii, 77, 
128% 

Barton Hey (Chipping), vii, 29 n, 
30” 

ae Lodge (Barton), vii, 127, 
12 


Bartonwood, John, vi, 496 ” 

Bartun, see Barton 

Bashall (Yorks), vi, 345, 346, 367 ” 

Bashall (Bacsolf), a ae ne 
365”; Eustachia de, vi, 365”; 
Hamo de, vi, 365”; Rob. de, 
vi, 365”; Will. vii, 310 

Baskerfield, Eliz., vi, 391 ; John, 
vi, 391 ” 

Baskervill, John de, vii, 159, 
159”; Lawr., vii, 222”, 296; 
Marg., vii, 159”; Will. de, vii, 
159” 

Baskit, Hawise, vii, 57; Margery, 
vii, 57”; Will., vii, 57 ” 

Bastwell (Blackburn), vi, 246 

Bastwisle, Eliz., vi, 497”; Geoff. 
vi, 497 ”; see also Battestwisle 

Bate, Abra., vi, 48 

Bateman, Lawr., vi, 74 

Bateson, Ant., vii, 335; Mary, vii, 
93”; Rob., vii, 324”; Thos., 
vii, 324”; Will, vii, 335 

Bath and Wells, bp. of, vi, 160 ” 

Bathgreve (Clitheroe), vi, 365 ” 

Battersby, John, vi, 153; Kath., 
vi, 393”; Nich. vi, 3937, 
539%”; Rich., vi, 436” 

Battestwisle, Ad. de, vi, 246”; 
Agnes de, vi, 246”; Cecily de, 
vi, 246”; Eva de, vi, 246”; 
Rich. de, vi, 246; Will. de, vi, 
246; see also Bastwisle 

Battlefield College (Shrewsbury), 
vii, 263, 264, 265, 279 n, 289 n 

Batty Hole (Briercliffe), vi, 470 

Bauden, see Bawdon 

Baudri, Ad. de, vi, 366”; Emma 
de, vi, 366” 

Baunebreck (Warton), vii, 171 2 

Bawdon (Bauden), Hen., vi, 136 7; 
—, vi, 524” 

Bawmber, see Bamber 

Bawsedge (Colne), see Boss Head 

Baxenden (Accrington), vi, 233%, 
423, 424%, 425, 437 

Baxenden, John, vi, 425”; Ralph, 
vi, 4257” 

Baxter, Hannah, vi, 318”; John, 
vi, 496; Nathaniel, vii, 265; 
Rev. Rog., vi, 290 

Baye, vi, 301” 

Bayley, Bayleye, see Bailey 

Baylton, Will., vii, 300, 318 

Baynard, Anne, vii, 80; Edw., 
vii, 80 

Bayne, see Baine 

Bayton, Thos., vii, 139 7 

Beacon Fell, vii, 191 

Beale, Will., vii, 197 


, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Beardshaw (Trawden), vi, 548, 551 

Beardshaw, Nether and Over 
(Trawden), v1, 549 

Beardwood, man., vi, 2327” 

Beardworth Green (Blackburn), vi, 
250 

Beasting, brook, vi, 300, 303 

Beatrice, vii, 99”; d. of Rob., 
vii, 192; Lady, vii, 195” 

Beatson, John, v1, 9” 

Beauclerk, Rev. C. S., vii, 7”, 8n, 
IIn 

Beaufront, Ad., vii, 
John, vii, 189”, 252, 2537, 
254n; Will, vil, 252”, 253”, 
254; see also Stalmine 

Beaumont, Dr. Chas. R., vi, 389 7 ; 
Eliz., vi, 200 n, 389 ”; John, vi, 
389; Rich., vi, 200, 3897; 
Rich. H., vi, 359”; Thos. (de), 
MM, 389% wil, 235 2S —- Na, 
392; vii, Ion 

Beaumont Cote, vii, 314 

Beaver, John, vii, 230” 

Beawse, vi, 516 

Becanesfurlong (Preston), vii, 130” 

Becansaw, par., see Becconsall 

Becconsall, vi, 86, 111-14”; adv., 
vi, 114; chap., vi, 89, 90”, 113; 
char;, Vi, 114) ch., v4, 113.) man.,; 
vi, 90”, 112; Nonconf., vi, I14 

Becconsall, Becconshaw, fam., see 
Beconsaw 

Becconsall Hall, vi, 113 

Beche, Margery de la, vi, 
Nich, de la, vi, ror 7 

Beck, Rich., vi, 99 7, 287 2; Rob., 
vii, 312”; Rog., vi, 379”; vil, 
237" 

Beconsaw (Becconsall, Becconsaw, 
Beconshaw), Ad. (de), vi, 6 », 
112, 112m, 113, 121”; Dorothy 
(de), vi, 11 n, 30, 31 ”, 63, I12, 
112”, 113”; Edw. (de), vi, 82, 
112, 112m”, 151”; Eliz., i, 
112m, 113; Emma, vi, 1127”; 
Geo., vi, 112, 112 ”, 113”, I14; 
Hen. (de), vi, I1m, 30, I12, 
I1l2”, 113”; vii, 268; Joan, 
vi, II”, 30, 112; vii, 198; 
John de, vi, 112 ”, 113 ”, 1217”; 
Marg., vi, 112 2; vii, 89; Maud 
de, vii, 166”; Nich., vii, 158 7, 
254 "2. Rieh:,, ‘vi, i712, Teg; 
Rob. (de), vi, 88, 112”; Thos. 
de, vi, 112 m ; Will. (de), vi, 112 7, 
113”, II6Mm, 121M; Vii, 1667, 
177, 2547, 200n; fam., vi, 151 

Bective, earls of, vii, 318, 319; 
Thomas, vii, 318 

Bedford, man. (Leigh), vii, 2807; 
mill, vii, 280” 

Bedford, Isabella, ctss. of, vii, 
303; Jaquetta, ctss. of, vii, 
303”; dks. of, vii, 314; John, 
vii, 183”, 301, 303; Ingram, 
earl of, vii, 303 

Bedson, Rev. Alf., vi, 435 

Bee, John, vii, 292 ” 

Beelsetenabbe, see Whalley Nab 

Beesley, man. (Goosnargh), vii, 191, 


189 n, 252M; 


I0l; 


19 

Beesley, Ad. de, vii, 198 2; Agnes 
de, vii, 198; Amiria de, vii, 
249; Benedict de, vii, 192”; 
Cecily, vii, 198 2 ; Ellen (de), vii, 
19d”, 195”; Fran., vii, 307, 
195, 278; Geo., vii, 191, 195, 
195”, 1987, 205; Gilb. de, vii, 


198; Hen., vii, 198, 278 n, 
289, 330; Iseud de, vii, 
198 n; Jas., vii, 32, 216”; Jane, 
vil, 30n, 198, 278", 330”; 
Joan, vii, 198”; John, vii, 
I27”; Nich. de, vii, 198”; 


Beesley (cont.) 

Rich. de, vii, 198”; Rob., vii, 
195”, 198, 198; Thos. (de), 
vii, 126m, 127m, 198, 198n, 
213”, 329m; Will, vii, 194%, 
198, 198, 289"; fam., vii, 
120” 

Beetham, Agnes, vii, 173 »; Amice, 
de, vii, 255; Amiria (Amuria) 
de, vii, 160, 172 n; Christiana 
de, vii, 173”; Sir Edm., vii, 
173; Sir Edw., vu, 1737; 
Eleanor de, vii, 215 2; Joan de, 
vii, 172; Sir John de, vil, 173” ; 
Maud de, vii, 172”; Sir Ralph 
de, vii, 159”, 172, 173; Ralph 
(de), vi, 103 ; vil, 159”, 160”, 
173, 200”, 325; Rich. de, vii, 
173; Sir Rob. de, vii, 172 ; Rob. 
de, vii, 173, 173 m, 215”; Rog., 
vii, 173 2; Thos. (de), vu, 63”, 
$50", 160%, Ist, 172%, 173, 
200 n, 249, 285; Will. de, vii, 
173 : 

Beforton, Sim. de, vii, 24 ” 

Beilby, Rev. Jonathan, vi, 334 

Bekanesho, Bekaneshow, Bekani- 
shou, Bekanoshow, par., see Bec- 
consall 

Beland, see Bogland 


Belanspot Ford (Garstang), vii, 
3lI Kn 

Pelasyse (Bellasis), Sir Rowland, 
vi, I10n, 272; Thos., see 


Fauconberg, vsct. 

Belesetenabbe, see Whalley Nab 

Belewe, see Bellew 

Belfield (Rochdale), vii, 56 

Belfield, Chas., vi, 488 ”; Eliz., vi, 
483”; Thos., vi, 4832; fam., 
vii, 55 

Belingfield, vii, 59 ” 

Belknap, Sir Edw., vii, 42” 

Bell, Dav., vii, 142; Rev. Jas., vi, 
435; John, vi, 286”, 426; vii, 
283; Ralph, vi, 286; Rich., vi, 
31; Rob., vi, 286; Thos., vii, 
256; Will., vu, 283 ”, 284” 

Bellasis, see Betasyse 

Bellet, John, vi, 371 

Bellew (Belewe), Joan de, vi, 261”; 
vii, 301”, 329”; John de, vi, 
261 n: vii, 301, 329”; Ladarina 
de, vii, 301; Rob. de, vii, 302; 
Sibyl de, vii, 301”; see also 
Beloe 

Bellhouse, Herb. L., vi, 371 

Bellingham, Allen, vii, 264 ; Mary, 
vii, 264; Will. vi, 82” 

Bcloc, Rev. Hen. J. G., vi, 23; see 
also Bellew 

Belota, vii, 98 

Belsetenab, see Whalley Nab 

Belshaugh, Edw., vii, 107 

Belthorn (Lower Darwen), vi, 275 

Belthorn (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 405; 
ch., vi, 409 ; Nonconf., vi, 409 

Belyngton, see Billington 

Benalt, Thos., vi, 39 

Bence, Col. Hen. B., vii, 117 

Bend Hill (Briercliffe), vi, 469 

Benebutts (Church), vi, 402 ” 

Benedict XII., pope, vi, 357” 

Benedict, vi, 544”; vii, 
the carpenter, vi, 767; 
clerk, vi, 151”; vii, 99 ” 

Benedictines, vi, 28, 32, 81; vii, 
175, 205 

Benefield (Northants), vii, 41 ” 

Benelonds (Osbaldeston), vi, 320” 

Benet, see Benedict and Bennet 

Benetfield (Kirkham), vii, 199 

Benison, Anne, vii, 155”, 235; 
Rev. John, vii, 155”, 235; see 
also Benson 


297; 
the 


344 


Benn, Thos., vii, 205 

Bennet (Benet) Christiana, vi, 71»; 
vn, 92”; John, vi, 719: vil. 
g2; Kev. John W., vi, 440: 
Phil., vi, 80; Rob., vii, 216" : 
Will, vi, 80 

Benson, John, vii, 157  ; Susannah 
vi, 550; see also Benison : 

Bent (Eccleshill), vi, 279 " 

Bentgate (Haslingden), vi, 427 

Benthan, Rich., vi, 489 

Bentinck, Lady Olivia Cavendish, 
vu, 318; Lord Henry Cavendish, 
vii, 318 

Bentley (Hapton), vi, 511 

Bentley, brook, vi, 100, 552” 

Bentley, Horatio, vi, 541; Rev. 
Thos., vi, 343, 344 

Bentley Wood Green (Hapton), vi, 
5Il” 

Berdeshagh, Berdeshaw, see Beard- 
shaw 

Berdeworth, Berdwrth, see Brere- 
worth 

Berecroft (Dutton), vii, 57 

Berecroft, fam., see Barcroft 

Berefield (Whittle), vi, 33 ” 

Bereschahe, sike de (Mellor), vi, 263 

Beresford, Edw., vii, 287 n 

Berewinde, Alice de, vi, 510n; 
Emot de, vi, 510” 

Bergh, see Burgh 

Berifurlong (Preston), vii, 131 

Berington, John, vii, 188 n 

Berkeley, John, vii, 245 

Berleye (Yorks), vi, 109 

Bernaker, see Barnacre 

Bernard, vii, 45 ”, 52 ”, 1347, 191, 
192 ”, 194”, 196 n, 308 n, 318 n, 
323 1, 324” 

Bernard, John, vii, 263”; see also 
Barnard and Baynard 

Bernardacre (Ribchester), vii, 58 » 

Bernard Park (Ribchester), vii, 44” 

Berneste, Agnes, vi, 470; Rich. de, 
v1, 470 

Bernevill, Emery de, vi, 2917; 
Hawise de, vi, 291 ; Mabel de, 
vi, 291 

Bernsetkreg (Foulridge), vi, 547 

Berridding Bank (Ribchester), vii, 
40n 

Berry (Berrey), Ewan, vi, 2367; 
Jas., vii, 44; Miles, vii, 208 n; 
Pet., vi, 74; Rich., vi, 128; 
Will., vi, 539; see also Bury 

Bertherton, see Bretherton 

Berton, see Barton 

Bessowe call (Ribble), vii, 70 

Beteleyfield (Ribchester), vii, 46” 

Beuerley (Cliviger), vi, 481” 

Beverley (Yorks), vi, 356 

Beverley, Rob. Cornthwaite, bp. of, 
vii, 81 

Bewhouse (Parbold), vi, 174, 180 

Bewley, Thos., vii, 258m, 259; 
Will., vii, 259” 

Bezza (Boseburn), brook, vi, 263, 
313 

Bezza, wood, (Samlesbury), vi, 
313” 

Bibby, Ad., vii, 50, 53 2; Hen., vi, 
225%; John, vi, 520; Nich., vi, 
190”, 191; Oliver, vi, 199”; 
Rich., vi, 520; vii, 50”; Will, 
vi, 225”; vii, 50” 

Bickerstaff (Bickerstaffe, Bicker- 
stath, Bickersteth), Ad. de, vii, 
182 n, 183; Ellen, vii, 187"; 
Hen. de, vii, 70, 183, 183 ”; Joan 
de, vii, 183”; Maud de, vu, 
249; Ralph (de), vi, 103”: 
vii, 182, 183, 249”; Rich. 
de, vii, 183; Rob., vi, 48” 
vii, 190 n, 225” 


Biddulph, Fran., vii, 309 »; Rich., 


vii, 309 ” 
Biggins (Kirkby Lonsdale), vi, 


12” 

Bikaker (Studlehurst), vi, 324 ” 

Bildeswath, John de, vii, 277 » 

Bileuurde, see Dilworth 

Billesburch, Billesburgh, see Bils- 
borrow 

Billindon, see Billington 

Billingahoth (Billington), vi, 326 

Billingdon, see Billington 

Billinge, Nich., vi, 188 » 

Billingehill (Witton), vi, 263, 340 

Billingford (Nort.), vi, 227” 

Billington, vi, 325, 387m, 411, 
412 , 457, 555%; adv., vi, 333; 
char., vi, 334; ch., vi, 332; epi- 
leptic colony, vi, 326, 336; 
hermitage, vi, 327 ™, 334; 
ind., vi, 326; man., vi, 264, 326, 
421, 422; mill, vi, 328; Nonconf., 
vi, 334; Rom. Cath., vi, 334 

Billington, Ad. de, vi, 264, 285, 

326, 328 nm, 332, 409; Alice de, 
vi, 264; Ant., vii, 175 , 287 7 ; 
Avice de, vi, 264, 326, 3287; 
Edw. de, vi, 326; Efward de, vi, 
266; Elias (Ellis), de, vi, 266, 
326; Eliz., vii, 289 ; Geoff. de, 
vi, 328 , 330”, 331”; Hen., vi, 
326; Joan de, vi, 264”; John, 
vii, 175”, 287; Mabel de, vi, 
332; Ralph (de), vi, 326, 408 n ; 
Rich. de, vi, 326, 330”, 331, 
408"; Rob., vi, 326, 330”; 
Rog. de, vi, 264, 326; Thos., vii, 
287”; Will., vi, 326, 303 

Billington Common, vi, 328 

Billington Moor, vi, 325, 337 

Billinton, see Billington 

Bilsborough, Billisburgh, Bills- 
borough, see Bilsborrow 

Bilsborrow, vii, 118, 119”, 128 n, 

149, 269, 287, 288n, 291, 
292”, 293, 296n, 318%, 326, 
327, 330-2; char., vii, 300; 
man., vil, 127 ”, 330; Nonconf., 
vii, 332; sch., vii, 141, 332 

Bilsborrow (Bilsborough,  Bills- 

borough), Ad. de, vii, 326%, 
332 n ; Edusa, vii, 332 ” ; Eustace 
de, vii, 331 ”, 332 ; Hamnet de, 
vii, 332”; Hugh de, vii, 332”; 
Isabel, vii, 332”; Rev. John, 
vii, 184; John de, vii, 326 m, 
331, 331 n, 332 n; Matth., vii, 
331 ”, 332 n; Paulin de, vii, 
330”; Rich. de, vii, 326%, 
332”; Rob. de, vii, 326 ”, 330”; 
Rog. de, vii, 332 ~; Tancard de, 
vii, 332 2; Will. (de), vii, 289 n, 
326 n, 3322; —, vi, 48 

Bilyngton, see Billington 

Bimme, vi, 290; vii, 30”; the 
white, vii, 30” 

Bimme croft (Eccleshill), vi, 279 » 

Bimson (Bimmeson), Alex., vi, 
202 n; vii, 58 n; Alice, vi, 202 ” ; 
Anne, vii, 58x; Beatrice, vi, 
202”; Frances, vi, 202 ”; Joan, 
vi, 202; John, vi, 202”; vii, 
29”, 58”; Kath., vi, 202”; 
Lawr., vi, 182”, 202, 2027; 
Maud, vi, 202 ”; Rog., vi, 200 n, 
202, 202”; Thos., vi, 181%, 
202%; Will., vi, 177”, 191”, 
202 ” 

Bindloss, Cecilia, vi, 196”; 
Dorothy, vii, 112”; Fran., vii, 
112, 112”; Rebecca, vii, 2967”; 
Sir Rob., vi, 196”; vii, 112 n, 
260, 296, 334 

Birch (Birches), Dyke del, vi, 480; 
Edw., vi, 242; Hen., vii, 119”; 


7 


INDEX 


Birch (cont.) 
John de, vi, 485”; Rob., vi, 
358; Thos., vii, 86 ; —, vii, 123 n 

Birchall, Rev. Jos., vi, 404; Josiah, 
vii, 218; Thos., vi, 191”; vii, 
107 ; Mrs., vii, 107 

Birchenlee (Chipping), vii, 28 

Birchenley (Marsden), vi, 536, 539 

Birches, see Birch 

Birchholme, vii, 214 ” 

Birewath, see Byrewath 

Birkacre (Coppull), vi, 224 

Birkacre Mill (Chorley), vi, 142 

Birkby, Will., vi, 515 

Birkenhead, see Birkhead 

Birkett (Birket), John, vi, 817; 
Will, vi, 55; vii, 205 

Birkhead (Birkenhead, Birkheved), 
Alice, vii, 239 ”, 307; Eleanor, 
vi, 194; Hen., vi, 194”; vii, 
239m, 307m; John, vi, 194”; 

arg., vi, 209 ” ; Rich., vi, 209 ” 

Birkin, Alice de, vi, 93 x; John de, 
vi, 93”; Mich. de, vi, 3772”; 
Rog. de, vi, 377 ” 

Birks (Lower and Higher) (Chip- 
ping), vii, 35 ” 

Birks, Rich. del, vi, 481 ” 

Birkshaw Moor, vi, 552 

Birley (Birlay, Birlegh), Chas., vii, 
145, 287, 288, 290; Chas. A., vii, 
287; Chas. F., vii, 287; Edm., 
vii, 74; Edw., vii, 239, 239”; 
Eliz., vii, 145; Gertrude E., vii, 
290; Hen., vi, 311”; Hen. L., 
vil, 151”; John, vii, 309”; 
John L., vii, 156”; Marg. S., 
vii, 239”; Mary, vi, 311%”; 
Rich., vii, 167; Rob. de, vi, 
315”; Sim. de, vi, 314; Thos. 
de, vi, 315”, 318; Thos. L., 
vii, 151; Will., vi, 314; vii, 188; 
see also Burghley 

Birstatbrinning, Birstatbrunning, 
see Bryning 

Birtwisle, man. (Hapton), vi, 232, 
458, 459, 507, 509, 510” 

Birtwisle (Birtwistle), Ad. (de), 
vi, 434", 456”, 474”, 477%, 
509; Agnes, vi, 410; Alex., vi, 
434”; Alice de, vi, 410”; 
Amiria de, vi, 511”; Anne, vi, 
410 7 ; Catlow, vi, 470 ; Christian, 
vi, 410%”; Dorothy, vi, 410, 
411; Edw., vi, 410”, 4IIn; 
Ellis de, vi, 456 2; Geo., vi, 411, 
434, 438”, 4687; Gilb. (de), vi, 
438 , 456%, 474, 475%, 509; 
Hen. de, vi, 455, 509”, 511”; 
Isabel de, vi, 510”; Jas., vi, 
410; Janet, vi, 410”; Joan de, 
vi, 509; John (de), vi, 410, 411, 
434”, 455, 499”, 509, 5I0N, 
511 ”; Leonard, vi, 410 »; Marg., 
vi, 410m”, 411, 434, 438%; 
Margery de, vi, 474”; Miles, 
vi, 410”; Nich. de, vi, 477%, 
509”; Oliver, vi, 410, 411; 
Ralph, vi, 509; Reyner de, vi, 
509; Rich. (de), vi, 410, 434, 
508 n, 509, 510”, 511”; Thos. 
(de), vi, 410, 411, 434, 510”; 
Thurstan, vi, 435; Will. (de), vi, 
410, 434”, 508, 511” 

Birtwisle Field (Hapton), vi, 510 ” 

Biscoe, Edw., vi, 187 ” 

Biscopham, see Bispham 

Bishopston, Hen. de, vii, 264 

Bispam, Bispeham, see Bispham 

Bispham (Bispham with Norbreck), 

E vii, 43 , 68, 69 , 71, 222, 222”, 

& 242-7; cross, vii, 245; ch., vil, 

F244; mans., vii, 236", 246, 

#248; Nonconf., vii, 246; sch., 
vii, 245 ; sundial, vii, 245 


at 


Bispham (Mawdesley), vi, 81, 86», 


91”, 92, 100-2; char., vi, 90, 
gi”; man., vi, 100; sch., vi, 
89, 91 n, 102 


Bispham, Great, vii, 246, 248 
Bispham, Little, vii, 246 
Bispham (Bispam), Ad. de, vi, 


98 n, 101 2; vii, 247”; Alice de, 
vl, 92”, 95”, 261 n; Amery de, 
vi, 100, 101m; vii, 247; Cecily 
de, vi, torn; Eliz., vii, 136”; 
Hawise de, vii, 247 n ; Hen. (de), 
vi, 98 n, ro1 n, 191 n, 295; John, 
vii, 136 2, 249”; Matth. de, vi, 
101 n ; Maud de, vi, 101 ”; Nich. 
de, vi, 261; Rich. de, vii, 
166”, 247, 247”; Rob. de, vi, 
92, 97”, IoIN; Rog. de, vi, 
98 n, 101 n; Thos. de, vi, ror x, 
240n, 241”; Warine de, vi, 
92”, 97, IoIn, 1802; Will. 
(de), vi, 80, Lor n, 247 ; vii, 166 x, 
204, 240 Nn, 2412 


Bispham Green, vi, 100 
Bispham Hall (Hall of Bispham), 


vi, 102 


Bispham Hawes, vii, 246, 250” 
Bisset, Alice, vii, 46”, 47”; Will. 


vii, 46”, 47” 


Black, Will., vii, 78 2 

Blackay (Barrowford), vi, 542, 544 
Blackay, fam., see Blakey 
Blackborne, see Blackburn 
Blackbrook (Catterall), vii, 323 
Blackbrook (Chorley), vi, 129 
Blackburn, vi, 230, 233”, 234, 235- 


49; vii, 79”, 118, 305”; adv., 
vi, 239; chant., vi, 494”; char., 
vi, 243 ; ch., vi, 238-9, 247, 420; 
man., vi, 245; mkts. and fairs, 
vi, 237, 238, 247; Nonconf., vi, 
248; pks., vi, 247; Rom. Cath., 
vi, 249; schs., vi, 243, 247, 288 


Blackburn, brook, vi, 250 
Blackburn, deanery, vi, 234 
Blackburn, hund., vi, 230 
Blackburn, wap., vi, 231 
Blackburn (Blackbume, Blackburn- 


shire, Blakeburn), Ad. de, vi, 
26 M, 239, 240, 245, 246 , 253 n, 
254M, 258, 259, 261, 262, 266 n, 
276, 297, 326, 327%, 388, 
394”, 396, 397, 397%, 418%, 
475 2, 477 2, 550 2; Vil, 4”, 48 n, 
50, 54%, 57%, 59%, 125%, 
I51”, 193”, 195”; Agnes de, 
vi, 131, 245, 258m, 259, 276, 
397; Alan de, vi, 246”; Alesia 
de, vi, 276; Alice de, vi, 14”, 
131, 276, 277, 397, 556m; Vii, 
4n, 48, 125”, 151”; Amabel 
de, vi, 254”, 258%, 303”; Vi, 
57n; Anne, vi, 237”, 239%; 
Avice de, vi, 26, 212”; Bea- 
trice de, vi, 245, 326, 327, 388, 
396”, 397; Bridg., vii, 195%; 
Cecilia de, vi, 418”; Edayne 
(Idonea) de, vi, 259, 266”; 
Edw., vii, 136”, 272, 278 Nn; 
Ellen (de), vi, 291”; vu, 50%, 
272; Eliz., vi, 398” i vii, 142, 
195”; Emma de, vi, 245%; 
Eve de, vii, 114”, 125”; Gilb. 
de, vi, 239”, 345; Grace, vii, 
195”; Hen. de, vi, 239, 240%, 
245”, 246”, 258, 259, 260-1, 
262, 266, 276, 291”, 293, 297, 
345, 392, 393%, 394%, 396, 
397 %, 400M, 507; VU, 15, 54%, 
58m, 114M, 125M, 151M, 193%, 
195”; Isabel de, vi, 218%; 
Jas., vii, 195 2, 239 #5 Janet, vii, 
j21m; Joan (de), vi, 131, 276, 
397, 398”; vii, 278”; John de, 
vi, 26 2, 131, 212 m, 238 m, 245%, 


44 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Blackburn (cont.) 
258, 258, 259, 27%, 291 N, 293, 
296, 327”, 397, 398”, 405%, 
477 %, 556; Vu, 4”, 44.7, 597, 
100m, 114m, 125", 195M, 272, 
275 n, 328; Kath., vil, 289”; 
Marg. (de), vi, 91”, I00”, 131, 
279, 299, 397; Vil, 272, 272; 
Margery de, vi, 26"; Mary de, 
vii, 15; Pet., vii, 142”, 289”; 
Ralph, vi, 65”; Rich. (de), vi, 
I4m, 26n, loon, 143, 2467, 
397", 398n; vii, 50”, 577, 
I2I m, 142, 142”, 272, 278n; 
Rob. (de), vi, 259, 266”, 397%, 
5522, 5532, 555”, 556"; Vil, 
100 7, 144, 195”, 313 n, 3287; 
Rog. de, vi, 26 ”, 240; vii, 113”; 
Thos., vi, 321; vil, 44", 57%, 
175, 272; Will. (de), vi, 14%, 
26n, 218 n, 235m, 237 Nn, 258n, 
261”, 290, 296, 398%, 556”; 
vii, 50”, 57”, 239”; fam., vii, 
304 

Blackburn and East Lancs. In- 
firmary, vi, 247 

Blackburn Grammar School, vi, 263 

Blackburn Orphanage (Wilpshire), 
vi, 326, 334 

Blackburnshire, fam., see Black- 
burn 

Black Carr (Trawden), vi, 551 

Black Clough Head (Trawden), vi, 


552 

Blackearth (Ribbleton), vii, 106 ” 

Blackeburne, see Blackburn 

Blackedge, man., vi, 233 ” 

Blackewode, see Blackwood 

Blackgate Lane End (Tarleton), vi, 
119” 

Blackgreve (Ribchester), vii, 65 ” 

Blackgroove (Trawden), vi, 552 

Black Hall (Chipping), vii, 27 

Blackhall (Blakehall), man. (Goos- 

nargh), vii, 199 

Black Hameldon, see Hameldon Hill 

Black Hate, brook, vi, 204 ” 

Blackhorde (Cuerden), vi, 28 

Blackhouse (Briercliffe), vi, 469 ” 

Blackhouse Lane (Briercliffe), vi, 
469 n, 471 0 

Blackhurst, Pet., vi, 17; Thos., 
vi, 17 

Blacklache (Garstang), vii, 332 ” 

Blacklache (Little Carleton), vii, 
229n 

Blacklache (Preesall), vii, 257 

Blacklache (Studlehurst), vi, 324” 

Blacklache, Little (Woodplump- 
ton), vii, 288 n 

Blacklache (Blacklach, Blacklidge), 
Abra., vi, 15 »; Ad. (de), vi, 11 2, 
15; Aubrey, vi, 15”; Chris., 
vi, 77”; Edw., vi, 81; Hen., 
vi, 36; John de, vi, 15, 157; 
Marg., vi, 16; Margery, vi, 15; 
Nich., vi, 12”, 152; Ralph, vi, 
7, 160; Rob., vi, 36”; Thos., 
vi, 5”; Will, vi, 15”, 16, 36, 


50; fam., vii, 126; see also 
Blackledge 

Blacklache-hevid (Eccleshill), vi, 
279 Nn 


Blacklache House, see Leyland Hall 

Black Lane End (Colne), vi, 523 

Blackledge, John, vii, 195; Will 
vii, 195; see also Blacklache 

Blackley, man., 233” 

Blacklidge, see Blacklache 

Black Moor (Mawdesley), vi, 96 

Black Moss (Chipping), vii, 29 ” 

Black Moss Water, vi, 518, 519 

Blacko (Barrowford), vi, 527 n, 542, 
534%, 544 

Blacko Hill (Barrowford), vi, 542 


"? 


Blacko Tower, see Malkin Tower 

Blacko Water, vi, 519 

Blackpool, vii, 79 7, 80, 174, 176, 
242, 243, 247, 248, 250, agric., 
vii, 243; Jews, vii, 251; mkt. 
and fairs, vii, 248, 251; Non- 
conf., vii, 251: old cottages, vil, 
242; sch. vii, 243; Rom. 
Cath., vii, 251 

Blackrod, man., vi, 320 

Blackscarr Croft, see Black Carr 

Black’s Cross (Barrowford), vi, 542 

Blackshaw (Penwortham), vi, 57 ” 

Blackshawbrook, vi, 70” 

Blacksnape (Over Darwen), vi, 269, 
270 

Blackstubheys (Colne), vi, 527 ” 

Blackwater, riv., vi, 235, 244, 249, 
263 

Blackwitthill, man., vi, 233 ” 

Blackwood (Whalley), vi, 521 

Blackwood, Little (Whalley), vi, 


521 

Blackwood Doles (Barrowford), vi, 
543 

Blacoe, Geo., vi, 310%; Marg., vi, 
310; Thos., vi, 237", 310”; 
Will., vii, 178 ” 

Blainscough (Coppull), vi, 224, 227 

Blainscough (Bleynescowe), Ad. de, 
vi, 225, 227”; Aimery de, vi, 
227m; Hen. de, vi, 227”; 
Isabel de, vi, 227”; John de, 
vi, 227”; Orm de, vi, 2277”; 
Rich. de, vi, 227”; Thos. de, 
vi, 227 n; Will. de, vi, 188 ” 

Blainscough Hall (Standish), vi, 
182 

Blakay, see Blakey 

Blake, John, vi, 432” 

Blakeayke (Winkley), vii, 13 ” 

Blakebroc, Blake brook, see Black- 
brook and Showley brook 

Blakeburn, see Blackburn 

Blakecroft (Altham), vi, 413 ” 

Blakeden, Joan, vii, 17; John, 
vii, I 

Blakefield (Warton), vii, 171 ” 

Blakefield (Shevington), vi, 202 

Blakeflatt (Wilpshire), vi, 335 

Blake Hey (Colne), see Blakey 

Blakelache, see Blacklache 

Blakemelnecroft (Mellor), vi, 262 

Blakemon Syke (Preston), vii, 
130” 

Blakepitte (Eccleshill), vi, 279 ” 

Blakewel-holm, le (Sunderland), vi, 
318 

Blakey (Colne), vi, 526, 527 

Blakey (Blackay, Blakay), Agnes, 
vi, 527”; Alice, vi, 527%”; 
Anne, vi, 527”; Bern., vi, 
527; Chris., vi, 542”; Ellen, 
vi, 527”; Frances, vi, 527”; 
Geoff. de, vi, 525”, 527; Geo., 
vi, 301; Hen., vi, 527”; Isabel, 
vi, 527 ”; Jenet, vi, 527”; Joan, 
vi, 527; John, vi, 527”, 544; 
Lawr., vi, 527%”, 544; Leonard, 
vi, 530; Lettice de, vi, 527%”; 
Marg., vi, 527”; Nich., vi, 527; 
Friscilla, vi, 527”; KRich., vi, 
527”, 530; Rob., vi, 301, 520, 
527”, 530, 534”, 546”; Rog., 
vi, 527 , 534; Sim., vi, 517, 527, 
542, 544, 546”; Thos., vi, 372, 
527; Will., vii, 121”; —, vi, 
524”, 535, fam., vi, 516” 

Blakey Hall (Colne), vi, 523, 527 

Blakey Moor (Blackburn), vi, 246 ” 

Blakhou Hill, see Blacko Hill 

Blaklache, see Blacklache 

Blamire, Rev. Will. B., vi, 274 

Bland, Jas., vii, 86” 

Blashey (Penwortham), vi, 567 


346 


Blasshaw (Penwortham), vi, 58 » 

Blaston, Geoff. de, vi, 357, 357." 

Bleasby, man. (Lincs), vi, 35 » 

Bleasdale (Preston), vii, 68, 141-2; 
ch., vii, 142 

Bleasdale, brook, vii, 27 n 

Bleasdale, Alex., vi, 237”; Jas. 
vii, 142; fam., vi, 380n 

Bleasdale Fells, vi, 379; vii, 27, 
141, 320 

Bleasdale Forest, vi, 230; vii, 141 

Bleasdale Tower (Preston), vii, 142 

Blenesgill (Whittingham), vii, 209 n 

Blesedale, see Bleasdale 

Blewett, Ant., vi, 330; Jane, vi, 
330 

Blews, W., and Sons, vi, 404 

Bleynescowe, see Blainscough 

Blindhurst, vi, 315”; vii, 
141 n, 142” 

Blodhey (Penwortham), vi, 61 

Blome, —, vii, 312 ” 

Blood, Sarah, vi, 394” 

Blore, Geo., vi, 284 

Blount (Albus, Blound, Blund), 
Agnes, vi, 109”; Bald. le, 
vil, 223”; Hen. de (le), vi, 
291 n, 293”; John (le), vi, 66n, 
109 ”; vil, 157; Jordan le, vii, 
52m”; Osbert le, vii, 52”; 
Ralph de (le), vi, 291 n, 293; 
Rob. le, vii, 30”; Siegrith le, 
vii, 52 2; Sim. le, vii, 146; Will. 
le, vii, 110” 

Blue Coat School (Newton), vii, 167 

Blue Stone (Mawdesley), vi, 97 

Blund, see Blount 

Blundel, brook, vii, 117, 121, 124, 


141, 


207 
Blundell, Agnes, vii, toon; Alex., 


vii, 126”; Alice, vii, 100n, 
260”; Anne, vi, 133”; Eliz., 
vii, 100”; Ellen, vii, toon; 


Emma, vi, 302; Hen., vi, 222; 
vii, 100”, 260”; Jas., vi, 199; 
Joan, vii, 100 ”; John, vii, 100, 
I20 ”, 125 n, 126 n, 182 ”; Nich., 
vi, 220, 302; Pat., vii, 182; 
Rich., vi, 302, 445”; vii, 98n, 
100 ”, 120”; Rob., vi, 20; vi', 
Ioon, 121”; Rog., vii, 1207, 
126”; Thos., vi, 199”; Will, 
vii, 100”, I20n, 125%, 126n, 


182, 182”; —, vii, 32; fam., 
vi, 28; vii, 102 

Blyndehurst, see Blindhurst 

Blyth (Blythe), Agnes de, vii, 


301 n; Geoft., vii, 265 n; Warine 
de, vii, 301 ” 
Boar’s Head (Barton), vii, 128 » 
Boar’s Head (Standish), vi, 192 
Boatfield (Brockholes), vii, 111 n 
Boathouse Farm (Ribchester), vu, 


14, 50 

Boathousefield (Ribchester), vii, 

8n 

Bobbin and clog-sole works, vi, 
326 

Bocher, see Bourchier 

Bodel, Joan de, vi, 482 2; Rob. de, 
vi, 482” 

Bodkin, Will., vii, 13 

Boeland, see Bowland 

Boggart House Farm (Newsham), 
vii, 206” 

Bogland, Cecily de, vi, 559”; 
Rob. de, vi, 559” 

Bohun, John de, vi, 7; see also 
Bowen : 
Boilton (Boylton) estate (Grim- 

sargh), vii, 90 . 
Boilton Spa (Grimsargh), vii, 108 
Boilton Wood (Grimsargh), vii, 108 
Bold, Alice de, vi, 48”; Geoff., vi, 

277; Grace, vi, 16%, 33, 71", 


Bold (cont.) . ” 
vii, 230; Hen., vi, I95”; vii, 
83, 86; John (de), vi, 48%, 
202 0; vii, 83”, 85, 180 n, 181 n, 
298 n; Kath., vi, 277; Lancelot, 
vii, 230; Maud, vii, 5; Rich., 
vii, 334 2; Sibyl, vi, 195 ”, 254; 
Will. de, vi, 254; Miss, vii, 
243; fam., vi, 151 

Bold Venture Park (Over Darwen), 


vi, 274 : 

Bolingbrook (Bolin, Bolkin Brook) 
(Ribchester), vii, 48”, 64” 

Bolland, see Bowland 

Bollard, Jas., vi, 519; Marg., vi, 
519; Rich., vi, 519 

Bolleron, see Bolron 

Bolon-wray (Kirkland), vii, 313 », 

14, 315 : 

Bolothorncroft, vi, 69 ” 

Bolron (Bolleron), Rob., vii, 6; 
Will., vii, 120”, 265 

Bolter, Chas., vi, 270; Harold, vi, 
270 

Bolton, Ad., vi, 241, 255, 256, 257; 
Agnes de, vi, 253”; Anselm, vi, 
81 2; Cecily (de), vi, 256, 406 x ; 
vii, 16”; Edw., vi, 239, 242 n, 


243”; Eliz., vi, 237”, 256; 
Ellen (de), vi, 225”, 335”; vii, 
150”; Emota de, vi, 256; 


Geoff. de, vi, 256; Geo., vi, 251; 
Hen. de, vi, 332”, 335, 335%; 
Jas., vi, 438; vii, 32”, 21117”; 
Jane, vi, 257; Joan de, vi, 2257; 
vii, 125”; John (de), vi, 817, 
200 ”, 225m, 250, 250; vii, 16”, 
32”, 53”, 125, 127m, I50n; 
Jos., vi, 96”; Kath. (de), vi, 
256; vii, 211”; Lancelot, vi, 
257; vii, 65”; Marg. (de), vi, 
335%; vii, 99m, 125; Margery 
de, vi, 208; Matilda, vi, 256; 
Matth., vii, 99 2; Nich. (de), vi, 
208 n, 256, 257, 335 ”; Vii, 211 7”; 
Rich. (de), vi, 253 ”, 256, 335; 
vii, 31, 32, 108 x; Rob. (de), vi, 
235M, 239, 244, 256, 258, 259, 
260, 262, 332, 335, 335%, 451; 
vii, 125”; Rog. (de), vi, 208, 
225 m, 256, 400 u ; vii, 16 n, 532”; 
Thos., vii, 32, 85; Will. (de), vii, 
41, 136m, 147; —, vil, 58”; 
fam., vi, 246, 251, 252”, 326; 
see also Boulton 

Bolton Abbey (Yorks), vi, 58 

Bolton-by-Bowland (Yorks), vi, 361 

Bolton Field (Standish), vi, 194 ” 

Bolton Green (Charnock Richard), 
vi, 204 

Bolton Hall (Salesbury), vi, 257 

Bolton Houses (Treales), vii, 178 

Bolton-le-Moors, vi, 58 ” ; vii, 79 ”, 
270” 

Bolton-le-Sands, vii, 112 n, 222 

Bombay, Walt. R. Pym, bp. of, vii, 
217 : 

Bond (Buynde), Augustine, vi, 
222; Eliz., vil, 225; Rich., vi, 
222; Rog., vi,9z2”; Thos., vi, 88 

Bonds (Garstang), vii, 291, 292 n, 
293, 304, 305, 315, 318; Noncontf., 
vii, 320; Rom. Cath., vii, 320 

Bondyard (Padiham), vi, 493 

Bonel, Quenilda, vi, 73 x; Rob., vi, 
73”; fam., vi, 69” 

Boniface, archbp. of Canterbury, 
vii, 264” Am kj xh 

Bonk, Chas., vi, 262; John, vi, 
202” 

Bonner, Edm., vii, 42 ” 

Bonney, Will., vii, 225 

Boot, Agnes del, vii, 157”; Rich. 
del, vii, 157 1 ; Rob. del, vii, 157 ” 

Booth, Agnes (Annes), vi, 377”; 


INDEX 


Booth (cont.) 

vii, 258, 258”; Alice, vi, 122; 
vii, 258”; Anne, vii, 258”; Bar- 
bara, vii, 258 » ; Chas., vii, 258 1, 
259; Douce, vii, 2587; Edw., 
vi, 407”; Fran., vii, 258; Sir 
Geo., vii, 76; Joan, vi, 305; 
Sir John, vi, 57%, 513”; vii, 
I4rm; John (del), vi, 305, 548; 
vil, 2572, 258; Jordan del, vi, 
548; Juliana del, vi, 548; Maud 
del, vi, 548; Oliver del, vi, 548 ; 
Rob., vi, 122, 127 ”, 4502; Rog., 
vil, 258”; Thos., vi, 3772, 
404 7 ; vii, 258, 260 n ; Rev. Will, 
bp., vi, lla Will., vi, 467 , 
495 %, 490; —, vi, 524 n n 

Booth House (Colne), vit is 

Boothhurst (Chipping), vii, 30 2 

Boothman, Rich., vi, 489; —, vi 
513” 

Boothroyds (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 406 

Booths, Higher, vi, 349, 431, 433- 
5; char., vi, 4353 ch., vi, 435; 
forest, vi, 434; ind., vi, 434; 
Nonconf., vi, 435 

Booths, Lower, vi, 349, 431, 435- 
6; ch., vi, 436; fair, vi, 436; 
Nonconf., vi, 436; Rom. Cath., 
vi, 436 

Bootle, vii, 285 

Bootle, Edw. W., vi, 31; Rich. 
W., vi, 102 ; Sir Thos., vi, 102 ”, 
173; Thos., vi, 31”; Wilbra- 
ham, vi, 32 

Borayns (Greenhalgh with Thistle- 
ton), vii, 180” 

Bornes Clough (Cliviger), vi, 480 ” 

Borset, Walt., vi, 496 

Borughams in the How (Longton), 
vi, 71” 

Bosco, see Boys 

Bosden (Bowland), vii, 34 ” 

Boseburn, see Bezza brook 

Boseden, Hen. de, vi, 261, 262; 
Will. de, vi, 261, 262 

Boss, Thos. B., vii, 204 

Boss Head (Colne), vi, 524” 

Bostock, Anne, vi, 468”; Thos., 
vii, 87 n, 88x 

Boston, Will. de, vii, 13 ” 

Boswell, Alice, vi, 498; Eliz., vi, 
498; John, vi, 497”; Will, vi, 
497 . . 

Boswell Heys (Haslingden), vi, 431” 

Botany Bay (Chorley), vi, 129 

Botden, see Bottin 

Boteler, Ad., vii, 171, 172%”; 
Agatha, vii, 241”; Agnes (le), 
vi, 154%; Vil, 241 ”, 249 N, 253 7, 
272 n, 274 ”; Alice (le), vi, 397 ” ; 
vii, 4”, 179 N, 266 n, 274, 2772, 
280, 282, 313, 321%”; Aline, 
vii, 171; Amery (Emery) le, 
vi, 149-50; vii, 62 , 248, 250”; 
Anne, vii, 274”, 275; Avice le, 
vii, 172”; Beatrice, vii, 274”; 
Cecily (le), vii, 241 ”, 249 ”, 254, 
280n; Clemency le, vii, 254; 
Eda le, vii, 172 ~; Edm. (le), vii, 
176 N, 179 N, 241 N, 274 Nn, 282 N ; 
Edw., vii, 314”; Eleanor (le), 
vii, 16, 176, 275; Eliz. (le), vi, 
154”; Vii, 210”, 241%, 274, 
274 N, 275, 313 ”, 314”; Ellen le, 
vii, 240”, 241 n, 314”; Emma 
le, vii, 322”; Eustace le, vii, 
172”; Geoff. (le), vii, 189%, 
274%; Godith le, vii, 172”; 
Grace, vii, 275 ; Hamon (Hamlet) 
le, vi, 37; vii, 113; Hen. (le), vi, 
262; vii, 179”, 193%, 230%, 
240, 248%”, 274M, 275, 321%, 
322 n, 323”; Isabel (le), vi, 458, 
509%; vii, 240”, 248%, 274, 


347 


? 


Boteler (cont.) 
275; Ivetta le, vii, 171”, Jas. 
(le), vi, 33”, 71m, 170n; vii, 
170”, 178m, 241m, 253, 274, 
281 n, 322, 323m, 329; Joan 
de, vi, 154 n, 302; vii, 273, 274, 
274; Sir John, vi, 93 2, 170 n, 
397”; vii, 4, 4m, 5, 169n, 
193”, 215”, 274, 313”; John 
(le), vi, 33”, 154, 305%; vii, 
3, 152”, 168m", 170n, 1777n, 
180 n, 183, 198, 210n, 227 Nn, 
234, 241 nN, 253”, 264, 266, 
270, 272, 274, 275, 282 n, 313, 
314”, 321; Kath., vii, 274”; 
Mabel (le), vii, 154, 171 n, 179”, 
249 n, 274; Marg. (le), vii, 241 », 
257, 258m, 313”; Margery (le), 
Vl, 154”; vii, 176”, 274; 
Martin, vii, 1712; Maud le, vi, 
103”; Sir Nich. (le), vi, 33, 
154; vil, 16, 163m”, L169n, 
180 n, 193 ”, 277 ”, 281 n; Nich. 
(le), Vl, 33, 34%, 63 nN, 103”, 
105”, 131”, 140, 154”, 170n, 
458, 509”; vil, 168m, 169n, 
179”, 181m, 189, 193, 193”, 
227M, 240M, 241 nN, 249 Nn, 253, 
253”, 254%”, 269, 270, 272n, 
273%, 274, 275, 277, 280n, 
309”, 314, 323”; Quenilda 
le, vii, 171, 172; Sir Rich. le, 
vi, 34”, 120n, 262; vii, 169 n, 
1807, 229m, 268n, 273, 279, 
282, 321 n, 331.n; Rich. (le), vi, 
33%, 37, 71, 103, 106, 154”; 
vu, 52%, 92H, 126”, 1527, 
154, 169, 170”, I71, 172%, 
179”, 180n, 189 n, 193, 193”, 
227”, 229N, 238m, 240, 2407, 
241M, 2470, 249M, 254, 254n, 
257, 258n, 272, 273, 274%, 
275, 277, 279%, 280, 281%, 
282 N, 303 M, 313 n, 314 n, 323%, 
325; Rob. (le), vii, 314 ”, 322”; 
Rog. le, vi, 105”; vii, 171, 
172 ”, 325; Sibyl (le), vii, 246 x, 
249; Siegrith, vii, 171; Steph. 
(le), vi, 105”; vii, I7I, 172”; 
Sir Theobald, le, vii, 241”; 
Theobald (le), vii, 145, 1542, 
156, 176, 178, 180n, 240n, 
241 n, 254, 274; Sir Thos. (de), 
vii, 98, 107”, 249”, 323%”; 
Thos. (le), vi, 103 ”, 104”; vii, 
I7OM, I7I, I90n, 280n, 314”; 
Walt. le, vii, 273; Sir Will. (le), 
vi, 33%”, 62%”, 262; vii, 241 7, 
242, 268n, 273, 280”; Will. 
(le), vi, 37, 140”, 150, 169”; 
vii, 63%”, 113, 154”, I71n, 
179”, 181 nN, 193 n, 215 nN, 238 n, 
240, 241, 244", 2460, 247, 
247, 248, 249, 250, 253M, 
254%, 273, 274, 282, 313, 
314”, 323”; fam., vi, I51; see 
also Butler 

Botham, Ad. de, vi, 131 ” 

Botiler, see Boteler and Butler 

Botreux, Eliz. de, vii, 301”; Sir 
Will. de, vii, 301 ” 

Bottin (Worsthorne), vi, 474 

Bottin (Botden, Bottedene, Bottes- 
dene), Ad. de, vi, 457%”, 474%, 
475 2, 477 %; Gilb. de, vi, 477 ” 

Bottin Butts (Worsthorne), vi, 


477 2 ; 
Bottin Clough (Worsthorne), vi, 
475”, 477% : ; 
Bottoms, the (Howick), vi, 66” — 
Boughton, Ann, vii, 82; Mary, vii, 
82 ; 
Bouke, Marg., vi, 277 ”; Thos., vi, 
2771 
Bouland, see Bowland 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Boulandwra, see Bolon-wray 

Boulogne, Steph., ct. of, see Stephen, 
king; Will., ct. of, vii, 117 

Boulsworth, ill, vi, 230, 524%, 
545, 552 

Boulton, Arth. R., vi, 174; Edw., 
vi, 251; Geo., vil, 291 2; Hen., 
Ni, S475 Rob., vii, 2917; Rog., 
vi, 2987; Thos., vi, 447; VU, 
32; see also Bolton 

Bounder Stone (Trawden), vi, 552 

Boundes, the (Nether Wyresdale), 
vii, 303 

Bour, see Bower and Burgh 

Bourchier, Ld. John, vi, 134 

Bourchier (Bocher), Agnes, vii, 
227; Thos., vii, 227” 

Boure, see Bower and Burgh 

Bourne (Bourn, Burn, Burne), Cor- 
nelius, vil, 2537; Sir Jas., vii, 
259; ‘Tas., vii, 259; Sir Jas. Di 
vii, 259; ‘Jane, vii, 2537; John, 
vi, "80; vii, 200, 253; Pet., vu, 
259; Thos., vii, 34”, 30; W il, 
vi, 358; see also Byrne 

Bourne-May, Harriet A., vil, 259; 
Jas. Wie S:.Vil, 259 

Bourne Naze, see Burnt Naze 

Bowden, Charlotte, vi, 267, 208 » ; 
Hen., vi, 2057; John, vi, 267, 
268; John P. B., vi, 208 

Bowen, Will, vii, 53; see also 
Bohun 

Bower (Bour, Boure, Bure), Ad. de 
Ja (del), vi, 60 1; vii, 308 7 ; Alice 
del, vui, 3087; Cecily de la, vi, 
bon; Hen. del, vi, 60n; Mare. 
vil, 310”; Pet., vi, Igin; Rob. 
de (la), vi, 60”, 66; vii, 308; 
Sabina de, vi, 66 ; Sam., vi, 265 ; 
Thos., vi, 60”; vu, 310; See 
also Burgh 

Bowers House (Nateby), vii, 310, 
Sri, 312 

Bowgrave (Barnacre), vii, 315; 
cross, Vil, 311 ” 

Bowkerfield (Billington), vi, 330” 

Bowkerflat (Bispham), vi, 101 

Bowland (Bowland with Leagram), 
Vi, 233 ”, 349, 379; Vii, 2, loz” 

Bowland, Little, vi, 379, 380; vu, 


270" 
Bowland, forest (chase), vi, 230, 
276, 349, 32, 379 
Bowland, Ad. de, vii, 62 2; Agnes, 
vii, 62; Rog., vi, 519; Thos., 
vil, 297 
Bowley, hill, vi, 337 
Bowling Green Mill (Over Darwen), 
vi, 270 
Box, Anne, vii, 114”; John, vii, 
IIlgn 
Boyce’s Brook (Ribchester), vii, 45 
Boylton, see Boilton 
Boys (Bosco, Boyes), Alex. de, vil, 
49m; Alice (de), vi, 406m; vil, 
4on: Anne, vii, 49”; Edw., 
49 n; Ellis, vii, 49 » ; Grace hes 
, 335-6, "408 n; vii, 49; Hen., 
x 33, 406 N, 408 » ; vi, 49 n, 
; John (de), vi, 335-4, 406 n, 
pie nm; vi, 447, os 49”; Jor- 
dan de, Vil, 49 m7 Margery de, 
V1, 32"; Nich. de, Vay 49.925 
Rich. (de), vi, 32 ”, 531”; vii, 
48 n, 121. n; Rob. (de), vi, 458 2; 
vii, 46 n, 48, 49 n, 205”; Will. 
(de), vii, 45”, 49 n ; see also Wood 
Boys Bridge (Ribchester), vii, 51 ” 
Boys House (Ribchester), vii, 49 7, 
50 
Brabazon, Sir Edw., vi, 49”; vii, 
278 
Brabin, John, vi, 380; vii, 26 
Brabinfield (Goosnargh), vii, 199 


Braboner, Will. vii, 288”; fam., 
vii, 212 

Braboner’s House (Comberhalgh), 
vii, 212" 

Bracebridge, Maud de, vi, 109, 
163 »; Will. de, vi, 109, 163 ” 

Bracken Hill (Trawden), vi, 551 

Brackenlea (Nether Wytesdale) , 
vii, 304” 

Brackinscal (Singleton), vii, 183 

Brackley, Alice, vi, 93 ” 

es (Habergham Eaves), vi, 


Grades (Goosnargh), vii, 198, 
198” 

Braddeth, Rob. de, vi, 497 ” 

eee man. (Billington), vi, 
325, 3 

Braddyll | (Bradehull, Bradhill, Brad- 
hul), Alice de, vi, 330, 330”; vii, 
57”; Amery de, vii, 57”; Anne, 
vi, 3537; Cecily de, vi, 330”; 
Dodding, vi, 331, 383 2; Dorothy, 
vi, 336, 383 ; Vu, 193%, 322”; 
Edw, vi, 251, 331 2, 336, 359”, 
383, 387”, 305%, 498, 4997, 
505 7, 500", 528", 560%; Vii, 
327"; Eliz. vi, 383”; Geoff. de, 
vi, 326 n, 330"; Hen. de, vi, 
329, 330, 335; Jenet, vi, 383”; 
Joan, vi, 331; John (de), vi, 
251, 317, 330, 331, 332, 335) 336, 
337”, 367", 382, 383, 387, 
394 n, 398”, 468m, 498, 499”, 
506, 547, 550”; vu, 57%, 254, 
272, 3277; J., vi, 332; Lettice, 
vi, 505”; Marg., vi, 322, 331, 
383, 383 n; Rich. (de), vi, 331, 
497 ", 528 2; vil, 57”, 322”; 
Rog. (de), vi, 329, 330”; Sarah, 
vi, 383; Thos. (de), vi, 307, 322, 
3307, 331, 354, 355”, 358n, 
383 ”, 387, 388, 452; vii, 577; 
Walt. de, vi, 330, 335; Will. de, 
vi, 339, 335 25 vii, 57”; Wilson, 
vi, 331, 425; Wilson G., vi, 383; 
—, vi, 340”, 387, 395; fam., vi, 
75” 

Bradehurst, see Broadhurst 

Bradelee, see Bradley 

Bradeley (Clayton-le-Dale), vi, 258” 

Braderidding (Read), vi, 506 ” 

Braderode (Wheatley), vii, 32” 

Bradford (Howick), vi, 66”; mill, 
vi, 66, 67. n, 68n 

Bradford, Hugh de, vii, 15; John, 
vi, 358%; vii, 297; Rob. de, vi, 
60n 

Bradford Brigstead (Chatburn), vi, 
372-0 

Bradfordeghes (Bradford Heghes, 
Bradfordheies), (Clitheroe), vi, 
305 Nn 

Bradhagh, Bradhaleigh, see Broad- 
halgh 

Bradhul, see Braddyll 

Bradhurst, see Broadhurst 

Bradkirk (Medlar), vii, 153; man., 
vii, 156, 176” 

Bradkirk (Bredkirk), Ad. de, vi, 
201 2; vii, 154, 154 ”, 156, 167 n, 
169 n, 179”, 180 n, 212 n, 216 Nn, 
227, 283", 284”; Agnes de, 
vii, 316; Alice de, vi, 225”; 
vii, 156”, 169n, 216, 257; 
Amabil (de), vii, 156, 2837, 
284n; Capt. Cuth., vi, 361; 
Edm. de, vii, 156 7, 2167; Eliz., 
vli, 161%; Ismania de, vii, 156, 
180 7; Jas., vii, 1587; John de, 
vi, 201”; vii, 151”, 154, 156, 
160 7, 180 n, 212 n, 216 n, 227 Nn, 
233, 241, 257, 313, 316; 
Margery de, vii, 192"; Mary, 
vil, 150”; Olive de, vii, 156n; 


348 


Bradkirk (cont.) 
Rich., vii, 161 #; Rog. de, vii, 
1547, 1567; Thos. de, vii, 111m, 
192%, 283, 283n; Will. ‘de, vi, 
225m; vii, 150m, 173", 227n, 
313 7, 316, 329 
Bradley (Chipping), vii, 34, 64 
Bradley (Eccleston), vi, 162, 163 » 
Bradley (Hapton), vi, 456, str 
Bradley (Livesey), vi, 288 
Bradley (Marsden), vi, 536, 537, 


54° 

Bradley (Standish-with-Langtree), 
vi, 198 

Bradley (Tockholes), vi, 2830 

Bradley (Walton-le- Dale), vi, 295 

Bradley (Wheatley Carr Booth), 
mill, vi, 521 

Bradley, brook (beck), vi, 192, 222, 

457, 511”; vii, 34” 

Bradley, Ad. de, vi, SII Mm; vii, 
58 n, 65; Alex., vii, 34, 86n; 
Alice de, vii, 58 n: Amice de, vii, 
Ibn; Anne (de), vi, 205; vii, 
58”; Avice de, vi, 511”; vii, 
582; Edm., vii, 58, 58; Edw., 
vii, 187, 139, 160, 161 ; Eliz., vi, 
278 ; vii, 18, 35; Ellen, vi, 322; 
vii, 35, 36m", 160”; Ellis de, vi 
5trm; Emma (de), vi, 294; vii, 
34”; Grace, vii, 119”; Hen., 
vii, 35”, 587; Jas., vii, 32, 36, 
152”, 158n, 159 m, 160, 161 n, 
174m”; Jane, vil, 35; Joan, vii, 
35; John (de), vi, 24”, 51%, 
89 n, 278, 294, 322, 379 n, 538"; 
vii, 19, 19, 28m, 32, 35, 47%, 
58n, 65n, 126n, 158N, 159n, 
160, 161 m, 170m, 200; Marg. 
(de), vii, 28”, 33%, I60n; 
Matth. de, vi, 538”; Miles, vii, 
35; Pet. de, vi, 538”; Rich. 
(de), vi, 248”, 507 , 511 ”; vii, 
18, 19, 33 2, 34 ”, 47 1, 64 n, 160 ; 
Rob., vil, 34”, 35”, 65”; Rog. 
de, vi, 507 , 511 n; vii, 18, 32 n, 
34”; Sim. de, vii, 652; Thos, 
(de), vi, 205, 294, 397”; vii, 18, 
33”, 35, 59M, 05m, 66N, 19H, 
126, 160n, 222; Will. (de), 
vii, 19, 50, 58”, 65n, I60n; 
fam., vii, 57” 

Bradleybone (Alston), vii, 63 

Bradleybroke (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 
290 

Bradley Hall (Eccleston), vi, 163 

Bradley Hall (Standish-with-Lang- 
tree), vi, 192” 

Bradley Hall (Thornley), vii, 32, 35 

Bradley House, vii, 317 ” 

Bradley Syke (Chipping), vii, 34” 

Bradridding, see Broadridding 

Bradshagh, see Bradshaw 

Bradshaw (Cliviger), vi, aS 

Bradshaw (Stanworth), vi, 4 

Bradshaw (Bradshagh, Battal, 
Ad. de, vi, 197”, 198m, vil, 
166 n ; Alice, vi, 285, 286, 286n; ; 
vii, 166 2; Anne, vi, 406 1; vii, 
275; Cecily de, vi, 178, 194%, 
198; Eleanor, vi, 277; Elias, 
vi, 277; Eliz., vi, 209m, 483; 
Ellen, vi, 198; vii, 166”, 
Fran. T., vi, 558 ; Geo., vii, 329 %; 
Gilb., vi, 198 ” ; Grace, vi, 198"; 
Hawise de, vi, 195 n; Hen. (de), 
vi, 198 n, 205 n, 483; vii, 109"; 
Huard de, vii, 109”; Huctred 
de, vii, 109”; Hugh, vi, 277: 
Jas., vi, go, 102m, 200 2, 255, 
406 n; vii, 85.7; Jane, vi, 4On; 
John (de), vi vi, 197 ", 198", 277, 
349; Vii, 166, 292m, 329", 
Kath., vi, 198 n, 218”; Lawr., 
vi, 128, 277; Mabel de, vi, 109 *, 


vi, 


Bradshaw (cont.) 

197%, 221%; vil, log”; Marg., 
vi, 198 », 277; Vu, 106”; Mary 
de, vi, 424; Nath., vi, 55 ; Nich., 
vi, 277; Vii, 85; Pet., vi, 160, 
188 ; Ralph (de), vi, 197 ”, 198 x, 
199, 218”; Rich. (de), vi, 178, 
198 m, 290; vii, 166”; Rob. de, 
vi, 198”; vii, 109%; Rog. de, 
vi, 40”, 194”; vil, 280”; Thos. 
(de), vi, 14m, 178, 178”, 277, 
490; Sir Will. de, vi, 109 » ; Will 
(de), vi, 198 m, 228, 277, 424; 
vii, 166 2; —, Vi, 55, 127; fam., 
vii, 260 

Bradshaw, brook, vi, 269 

Bradshaw Hey (Myerscough), vu, 
139” 

hesdshays see Bradshaw 

Bradwell, Sam., vi, 80 ” 

Braggar’s tenement (Ribbleton), 
vil, 117% 

Braithwaite, John, vii, 142 

Bramley, man., vi, 233 ” 

Bramley, Geo., vi, 160 » 

Bramston, bp., vii, 161 

Brand, Jas., vil, I4im, 3247; 
Marg., vii, 324”; Rich., vii, 
324”; Will., vii, 324” 

Brandlewood (Penwortham), vi, 
612” 

Brandreth, Jos. P., vi, 187, 190; 
Will. H., vi, 183 ”, 190 

Brandstock (Wheelton), vi, 50” 

Brandwood (Bacup), vi, 439 ” 

Brandwood (Withnell), vi, 49 ” 

Brandwood, Eliz., vi, 48”; Jas., 
vi, 48”; Lawr., vi, 48”, 4137”; 
fam., vi, 213 

Brantwood, Mary, vi, 150”; Rog., 
vi, 150” 

Brasses, vi, 85, 118, 122 , 126, 152, 
158, 165”, 186, 297, 354, 379, 
389 %, 415, 495, 533; Vil, 23, 82, 
203, 218 nm, 221, 245, 295 nN, 307 n 

Bray, Nich., vii, 265; fam., vii, 


133% 

Braydel, see Braddyl. 

Brayton (Yorks), vi, 421 

Breakell-Moss, Alf. M., vi, 72 

Breame, Rich., vi, 298 

Brechou, see Brethough 

Breck (Poulton), vii, 225 

Breck of Water (Worsthorne), vi, 
477” 

Brecton, see Broughton 

Bredekirk, see Bradkirk 

Bredeland (Fulwood), vii, 138 

Bredenham (Kirkland), vii, 314 ” 

Bredeoak, see Brideoak 

Bredkirk, see Bradkirk 

Breeke, Will. de, vi, 72 ” 

Breightmet, man. (Bolton -le - 
Moors), vi, 304 

Brekesgate (Longton), vi, 70 ” 

Brendehurst (Mellor), vi, 263 

Brendeyerd (Ribchester), vii, 48 

Brennand, riv., vi, 247 | 

Brennand, Rob., vi, 371 

Brereclife, Brerecliff, Brereclive, 
see Briercliffe 

Brerecroft (Alston), vii, 63 ” 

Brerecroft, Dyke de, vi, 
Mocock de, vi, 480 

Brerefurlong (Alston), vii, 63 ” 

Brereley (Brierley), Ann, vi, 452; 
John, vii, 224”; Rich., vi, 534; 
Rev. Rog., vi, 452; Rog., vi, 
404”; Thos., vi, 452 

Breres (Brerys), Blanche, vi, 141 ”, 
142; Bridget, vii, 102 ”; Cecily, 
vi, 35%”; vii, 102”; Edm., vii, 
112”; Eliz., vii, 102”; Geoff. 
de, vi, 39”; Hen., vi, 133%, 
142; Jane, vi, 198”; John, vi, 


480 ; 


INDEX 


Breres (cont.) 
51 n, 147, 298 n, 490; vii, loz n; 
Lawr., vi, 130, 219 2; Mary, vii, 
to2m; Oliver, vi, 35”, 61x, 
97”, 102; Rog,, vi, 141 n, 142, 
198n, 220”; Thos., vi, 2167; 
vil, 102 2; Thurstan, vi, 8 ; Will., 
vi, 158; vii, 97 ” 

Brereton, see Bretherton 

Brerewood, Thos., vii, 42 

Brereworth (Berdeworth, Berd- 
wrth), Ad., vi, 77”; Alice de, 
vi, 47; Almarica de, vi, 77S 
Cecily de, vi, 47”; Chas., vi, 
263 n; Evan, vi, 203 7; Hen. de, 
vi, 47,771; Jas., vi, 322,777; 
John (de), vi, 32”, 77”, 170n, 
263”; vil, 324”; Kath., vi, 


32”; Margery de, vi, 772%, 
170m; vii, 324”; Rog. de, vi, 
77”, 249%; Uriel, vi, 77H; 
Will, vi, 32 ” 

Brerys, see Breres 

Bretherton, vi, 58x”, 68m, 81, 


86, 102-8; vii, 173; chant., 
vi, 104”; ch., vi, 108; crosses, 
vi, 103 ; man., vi, 103 ; Nonconf., 
vi, 52, 108; sch., vi, 89, 108 

Bretherton (Brereton, Brotherton), 
Ad. de, vi, 11 n, 70n; Agnes de, 
vi, 107m”, 151”; Alice de, vi, 
107, 227”; Godith de, vi, 
95”; Hen. (de), vi, 70”, 95, 
107”, 227”, 5506”; Hugh, vi, 
7on, 73n; Rev. Humph. W., 
vi, 98, 161; Ingott de, vi, 
1o7”; Isabel, vi, 107”; Joan 
de, vi, 107 ; John (de), 
vi, 95”, 107”, I51”, 357%, 
550”; vil, 123; Marg., de, vi, 
95”, 556”; Margery de, vi, 
107 »; Norris, vi, 21 ; Rich. (de), 
vi, 105”, 553%, 556; Rog. de, 
vi, 95”; Thos. (de), vi, 70, 
107”, 374%”; vii, 213”; Will. 
(de), vi, 21, 95 ”, 98, 107, 159, 
I61; vii, 123, 124, 223; —, vi, 
372 

Brethough (Freckleton), vii, 167” 

Bretland, Reg., vi, 223 ” 

Bretliff, see Briercliffe 

Breton (Briton), Ad., vi, 69”; 
Agnes, vii, Io0Im; Joan, vii, 
125”; John, vi, 66”; vii, 100, 
IoIn; Rog., vi, 66%”; Sim, 
vii, 125”; Will., vii, 132” 

Brettargh, Kath., vi, 189 ” 

Brettestreet (Clitheroe), vi, 365 ” 

Brewer (Bruer), Jane, vu, 2897; 
Marg., vi, 301; Thos., vi, 4477; 
—, vi, 411; vii, 149; fam., vii, 
107 

Brewhouse (Brockholes), vii, 111 ” 

Brex (Leyland), vi, 12 ”, 14, 63” 

Brex (Brexes), Alice de, vi, 147; 
Nich. de, vi, 14; Rich. de, vi, 
103; Thos. de, vi, 14”; Will. 
de, vi, 103 

Briary Furlong (Cottam), vii, 136 ” 

Briches, Rich., vi, 445 

Brickel (Brickell), Rich., vii, 234 ”; 
Rob., vi, 153 

Brick Hall (Eccleston), vi, 165 

Brick manuf., vi, 278, 284, 345, 
490 ; vii, 129 

Bridd (Brid), Gilb., vi, 475 ”; 
Rich., vii, 274 ” : 

Brideoake (Bredeoak), Ralph, vi, 
184, 189, 192 ” 

Bridge, Ad. (del), vi, 438, 468%, 
480, 481; Alice, vi, 438%”; 
Chris., vi, 438”; Fran., vi, 438; 
Joan, vi, 438”; Sir John, vi, 
438”; John, vi, 438”; Jordan, 
vi, 438, 438 2; Otwell, vi, 438”; 


Jot? 


Bridge (cont.) 

Rich. del (at), vi, 397 2, 4761; 
Steph. del, vi, 481; Thos. W., 
vi, 225” 

Bridgeholme (Haslingden), vi, 430” 

Bridgeman, Hen., vi, 153; John, 
vi, 222; Sir Orlando, vi, 222; 
—, bp., vi, 181, 222, 299, 516 

Bridges, fam., see Chandos 

Bridgett, vii, 150 » 

Briercliffe — (Briercliffe-with-Ext- 
wistle), vi, 349, 356”, 441, 444, 
445%, 448, 450, 451", 454, 
457%, 459, 408-71, 489, 492, 
538 ”, 542, 552; agric., vi, 443; 
ch., vi, 473; mans., vi, 232, 233 x, 
469 ; Noncont., vi, 473 

Briercliffe, Almaric de, vi, 470N ; 
Almoria de, vi, 470”; Anabel, 
vi, 469”; Grace, vi, 470n; 
Ilbota, de, vi, 470; Jas., vi, 
469”; John, vi, 469”, 4707; 
Lawr., vi, 470, 470%”, 471, 4733 
Matth. de, vi, 470, 471 »; Maud 
de, vi, 469; Mich. de, vi, 469, 
470; Mocock de, vi, 469; Pet. 
de, vi, 469; Rich. de, vi, 470”; 
Rob. (de), vi, 469, 470, 4707, 
471, 473; Rog. de, vi, 469; 
Thos., vi, 470”; Will, vi, 
409”, 470”; Yacocks de, vi, 
469; —, Vi, 524” 

Brierfield (Marsden), vi, 490, 537, 
540” 

Brierley, see Brereley 

Brigeshaw (Gt. Harwood), vi, 339 

Briggemouridding (Winmarleigh), 
vii, 306 ” 

Brigges, John, vi, 371 

Briggs, Rich., vi, 74” 

Brighfield, vi, 37” 

Brigholme (Marsden), vi, 539 ” 

Brightfold (Wheelton), vi, 49 ” 

Brimmicroft (Hoghton), vi, 36, 46 

Brindle, vi, I, 55, 58%”, 75-81, 
249”; Vil, 79m, 136”; adv., vi, 
76, 79; char., vi, 81; ch., vi, 
78; man., vi, 75; man.-house, 
vi, 75”; Noncont., vi, 81; Rom. 
Cath., vi, 36; St. Helen’s wells, 
vi, 75; sch., vi, 8r 

Brindle, Rob., vi, 237 ”, 273, 274; 
Thos., vi, 290; Will, vi, 161; 
see aiso Burnhull 

Brindle Lodge (Brindle), vi, 75, 77 

Brining, see Bryning 

Brinscall (Withnell), vi, 37%”, 47, 
48 n, 49”; ch., vi, 49 

Brinscall Hall, vi, 49 

Briscoe, Humph., vii, 25; Mich., 
vi, 241 

Bristed, John C., vi, 80 

Britholm (Altham), vi, 413 ” 

Briton, see Breton 

Brixworth, man. (Northants), vi, 
195” 

Broad Arrowhead (Trawden), vi, 
552 2 

Broad Bank (Briercliffe), vi, 470 

Broadclough (Bacup), vi, 439 # 

Broadfield (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 
405, 407 % : ‘ 

Broadfield (Wrightington), vi, 174 ” 

Broadhalgh (Livesey), vi, 285%, 
288 

Broadhead (Accrington), vi, 233 ”, 
424, 468, 492 2 

Broadhead (Chipping), vii, 27 ” 

Broadhead (Goosnargh), vii, I9I, 
193” : 

Broadhead (Ramsgreave), vi, 252 ” 

Broadhurst (Aighton), vii, 13 %, 
18 

Broadhurst 
169 


(Wrightington), vi, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Broadhurst (Bradehurst, Brad- 
hurst), Agnes de, vii, 4m, 18; 
Hen. de, vi, 211”; John, vi, 
217”; Rog., vi, 217 2; Thos. de, 
vi, 306"; vii, gn”, 18,577 

Broadlache (Preston), vu, 99 7 

Broadmeadow (Billington), vi, 331 

Broadmeadow (Salwick), vii, 163 ” 

Broadridding (Dutton), vu, 54”, 


57” 

Broadshabooth, vi, 233 ” 

Broad Slack (Foulridge), vi, 545 ” 

Brochole, Brocholes, Brochols, see 
Brockhall and Brockholes 

Brochton, see Broughton 

Brock, riv., vii, 68, 138, 141, I9I, 
270n 

Brock, Lawr., vi, 281-2; Will, 
vi, 281 

Brockhall (Billington), vi, 325, 330 

Brockhole Bank (Billington), Ni; 
3307 

Brockholehurst (Huncoat), vi, 409 ” 

Brockholes (Eccleshill), vi, 429 7” 

Brockholes (Grimsargh), vii, 37, 72, 
73 n, 76, 79, 80, 83 2, 88 n, 100 n, 
105, 100m, 107m, 108-13, I15, 
116m, 120; bridge, vii, 108, 
112; char., vil, 90; man., vu, 
110; mill, vii, 112 ” 

Brockholes (Over Darwen), vi, 271 
Brockholes, Higher and Lower 
(Grimsargh), vii, 108, I1I, 112 
Brockholes, New and Old, see 
Brockholes, Lower and Higher 
Brockholes, Ad. de, vi, 246 n, 304”; 
vii, 88, 98, 110, III, 1II 2%, 
297 m, 318m, 325; Agnes (de), 
vu, 107m”, 110m, III nm, 210n, 
320 n; Alice de, vii, 110”; Anne, 
vi, 483; vil, 327”; Augustine 
de, vu, 327”; Award de, vi, 
246"; vii, 109, 110 n; Cecily de, 
vii, 110; Chas. de, vii, 327”; 
Chnstiana de, vii, 109 n, 318”; 
Cuthbert, vii, 327; Edm. de, 
vii, 111”, 326”; Edw. de, vi, 
304; vii, 10g9n; Eliz. (de), vi, 
383%; vii, 326, 327"; Ellen 
(de), vii, 98”, 210 n, 326, 3277”; 
Ells de, vii, 109”; Eufemia de, 
vi, 326; Sir Geoff. de, vii, 
326; Geoff. de, vu, I1I 47; 
Gilb. de, vi, 294; Hen. de, vii, 
1o7n, 111”; Isabel (de), vi, 
317; Vil, 314", 326"; Jenet, 
vi, 383”; Joan de, vii, 326; 
John ( (de), vi, 453; Vil, Iogn, 
I1I0, 110”, 111M, 125 Hn, 1867, 
297, 314%, 324, 325, 3207, 
327, 327, 3292; Kath. (Cath.) 
de, vil, 326 n, 3277; Mabel de, 
vii, tog; Marg. de, vii, 111, 
ILI nN, 325 ‘n, 3260 n, 327n; Mary 
(de), vu, 15, 186 n, 327, 3277; 
Maud de, vii, 98 n, 107n; 
Nichola de, vii, 110, III ”, 316 n, 
325, 326; Nich. de, vii, 111, 
Ill”, 113”, 326; Orm de, vii, 
109 ” ; Rich. de, vii, 107 ”, 109 n, 
110»; Rob. de, vii, 111 , 326”; 
Rog. (de), vi, 135; vii, 109, 
IIo, III, III, 210%, 308”, 
316 n, 318, 319”, 324N, 325, 
326, 327", 325m, 330; Thos., 
vi, 1357”, 1997, 383 2; vi, 16, 
113m, 185 n, 298 n, 303 n, 3247, 
327, 327 , 329%, 330; Uctred 
de, vii, 110”; Will. de, vi, 294; 
vii, 98”, Iogm, Ilo”, III 7, 
326 7, 327; Will. F., vii, 319”; 
fam., vii, 299; see also Fitz- 

herbert- Brockholes 
Brockholes Bridge (Samlesbury), 


vi, 303 


Brockhole Syke (Wymondhouses), 
vi, 394.7 

Brock-Hollinshead, Lawr., vi, 281-2 ; 
Will, vi, 281 

Brocklehead (Eccleshill), vi, 279” 

Brocklehurst (Accrington), vi, 424, 
4720 

Brocton, Broctun, see Broughton 

Brodbelt, Rob., vii, 218, 245 

Brodfeld (Walton), vi, 296 

Broghton, Brogton, see Broughton 

Brok, see Brooke 

Brokehole, see Brockhall 

Brokehurst (Extwistle), vi, 471 ” 

Brome, riv., see Brun 

Bromefield Bank (Preston), vu, 
Io0o n 

Bromeley (Sharples), vi, 272” 

Bromley, Geo., vi, 404 7 

Brone, man., see Burn 

Bronley, see Burnley 

Brook, see Brooke 

Brookden, Eliz., vi, 546”; Jas., vi, 
546” 

Brooke (Brok, Brook, Bruch), 
Geoff. del, vi, 315; Hen., vi, 
207”; Hugh del, vi, 315”; 
John, vi, 318; Lawr. del, vi, 
57”; Marg., vi, 207, 207%, 
392 ns Nich. del, vi, 392 2; Sir 
Pet., vi, 139, 148 2, 207; Pet., 
vi, 22, 25, 139, 143, 146, 207 n, 
208; Rich., vi, 20m, 138, 182, 
207, 325 ; Susannah, vi, 25,207 ” ; 
Thos., vi, 207”, 495; Will., vi, 
20n; see also Brookes 

Brooker, John W., vii, 43 

Brookes (Brooks), Rev. John, vi, 
299 ; John, vi, 434; S., vi, 355 7; 
Sir Thos., vi, 434; Thos., vi, 3543 
Will, vi, 355”; See also Brooke 

Brookfield, vi, 68 ‘a; vii, 130” 

Brookhouse (Blackburn), vi, 240 

Brooks (Bleasdale), vii, 142, 142 ” 

Brooks, fam., see Brookes 

Brooksbank, ieee , Vi, 423 »; John, 
vi, 423; —, Vi, 423 

Bmemacid, the = (cuerden). vi, 28 

Broomhurst, Hen. de, vi, 48 ” 

Broomicroft (Hoghton), see Brim- 
microft 

Broomicroft, Alice del, vi, 46”; 
Hugh del, vi, 46” 

Brotherton, see Bretherton 

Broucton, see Broughton 

Broughton (Craven), vi, 544 ” 

Broughton (Preston), vii, 72, 73”, 
76, 79, 83 2, 100 n, 112 Nn, 117-24, 
128”, 129, 137”, 209”, 211 Nn, 
285 n; adv., vil, 123; chap., vii, 
73, 83 0, 87; char., vil, 90, 267 2; 
ch., vii, 77, 90, 117, 121 ; crosses, 
Vil; “L1G, 123% hermitage, vii, 
123”; mans., vii, 117, 185; mills, 
vii, 118 7, 119 n; Rom. Cath., 
vu, 124; sch., vii, 90, 124; wells, 
vii, 117 

Broughton (Brocton), Ad. de, vi, 
66”; Agnes de, vi, 66”; Ellen 
de, vii, 118 x; Grace, vi, 2467; 
Hen., vii, 123; John, vi, 246, 
280n, 517%; Rich. (de), vii, 
126 n, 517”; Rob. de, vii, 1897; 
Rog. de, vii, 126”; Will. de, vii, 
118”; fam., vi, 457” 

Broughton Charitable Society, vii, 
124 

Broughton House (Broughton), vii, 
117, 121 

Broughton Tower (Broughton), vii, 
118-20 

Broun, see Browne 

Brouncker, Edw., vi, 160 

Brounegge, see Brownedge 

Brown, see Browne 


35° 


Brownall, Rob., vii, 204 

Brownbill, Jas., vil, 13; Rob., vii, 
231 n; Thos., VU, 231” 

Brownbirks (Brownbirches), Ellis 
de, vi, 480, 511 ” 

Browne (Broun, Brown, Brun), Ad., 
vi, 303”, 320%, 308 0; Agnes, 
vu, 30”; Alex., vi, 48n; vu, 
167 1; Alice, Vik, jONn, 1o6On; 
Anne, vii, 106”; Sir Ant., vi, 
II, 30, 63, III Mm, 135"; Ant, 
vi, 617, 88, 90%, 109, ll2n, 
116”; vu, 138, 160; Avice, vii, 
52; "Award, vi, 469 ; Bridget, 
vu, 62 n, 106 2, 210; ‘Chnstina, 
vii, 248'n ; Edw., vii, 289m; 
Eliz., vii, 1067, "150", Ijon, 
1740; Ellen, Vii, 106n; Evan, 
Vi, 329; Vii, 30%, 106, LID A, 
113 ”, 136m, 152 n, 167 n, 2130; 
Ewan, vii, 99”, 329”; Geofl., 
vi, 303”; Rev. Geo., vi, 344: 
Geo., vi, 48”; vii, 30n, 99n, 
136, 152m, 167n, 238n, 557; 
Geo. H., vii, 161; Geo. R., vii, 
148; Geo. T. vi, 222; Hen., vi, 
48n; vii, 126 n, 167n, 234 ns 
Isabel, vii, 173”; Jas., vi, 48n, 
225”; vil, 30”, 99M, 106n, 
120”, 166”, 167”, 174; Rev. 
Jas. B., vi, 274; Jane, vi, 329; 
vii, 106”; Janet, vii, 170n; 
Joan, vi, II, 30, 63”, Iogn, 
112”, 113%”, 383%”; vii, 30n, 
160, 197”; John, vi, 199%, 
368 n, 383”; vii, 30n, 136m, 
167, 167”, 170”, 173m, 197”, 
224, 241M, 246, 248; Rev. 
Jonas, vi, 440, 518%”; Jos., vii, 
13; Kath., vii, 106m, 1111”; 
Laura, vii, 106”; Marg., vi, 
383 2; Mary, vi, 48”; Mich., vi, 
469; Osward, vi, 469, 4751”; 
Rich., vi, 299”, 329; vii, 30%, 
106, 106”, 107”, 149, 167 Nn, 
170”, 174m, 210, 223; Gen. 
Rob., see Browne-Clayton ; Rob., 
be 153, 170 n, 320 ”, 342; Thos., 

» 78, 377%; vii, 30%, 210} 
Will, vi, 48 N, 207N, 299n; 
vii, 52 n, 106n, 136”, 165%, 
167 nN, 170N, 1742; —, vii, 218 

Browne-Clayton, Rich, C., vi, 219; 
Gen. Rob., vi, 219 

Brownedge (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 
289, 300 

Brown Edge (Brounegge), dyke 
(Walton-le-Dale), vi, 290 

Brown Hill (Colne), vi, 526” 

Brown Hill (Little Harwood), vi, 
249 

Browning, John, vii, 167; Marg., 
vii, 167 n; Will., vii, 1606” 

Brownlow, earl, vi, 368 

Brownlow, Alice de, vi, 410”; 
Jane, vi, 425»; Lawr., vi, 4252; 
Thos. de, vi, 410” 

Brown Lowe (Over Darwen), vi, 
269 

Brown Moss (Kirkham), vii, 155” 

Brown Moss Side (Kirkham), vii, 


174 

Brownside Bridge (Worsthorne), vi, 

6 

Bie waewend (Brownswood), Will, 
vi, 153, 181 1; vii, 86” 

Brow Spring (Chipping), vii, 20" 

Bruce, see Brus 

Bruch, see Brooke 

Bruchet Gate (Salesbury), vi, 253” 

Brudenell, Eliz., see Buccleuch, 
dchss of: Geo., see Montagu, dk. 
of 

Bruer, see Brewer 

Brumhull, see Brindle 


Brumleye, see Burnley 

Brun, riv., vi, 441, 448, 468, 474, 
477% 478, 484 fk 

Brunahill Cross (Garstang), vii, 

15” a 

Gadden (Haighton), vii, 1257, 
208 n, 209 ” 

Brundeparloc (Chipping), vii, 29 ” 

Brundhill, Brundle, see Brindle 

Brune, man., see Burn 

Brunehill, see Brindle 

Brungerley Bridge (Clitheroe), vi, 
360, 361 : . 

Brungerley Hipping-stones (Clithe- 
roe), vi, 361 

Brunhill, see Brindle 

Brunigg, see Bryning 

Brunley, see Burnley 

Brunne, man., see Burn 

Brinshaw (Burnley), vi, 441, 446, 
448, 4573 AgTiCc., Vi, 443. 

Brunswick (Blackpool), vii, 250” 

Brus, Agnes de, vii, 300, 301; 
Helewise de, vii, 301; Ladarena 
de, vii, 301; Lucy de, vii, 301 ; 
Marg. de, vii, 301; Pet. de, vii, 
300 ”, 301 

Brustwick, Rob. de, vii, 41 

Brydestones (Over Darwen), vi, 
272, 279 n, 280” 

Bryndill, Bryndle, see Brindle 

Bryning (Bryning - with - Kella - 
mergh), vil, 143, 143”, 144, 
144”, 146”, 150, 157, 159-61, 
172”, 173, 285, 286”; man., 
vii, 159 

Bryning carr (Lytham), vii, 214” 

Buccleuch, Eliz., dchss. of, vi, 
233; dks. of, vi, 280, 361, 362; 
Hen. Scott, vi, 233; Walt. F. 
M. D. Scott, vi, 234 

Buck, Alice, vi, 151”; Chas., vii, 
145, 148, 165, 204, 266, 291 ; 
Chris., vi, 151”; Hen. R., vii, 
148”; N., vii, 78; Rich., vi, 
151m; Rob., vi, 151”, 372”; 
S., vii, 78 ; fam., vii, 231 

Buckclough (Cliviger), vi, 
481 n 

Buckden, Ad. de, vi, 320, 5072, 
509”; Matilda (Maud) de, vi, 
320, 507 %, 509 ” 

Buckler, Chas. E., vii, 10 

Buckley (Ribchester), vii, 45, 49 ”, 
50 

Buckley, fam., see Bulkeley 

Buckley Hall (Ribchester), vii, 49 

Buckow, brook, vi, 217, 222, 224 

Buck’s Cross (Holleth), vii, 305 

Buckshaw (Euxton), vi, 18, 21 

Buckshaw, Higher and Lower (Eux- 
ton), vi, 20, 211” 

Buckshaw Hall (Euxton), vi, 21 

Budworth, Cecily de, vi, 67”; 
Rich., vi, 67”; Will. de, vi, 
66 n, 67” 

Bukmonger, Ad., vii, 92 

Bulcock, Chris., vi, 516, 519 ; Hen., 
vi, 520; Jenet, vi, 519; John, 
vi, 519; Rich., vi, 519; Rob., 
Vi, 517, 519, 550; Sim., vi, 530; 


—) V1, 524” 

Bulhalgh (Bullaugh, Bullay, Bull- 
haugh, Bullough), Jas., vi, 217 ”; 
Joan, vi, 217 n, 411 ”; John, vi, 
411”; Rich., vi, 147, 217”; 
Rob., vi, 217 ”; Thos., vi, 365 ; 
seé also Buller 

Bulkeley, Eliz. H. Warren-Bulkeley, 
vsctss, vi, 244, 255; vii, 194%, 
286, 287; Thos. J. Warren- 
Bulkeley, vsct., vi, 255, 319”; 
vii, 194 2, 286 n, 287” 

Bulkeley (Buckley), Ad. de, vii, 
280 n ; Rob. de, vii, 280 ” ; Thos., 


479, 


INDEX 


Bulkeley (cont.) 
vi, 7,79; Will. vi, 1602; Capt., 
vi, 229 n; Rev. —, vi, 147 

Bulkes, ford, vii, 226 

Bullaugh, Bullay, see Bulhalgh and 
Buller 

Buller, Geo., vii, 136 n, 187 n; 
Jas., vii, 187; John, vi, 199 7; 
Will, vii, 136”; see also Bul- 
halgh 

Bullhaugh, see Bulhalgh 

Bull Hole (Goldshaw Booth), vi, 
516 

Bullock, Hugh, vii, 218 ; Rev. Rich., 
Vi, 333” 

Bullock Ees (Hapton), vi, 511 

Bullough, see Bulhalgh 

Bullridding (Charnock Richard), vi, 
208 n 

Bulsnape (Goosnargh), 
193 2; man., vii, 194 

Bulsnape Hall (Goosnargh), vii, 194 

Bulsware, Little, see Boulsworth 

Bumstead, Jas. H., vii, 190 

Bunk, hill, vi, 230 

Bunker’s Hill, vi, 284, 523 

Buntable, Rich. le, vii, 159 ” 

Burcher ridding (Chorley), vi, 141 

Burdett, Edw., vii, 59 

Bure, see Bower and Burgh 

Burfet, Burfoot, see Borset 

Burgess (Burgeys), John, vi, 72”; 
Thos., vi, 243, 451 

Burgh (Duxbury), vi, 183, 208, 212 

Burgh (Bergh, Boure, Bure), Ad. 
del, vi, 48”; Alice, vi, 64”; 
vii, 182; Avice de, vii, 227”; 
Cecily del, vi, 48”; Dorcas, vii, 
182; Ellen (del), vi, 209”, 212; 
Hen. (de, del), vi, 131”, 142, 
212 Mn, 223 n, 224M”, 225”; Joan 
de, vi, 212 ; John de, vi, 2127”; 
Marg., vi, 212; Ralph del, vi, 
224”; Rich. (de), vi, 64”; vii, 
182, 183, 183”, 185%, 187, 
227 n, 278; Rob. (de, del), vi, 
136 n, 140, 142, 209 nN, 212, 212 n, 
227%; Sarah, vii, 182 ; Thos. del, 
vi, 48”; Will. (de), vi, 131”, 
209”, 212”, 225”; vii, 182, 
275”; see also Bower and 
Burrow 

Burghley, Ld., vi, 306; vii, 236; 
Will. Ld., vi, 382 

Burghley (Burlegh, Burley), Alan 
de, vi, 193 ” ; Ellen de, vi, 193 ” ; 
Goditha de, vi, 193 x; John de, 
vi, 193”; Rob. de, vi, 188%”; 
vil, 50 n, 51”; Rog. de, vi, 193”; 
Will. de, vi, 188, 193 2; vii, 50”; 
see also Birley 

Burgill, Eliz., vi, 317 ” 

Burgoyne, John, vii, 17 ” 

Burials and burial mounds, vi, 396, 
442, 469 

Burlegh, Burley, see Burghley 

Burlington, earl of, vii, 281 ; Geo. 
A. H. Cavendish, earl of, vi, 76” 

Burn (Thornton), vii, 154%”, 155, 
155”; man., vii, 232, 234; Rom. 
Cath., vii, 237 

Burn, Burne, fam., see Bourne 

Burn Hall (Thornton), vii, 155”, 
232, 2352 

Burnhull, par., see Brindle 

Burnhull, Agnes de, vi, 76 ; Alan de, 
vi, 76, 221”; Alice de, vi, 76; 
Avice de, vi, 220”; Beatrice de, 
vii, 100 ” ; Joan de, vi, 76 ; Kath. 
de, vi, 76 ; Lambert de, vi, 220”; 
Marg., vi, 76; Margery de, vi, 
24”, 76n; Nich. de, vii, 98”, 
Ioo n; Sir Pet. de, vi, 76; Pet. 
de, vi, 76, 79”, 200M, 220%, 
291; vii, 62”; Rich., vi, 76"; 


351 


vii, IgI, 


Burnhull (cont.) 

Rob. de, vi, 76”, 100; Thos. 
de, vi, 76, 79, 190”, 220”, 
303; vii, 62; Walt. de, vi, 
24n; Will. de, vi, 242, 76n; 
see also Brindle 

Burnley, vi, 349, 356 ”, 434, 441-54, 
457%, 459, 481 2, 487, 489, 540 
vii, 56”; adv., vi, 450; agric., 
vi, 443; chant., vi, 451; char., 
vi, 453; ch., vi, 448, 504”; 
Crosses, V1, 349, 441, 442, 442 n, 
443, 450, 451”; ind., vi, 442; man., 
vi, 232, 233”, 443; mkts. and 
fairs, vi, 442, 443, 447, 523%; 
mill, vi, 447”, 488, 489, 491, 
540; Nonconf., vi, 452; parks, 
vi, 448; Rom. Cath., vi, 453; 
Rom. rem., vi, 442; sch., vi, 
453; suffragan bp. of, vi, 451; 
wards, vi, 448 ” 

Burnley, Ad. de, vi, 446, 477”; 
Alice de, vi, 446; Ellen de, vi, 
446 ; John de, vi, 446 ; Mabel de, 
vi, 477”; Matilda de, vi, 446 ; 
Rich. de, vi, 451; Rob. de, vi, 
444” . 

Burmley Lane, vi, 453 

Burnley Ridge, vi, 441 

Burnley Wood (Habergham Eaves) , 
vi, 454, 459, 468, 5342 

Burnslack (Chipping), vi, 379%”; 
vii, 27.” 

Burnt Naze (Thornton), vii, 232 ; 
ch,, vii, 237 

Burnul, see Brindle 

Burnulgate (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 
290 

Burrance meadow (Colne), vi, 528 » 

Burrow (Burrowes), Rev. Edw., vi, 
440; Rev. Will, vi, 80; —, vi, 
657; see also Burgh 

Burscough, vi, 71 2; char., vi, 90 ” 

Burscough, Alice de, vi, lor”; 
Edm., vi, 28”; Eliz., vi, 295; 
Jas., vi, 3”; John (de), vi, 28”, 
352, 92", 97H, IOI N, 151”, 
237 n; Marg. de, vi, I51 ; 
Pet., vi, 10”, 28%, 295, 300; 
Reg., vi, 295 2; Reynold, vi, 10 » ; 
Rog., vi, 28”, 295; Thos., vi, 
28 n, 2905 

Burscough Place (Leyland), vi, 12 ” 

Burscough Priory, vi, 69, 73, 73”, 
96, 97, 104", 105m, 108, 180, 
190, 202, 222 ”, 224, 228 2; Nich., 
prior of, vii, 99 ” 

Burstad Brining, see Bryning 

Burton (Kendal), vii, 177 ” 

Burton, brook, vi, 49 ” 

Burton, Eliz., vii, 211”; John de, 
vii, 137 ”; Oliver, vi, 55; Rich., 
vi, 525”, 527; Rob. de, vii, 85 ; 
Rog. (de), vi, 169, 171 ; vil, 211”; 
Sim. de, vii, 183 ”; Wilfrid, vi, 
518; Will. de, vi, 171”; vii, 
183” 

Burwain’s (Briercliffe), vi, 469, 470 

Burwains (Foulridge), vi, 545 

Burwell, Geo., vii, 26 

Burwens (Colne), vi, 525 ”, 528 

Bury, Ad. de, vi, 48, 284, 285, 287; 
vi, 31”, 34%, 73%, 94 n, 97%, 
z16”; Alice de, vii, 127”; 
Andr., vi, 48; Hen. (de), vi, 249, 
275”, 285; vii, 168”; Rev. 
Herb., vi, 440; Isabel de, vi, 
285; Jas., vi, 394; Rich. de, vii, 
3n, 62, I16n, 1277, 318 n ; 
Rob. de, vii, 116; Rog. de, vi, 
285; Will. (de), vi, 275”, 284, 
285; vii, 62m", 318”; fam., vi, 
246n; see also Berry 

Bushbury, Rich., vi, 25°; Rose, 
vi, 250 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Bushell (Bushel, Busshel), Clement, 
vi, 398”; Eliz., vii, 102 n, 206; 
Seth, vi, 18, 207, 22m, IIon, 
398 n; vii, 82, 86, gon, Io2z nN, 
1g1n; Thos., vi, 18”; Wil, vi, 
18m, 20; vii, 190M, I9I, 203, 
204, 205, 206; see also Bussel 

Bush, Rog. de, vi, 232, 291 

Bussel (Busshel), Ad., vi, 15 m, 21 7, 
qin, 72; Alb., vi, 6n, 14, 37, 
58 n, 59, 60n, 61N, 7ONn, 120N; 
vii, 113 ; Alice, vi, 77, 12”, 15 n, 
131; Avice, vi, 11 , 62; Bene- 
dict, vi, 7%; Cecily, vi, 21”; 
Ellen, vi, 71, 71”; Emma, vi, 
21; Geoff., vi, 37, 53”, 58”, 
60n, JOR, FIN, 72%, F385 
Hen., vi, 15 » ; Hugh, vi, 12, 70”, 
72m, 301; vii, 171; John, vi, 
15,21”; Jordan, vi, 70”, 71”; 
Karnwath, vi, 253; Lettice, vi,6”, 
60; Mabel, vi, 71”; Margery, 
Vi, 15%; 9O-n, gon7 Maud, v1 
18”; Nich., vi, 15, 21.”,170n; 
Quenilda, vii, 171; Ralph, vi, 
253; Rich., vi, 6, 11m, 15”, 
18 n, 29, 37, 58”, 62, 70, 71 2, 
120, 193; Vil, 171 m, 282; Rob., 
vi, 11, 15, 18, 21, 53, 587, 
62, 69, 70%, 71, 73”; Rog., vi, 
70n, JIm; Thos. vi, 7, 147, 
15m, 18m, 21, 58n, 7On, 
7in, Warine, vi, 6, 37, 54, 57, 
2, JOR, 204, 208, 213, 2175 
vii, 2, 92”, 113, I71”, 177, 
178n; Will, vi, 11m, 12", 157, 
15 n, 21 n, 33, 131; vii, 170”; 


fam., vii, 27, 2402”; see also 
Bushell 

Butcher, John, vii, 241”; Mary, 
vii, 120%”; Rob., vii, 2417; 


Steph., vii, 120”; Thos., vii, 
190, 241”; Will, vii, 241”; 
—, Vii, 2427” 

Butler, Agnes, vii, 255”, 2757”; 
Alex., vil, 239 , 314, 315; Alice, 
vii, 275 , 314; Anne, vi, 1517; 
vil, 193, 267, 270, 275m, 299, 
3142; Cath., vii, 275”; Cecily, 
vil, 322”; Charlotte, vi, 267; 


Chris., vii, 255; Cuth., vii, 
275"; Dorothy, vii, 239”, 
275m, 314; Edm., vii, 2747; 


Edw., vii, 140, 275; Eleanor, 
vil, 229; Eliz., vi, 30, 337, 
151”; vii, 239”, 270, 279n, 
314, 315; Ellen, vi, 30, 420; 
vii, 257; Geo., vii, 227 m, 257.7; 
Grace, vi, 20 n, 33"; vii, 169”; 
Hen., vi, 35”, 151m, 1547, 
170, 173m; vi, 180n, 181 n, 
182 n, 183 , 190 n, 193 n, 200 n, 
275) 275M. 250, 2977, 278 Hn: 
Hercules S., vii, 87; Isabel, vi, 
30, 154; vu, 314”; Janet, vii, 
17on; Jas. vi, 140m, I51n, 
154%; Vii, 275, 314; John, vi, 
20M, 33", 154, 176", 177M, 
368 n, 420; vii, 169, 169 n, 180, 
180 n, 181 n, 229 n, 275 n, 282 n, 
292m, 299, 314; John F., vi, 
267, 269; Marg., vil, 227, 257 n, 
314; Margery, vi, 306; Mary 
(Maria), vi, 85, 267, 268, 275”, 
314”; Nich., vi, 30, 154, 171, 
292; Vii, 169m, 189, 253n, 
254%, 257, 275 Nn, 277 n; Phil., 
vu, 276"; Rich., vi, 154”, 267; 
vu, 164”, 169”, I70n, 227 Hn, 
240M, 250N, 253M, 254%, 255, 
257", 275, 275”; Rob., vii, 
275m”; Sarah, vii, 314”; Sir 
Thos., vii, 241 ", 248, 306 ; Thos., 
VU, 2274, 255, 257m, 2757, 


Butler (cont.) 
314; Will, vi, 151”; vii, 77, 


139m, I40, I4t, 180”, 183m, 
189", 227, 231", 253m”, 257, 
258m, 259, 259m, 270, 276n, 
278, 253, 322"; —, vii, 149, 


283, 296”; fam., vi, 268; vii, 
168 », 172", 179, 201, 203, 272} 
see also Boteler 

Butler, fee of, vii, 176 

Butler-Bowden, John, vi, 
John E., vi, 268 

Butler-Cole, Thos., vii, 309 ” 

Butter Cross, The (Preston), vii, 
gin 

Butterfield, Thos., vi, 541 ” 

Butterley (Mearley), vi, 376” 

Butterworth, Alex., vi, 488 7; Jas., 
vi, 55; vil, 204; John, vi, 432, 
434; Rob., vii, 291; Susannah, 
vii, 82 

Butt Hill (Garstang), vii, 330 ” 

Buynde, see Bond 

Byerden Clough (Reedley), vi, 490 

Byerden Gate (Reedley), vi, 490 

Byerworth ; see Byrewath 

Bymbrig (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 290 

Bynns, Rob., vi, 418; Mrs., vi, 418 

Byrchinlache (Blackburn), vi, 276 

Byrewath (Barnacre), vii, 109”, 
TIO, 315, 318, 319 n, 326” 

Byrewath (Birewath), Alice de, vii, 
toon; John de, vii, 272 ”; Rob. 
de, vii, 318”; Rog. (de), vii, 
79 nN, 100 N, IOI NR, 272 N, 281 nN; 
Walt. de, vii, 319 ” 

Byrne, Anna D., vii, 286%; Sir 
Dan., vii, 286 » ; John, vii, 286 x ; 
Pet., vii, 286; see also Bourne 

Byrom, Hen. de, vi, 174”; Ibota 
de, vi, 174” 

Byron, John Byron, Ld., vi, 293 

Byron, Emma de, vi, 204 ; Geoff. 
de, vi, 204 ; Sir John, vi, 241”; 
Margcry de, vii, 64”; Rich. de, 
vu, #4"; fam., vi, 4597” 

Byroun, vi, 497 

Byspam, Byspaym, Byspham, see 
Bispham 


268; 


Cabber 
126” 

Caboun, Ad., vi, 538” 

Cabus (Caboos), vii, 291, 293, 300, 
304, 304 2, 305, 311 2, 315 

Cadeshou (Clayton-le-Dale), vi 
258n 

Cadley (Preston), vii, 119, 137, 
137”; man., vii, 126 ”, 138 

Cadley Moor, vii, 77 

Cadley Shaw (Freston), vii, 137” 

Cadman, Will,. vii, 78 2 

Cadshaw (Over Darwen), vi, 269 

Cagildegrene (Hapton), see Padi- 
ham Green 

Caldecotes, see Coldcoats 

Calder, mill, vii, 302 » 

Calder, riv., vi, 325, 338, 441, 446, 
454, 451, 464, 478, 479; vii, 141, 
I4In 

Calder, Ad. de, vii, 328  ; Thos. de, 
vii, 328; Will. de, vii, 328” 

Calderbank, Leonard, vi, 192 

Calder Field (Catterall), vii, 300 

Calder Head (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Calder Vale (Catterall), vii, 320”; 
ch., vii, 324 

Caleyard (Church), vi, 402 ” 

Calf, brook, vi, 67” 

Calf Croft (Wilpshire), vi, 335” 

Calfhey (Colne), vi, 527” 

Calf hey (Pleasington), vi, 258 

Calico, brook, vi, 199 


352 


Clough (Haighton), vii 


» 


, 


Calico-printing, vi, 284, 399, 423, 
513 

Call, fam., vi, 116” 

Callis, Eliz, vi, 525; vii, 34m; 
Rob., vii, 34” : 

Calmerley, Rich. de, vi, 140" 

Calna, see Colne 

Calveknoll, see Colneknoll 

Calvert, Geo., vii, 128m; John, vi, 
318; vii, 317; Rich., vi, 289; 
Rob., vi, 260; Thos., vi, 260 ; 
vu, 287; Thos. J., vii, 81; —, 
vi, 252” 

Camel, Rich., vi, 369 

Camera, see Chamber 

Campion, Edm., vi, 387 

Candelay, vii, 330 n 

Cane, Rev. Basil, vi, 344 

Canfall (Ribchester), vii, 58 » 

Cant Clough, brook (Worsthorne), 


vi, 474 

Cant Clough, reservoir (Worsthorne), 
vi, 447”, 474 

Cantelow (Cantley), vii, 226 n 

Cantelowe, Will., vi, 255 

Canterbury, archbps. of, vi, 356, 
357, 359, 459, 451, 534, 557; 
vii, 60m, 552m”; Cranmer, vi, 
298; vil, 275”; Grindal, vi, 
432; Juxon, vi, 240, 357, 404 n, 
4327”, 450m; Sancroft, vi, 240, 
318; vil, 36; Tillotson, archbp. 
of, V1, 492, 536; Walter, vii, 333 

Cantsfield, vii, 269, 270n 

Capelhedheus (Croston), vi, 92 n 

Capella, John de, vii, 87 n 

Capes, Will., vii, 292 n 

Cardales (Carleton), vii, 230” 

Cardales (Howick), vi, 66n 

Carden, Anna, vi, 257 

Cardenas, John de, vii, 280” 

Cardigan, Geo. Brudenell, earl of, 
see Montagu, dk. of 

Cardmaker, Will., vii, 136" 

Cardwell, Cuth., vii, 200; Edw,, 
vi, 211, 245 ; John, vi, 211 ; Rich., 
vi, 211; vii, 121, 216; Rob., 
vii, 141 ”; Thos., vii, 31 , 128m, 
196 7; Will., vii, 128, 128 

Cardwell of Ellerbeck, Edw. Card- 
well, vsct., vi, 211, 224, 225 

Carlentun, see Carleton 

Carles, Emma (de), vi, 179 n, 228»; 
John, vi, 204”; Sir Will. vi, 
179 n, 204; Will., vi, 228” 

Carleton, vi, 58”; vii, 155”, 219, 
222 n, 226M, 228-31, 282 n, 285; 
mans., vii, 228 

Carleton, Gt., man., vii, 228, 229- 
30, 302” 

Carleton, Hall of (Little Carleton), 
vii, 230 

Carleton, Little, man., vii, 225, 228, 
229 N, 230-31, 238, 246n 

Carleton, Ad. de, vii, 274; Alan 
de, vii, 192; Alice (de), vii, 


277", 230n; Amabil de, vii, 
230; Eliz. (de), vii, 193%, 
230”; Geo., vi, 218”; vi, 
230; Godith de, vii, 283"; 


Hen. de, vii, 223 n, 228 m, 229n, 
230, 233", 247m, 283"; Joan, 
vii, 230”; John, vii, 230"; 
Lawr., vii, 230, 231”; Marg. 
(de), vii, 228 n, 229 n, 230 n, 233; 
Margery (de), vii, 229”, 230%, 
231, 233; Maud de, vii, 229, 
256; Mich. de, vii, 228 2, 229”, 
233; Rich. de, vii, 228; Rob. 
de, vii, 228 n ; Rog. de, vii, 229”; 
Swain de, vii, 228 n, 229, 250”; 
Thos. (de), vii, 228 n, 230, 256”; 
Walt. de, vii, 193 ", 228, 229, 
230, 249, 250%, 277, 279% 
281 n, 282; Sir Will. de, vi, 


Carleton (cont.) 
247", 268 n, 277, 279; Will. de, 
vii, 192", 193”, 228%, 220, 
233, 240%, 274, 2772, 279, 
281 n, 282” 

Carleton House Farm, vii, 225 

Carlinghurst (Dutton), vii, 56%, 


59% 23 
Carlisle, John, vii, 25 
Camegie, Andr., vi, 274, 432, 530 
Carnforth, man., vii, 194, 303 ” 
Carpenter, Rog. the, vii, 230”; 
Will., the, vi, 2012; vii, 98; 
Gen., vi, 290; vii. 77 
Carr, New and Old (Dutton), vii, 


37% . 

Carr (Hutton), vi, 68 n 

Carr, brook, vi, 149 

Carr (Karr), Alan (del), vi, 70, 
71m; vil, 197”; Alice de, vi, 
201m; Anabel del, vi, 212"; 
Anne, vi, 210”; Edw., vi, 528; 
Emery, vi, 527”; Joan del, vi, 
7on, 71”; Priscilla, vi, 527”; 
Ralph, vi, 210”; Steph. del, 
vii, 170; Thos., vi, 394; Walt. 
(de, del), vi, 201”, 546”; vii, 
17on; Will. S., vi, 210; —, vii, 


215 
Carr Close, New (Barrowford 
Booth), mill, vi, 543 
Carrfurlong (Poulton), vu, 226 
Carr Hall (Barrowford Booth), vi, 
521, 542, 543, 547; mill, vi, 543 
Carr Hall (Pendle), vi, 250 
Carr Hall (Wilpshire), vi, 336 
Carr Hey, brook, vii, 27” 
Carr Heys (Colne), see Carry Heys 
Carr Holme (Cabus), vii, 305 
Carrholme (Colne), vi, 525” 
Carr House (Bretherton), vi, 102, 


153 
Carr House Green Common (In- 
skip), vii, 279 


Carrier, Miles, vi, 557 

Carrington, John, vi, 381; Rob., 
vu, 297 

Carr Marsh (Preese), vii, 177 ” 

Carr meadow (Carleton) vu, 231 ” 

Carrs, the (Singleton), vii, 183, 
192 n 

Carry Bridge (Colne), vi, 530 

Carry Heys (Colne), vi, 233 ”, 523, 
525, 528 2, 529, 530”, 549 

Cartelache (Tockholes), vi, 281 

Carter, Geo., vi, IIo”; vii, 144, 
260”; Hen., vi, 431”; Jas., 
vii, 121 n, 181 »; John, vii, 190 ; 
Pet., vii, 89 7; Rob., vii, 181 », 
255", 260”, 335; Thos., vi, 
431”; Vii, I90”, 260” 

Carter Place (Haslingden), vi, 431 

Cartford Bridge (Gt. Eccleston), vii, 
181, 273, 276 

Cartmel (Cartmell), Ad. de, vii, 
52”; Eliz., vii, 135”; Thos., 
VU, 293 N, 332 

Cartridge Hill, vi, 230, 280 

Cartwright, Alice, vi, 217”; Eliz., 
vi, 285 -286 ”; Will, vi, 217”, 
285 n-286 n 

Carus, John, vii, 173”; Kath., vii, 
173”; Mary, vii, 314”; Rich., 
vii, 173”; Thos., vii, 314”; 

ill., vi, 403; —, vi, 411; vii, 

280 

Carver, Jas., vi, 28 

Caryll, Bridg., vii, 182”; 
vii, 182 

Case, Geo., vi, 215, 228 

Cassinghurst, Ellis de, vi, 507; 
Rich. de, vi, 507 ” 

Casson, Rev. Geo., vi, 435 

Castelhow (Garstang), vii, 319 7 

Castell (Whalley), vi, 382 ” 


7 


John, 


INDEX 


Castell, Will. del, vii, t60 
Castercliff (Castell Clif) (Marsden), 

vi, 536 
Casterton, Gilb. de, vii, 318”; 

Hen. de, vii, 318 » 

Castilne Clough (Whittle), vi, 34n 
Castle Clough, brook, vi, 507 
Castle dykes (Clitheroe), vi, 363" 
Castlegate (Cuerden), vi, 24n, 28n 
Castlegate (Whalley), vi, 371 
Castle Hill (Clitheroe), vi, 363 
Castle Hill (Croston), vi, 95 ” 
Castle Hill (Habergham Eaves), 
C. ofl Pin (T 1 

astle Hi owneley), vi n 
Castle Place Coney vi, es 
Castlepool Hey (Mawdesley), vi, 


95” 

gets Townfields (Marsden), vi, 
53 

Castleyard (Croston), vi, 95 ” 

Castor Gill, riv., vi, 519 

Catch House (Goosnargh), vii, 199 ” 

Caterall, Caterhall, see Catterall 

Catforth (Woodplumpton), vii, 1502, 
285, 287 n; man., vii, 288; Rom. 
Cath., vii, 285; sch., vii, 288 n, 
291 

Catforth, Gilb. de, vii, 288 2 

Cathirton (Catherton), Alan de, vii, 
98, 313”; Margery de, vi, 
555”; Will. de, vi, 555”; vii, 
3132; —, vii, 308 2 

Cathole Clough (Trawden), vi, 551 

Catholic Apostolic Church, vi, 427 

Catlow (Marsden), vi, 524”, 536, 
538; hosp., vi, 540; man., vi, 
538; Rom. coins, vi, 523 2 

Catlow (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 407; 
mill, vi, 407 

Catlow, brook, vi, 468, 536 

Catlow (Cattlow), Ad. de, vi, 402 , 
538 ; Agnes de, vi, 402 m, 407”; 
Alice de, vi, 407”; Beatrice de, 
vi, 402  ; Chris., vi, 243 »; Edm., 
vi, 402 2; Eliz., vi, 402 n, 4077; 
Ellen de, vi, 402 x; Hen. de, vi, 
402”, 406”, 407”; John de, 
vi, 402 n, 538 n; Marg., vi, 402 n; 
Margery de, vi, 402”, 407”; 
Nich. de, vi, 402”; Pet. de, vi, 
402 ” ; Ralph de, vi, 402 ” ; Rich. 
de, vi, 402”, 538%”; Rob. de, 
vi, 402”, 4077, 538, 538”; 
Rog. de, vi, 402 ”, 407”; Thos. 
de, vi, 402 ”, 406 n, 407”; Will. 
de, vi, 402; —, vi, 528; fam., 
vi, 401 

Catlow Green (Marsden), vi, 539 ” 

Catlow Hall (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 


° 
Catlow Rake Foot (Marsden), vi, 
536” 
Catlow Row (Marsden), vi, 537 
Caton, vii, 269 ” : 
Caton, Chris., vii, 299; Eliz., vii, 
299; Jane de, vii, 196”; Joan 
de, vii, 177”, 279”; John, vii, 
24, 299; Lawr., vii, 24, 330”; 
Rog. de, vii, 109”; Will. (de), 
vi, 159 ”; Vii, 109 ”, 177 ”, 196 2, 
279", 297 
Catrehal, Catrehala, see Catterall 
Catshawsyke (Wheelton), vi, 49 
Catterall (Garstang), vii, 173%, 
253", 2742, 291, 293, 296”, 
302M, 314%, 315, 319%, 320-4, 
326; char., vii, 300; man., vil, 
291, 320, 322 . 
Catterall, Higher (Garstang), vil, 
320% 
Catterall (Shevington), vi, 202 
Catterall (Catthul), Ad. de, vi, 67 ”, 
170”, 388, 389”; vii, 136%, 
192", 1937, 194n, 281”, 321; 


B53 


Catterall (cont.) 
Agnes (de), vi, 346”, 4577; vii, 
192”, 321; Alan de, vi, 170 n, 
346, 388 n, 389; vii, 53 n, 192 n, 
193, 190m, 197, 316n, 321; 
Alex., V1, 201, 202; Alice, vi, 
419”; vil, 193”, 321”; Anne, 
V1, 170 n, 547 % ; vii, 193 ”, 322 7; 
Beatrice de, vii, 321 ; Bernard de, 
vu, 191, 318; Christiana de, 
vu, 192”; Dorothy (de), vi, 
389”; vii, 193”, 322; Eliz., 
V1, 170%, 354, 512; vii, 136, 
193”, 194, 322, 322m”; Ellen 
(de), vii, 64”, 321”; Emma; 
vu, 322”, Evan, vi, 2377, 
Hen. (de), vi, 296, 4o2; vii, 
74, 136m", 321”; Hugh de, vii, 
321 nN, 322 n, 323”; Isabel (de), 
vi, 346; vil, 53”, 321”; Iseult 
(Isoult), de, vi, 170”; vii, 192; 
Jas., vi, 237 7, 456, 512, 546, 
547; Jane, vii, 193”, 3221; 
Joan (de), vi, 456, 546”; vii, 
192 n, 194; John (de), vi, 77 ”, 
389 n, 457, 457%, 4582, 5082; 
Vii, 64 2, 192 n, 193 n, 194 ”, 196, 
197, 197%, 198”, 213m, 321, 
322”; Kath. (Cath.) (de), vi, 
200”, 328, 393”; vii, 193m, 
321 n, 322”; Lawr., vi, 201 n, 
338 x ; vii, 194 »; Loretta (Lora) 
de, vi, 388, 389; vii, 321 ; Marg. 
(de), vi, 391 ”, 546; vii, 193”, 
300, 322”; Marian, vii, 193”; 

- Mary, vi, 170”, 419; Paulin de, 
vii, 192 #, 193 m, 321 ; Pet. (de), 
vi, 20I m, 202 ; vli, 193 ”, 323”; 
Ralph (de), vi, 47 ”, 169 n, 170 », 
223", 328, 354, 389”, 3937; 
vii, 28, 127 n, 192 n, 193 ”, 194”, 
195, 198, 199, 268%, 297%, 
313”, 321, 322”, 323”; Rich. 
(de), vi, 169”, 174%”, 200%, 
388 n, 389”; Vil, 14, 30”, 53%, 
64”, 127”, 182”, 192, I92n, 
193, 193%, 194”, 314”, 316n, 
320, 321, 322%, 323%, 3310n, 
Rob., vi, 3”, 237”, 260, 402 7, 
419n; vii, I91n, 192”; Rog. 
(de), vi, 200, 201 2; vii, 321 2; 
Swain de, vi, 169”; vii, 192; 
Thos., vi, 170”, 175 n, 237 n, 
389”, 391”, 419; Vii, 1367, 
193”, 194, 194”, 199M, 201 n, 
227 2, 321, 323”, 324”; Vane, 
vi, 298; Will. de, vii, 141 2, 
194”, 321 2; —, Vi, 199, 353” 

Catterall Field (Garstang), vil, 


322 2 

Catterall Hall (Garstang), vi, 354 ” 
vii, 322 

Catterick, Thos., vii, 71 ” 

Catteridding (Clitheroe), vi, 365 ” 

Catthull, see Catterall 

Cattlow, fam., see Catlow 

Caune, see Colne 

Causeway Farm 
367 

Causeway (Cawsey) Meadow (Pres- 
ton), vii, 79%, 101 ” 

Cave-Browne-Cave, Fitzherbert A., 
vi, 496; vii, 67 . 

Cavendish, Lady Eliz., vi, 233; 
Ld. Geo., vi, 76”; Ld, Will. 
vi, 76”; vii, 281 2, 

Cavendish, Anne, vii, 280; Chas. 
C. W., see Chesham, Ld.; Geo. 
A. H., see Burlington, earl of; 
Will., vi, 76, 80; vii, 280, 2814; 
fam., vil, 277 . 

Cavendish Bentinck, see Bentinck 

Cawbeck, brook, vi, 18 ” 

Cawsey Meadow, see 
Meadow 


(Hoghton), vi, 


Causeway 


45 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Cawson, Geo., vii, 305”; John, 
vu, 305”; Kich., vu, 305” 

Cawthorne, —, Vil, 305” 

Cawvell, fam., see Cowell 

Cayballes, see Cabus 

Cecil, Sir Rob., vu, 73 

Cecily, vii, 97; d. of Benedict, 
vii, 99n; d.of John, vi, b1n; 
the recluse, vil, 44; w. of Adam, 
vi, 209”; w. of Jordan, vi, 
365; w.of Richard, vi, 555”; 
w. of Willbam, vu, 1157 

Celer, John de, vii, 268; Jordan 
del, vii, 257”; Maud de, vu, 
268 n; see also Seller 

Celhod, John, vi, 127" 

Cernok, see Charnock 

Certeden, Rich. de, vi, 60» 

Chacoumbe, John de, vu, 311” 

Chadderton (Chaderton), Geoff. de, 
vi, 264, 265m, 328; Margery 
de, vi, 264; Rich. de, vi, 204; 
Rob. de, v1, 328; Will. bp., v3, 
4, 185 1, 227, 359", 496m; Will. 
de, Vi, 264, 265” 

Chaddeslegh, see Chaigley 

Chaddock, Dan., vi, 296; Joan, vu, 
229 n, 230; Thos., vu, 229”, 
230n 

Chaderton, see Chadderton 

Chadesden, Rich. de, vi, 357 

Chadlington, man. (Uxon), vi, 321 

Chadswell (Chaigley), vu, 1 

Chadwick, Sir Andr., vi, 431 ; Anne, 
vi, 229 n; Chas., vi, 15y n; Edw., 
vi, 213; Eleanor M., vi, 213"; 
Ellen, vi, 229”; Ellis, vi, 431”, 
435n;E., vi, 143; Jas., vi, 2297; 
John, vi, 159, 228; Marg., vi, 
43°"; Mary, vi, 229”, 430”; 
Rob., vi, 431 2; Thos., vi, 213 ”, 
229"; Mrs., vi, 411; fam., vii, 
113” 

Chatfar, see Shaffer 

Chaigley (Chageley, Chaigeley), vi, 
230, 497; Vu, I, 2, 15, 20, 
197”; chant., vil, 19; char., vii, 
19; man., vu, 15; Nonconf., vu, 
19; well, vii, 2 

Chaillon, Will., vi, 369 

Chair-making, vii, 27 

Challoner (Chaloner), Eliz., vii, 
273; John, vi, 543; Thos., vii, 273 

Chamber (Marsden), see Chamber- 
in-Pendle 

Chamber (Camera, Chambre), Aline 
del, vii, 212”; Cecily «de, vi, 
bon; Eliz. de, vii, 3; Helen de, 
vu, 252 "; Thos. de, vii, 3; Will. 


de, vu, 252"; —, vi, 395” 
Chamber Bridge, see Quakers’ 
Bridge 


Chamber Hill, vi, 537, 540 
Chamber-in-Pendle, vi, 490, 492, 
21M, 539, 540; Vil, 3007 

Chamberlain (Chamberlaine), Ellen, 
vi, 198, 229”; Geo., vi, 119; 
Rich., vi, 478; Thos. F., vi, 128 

Chambre, see Chamber 

Champion (Chatburn), see Chatburn 
Score 

Chandos, Anne, Lady, vii, 185”; 
Grey Bridges, Ld., vii, 185 

Chantries, vi, 74, 89, I04, 114, 
118, 122”, 127, 161, 181, 183 n, 
186, 188%, 190, 243, 314%, 
316 Mn, 342, 343, 352, 354, 359, 
445, 451, 453", 494; Vu, 16, 17, 
19, 25”, 20, 88, 89, 147 n, 148 n, 
149, 201, 262, 206, 275 ”, 295, 299 

Chapel Croft (Claughton), vii, 330 

Chapelfield Wood, vii, 316 

Chapel Flat (Osbaldeston), vi, 319 

Chapel Flat (Twiston), vi, 559% 

Chapel Hill (Hutton), vi, 69 » 


Chapel Hillock (Coppull), vi, 224 
Chapel House (Chaigley), vil, 1, 19 
Chapel House farm (Aighton), vu, 14 
Chapel Lea (Towneley), vi, 459 7 
Chapelridding (Northale), vi, 312 " 
Chapels (Over Darwen), vi, 270 
Chapels, anc., vi, 73, 309, 373, 380, 
403, 420, 432, 459, 494, 495, 517, 
532-3, 535, 543) 544%, 552, 558, 
500; vu, 73, 81, 53”, 87, 87 N, 
115m, 124m, 219, 276m, 282, 
284, 289, 299, 312 e 
Chapman, Hen., vi, 397 ”; Vu, 92 ”; 
Jobn the, vii, 281; Maud, vii, 
281 n; Rob., vi, 474”; Will. vu, 


927 

Chapon Toft (Standish), vi, 190 ” 

Charles I, vi, 57; vu, 138” 

Charles II, vi, 18, 20”, 64, 290; 
vil, 76, 139 

Charles Edward, prince, vii, 78, 


293 

Charleton (Chorlton), Guy de, vi, 
373"; John, vi, 367”; Thos. de, 
v1, 373; see also Carleton 

Charneles, John de, vii, 85 

Charnley, Alex., vii, 252; Alice, 
vil, 50”, 115”; Amery, vii, 
128%”; Anne, vii, 115”; Chris., 
vi, 60; Eliz., vu, 120”; Geo., 
vii, 124, 126; Hen., vii, 120n, 
126m, 127”, 255; Hugh, vii, 
124,127; John, vi, 56, 192”; 
Vl, 3”, 90, 128", I90n, 282; 
Lawr., vii, 126”; Margery de, 
vi, 612; Paul, vu, 113”; Rich., 
vi, 311; vu, 126”; Rob. (de), 
vi, 61 n; vu, 282m"; Rog., vii, 
216; Thos., vii, 252”; Will, 
vi, 119; Vu, 50%, 123, 128” 

Charnley Eaves, vu, 279 n, 288 

Charnock, ham.(Charnock Richard), 
vi, 204 

Charnock, Heath, tnshp., see Heath 
Charnock 

Charnock (Heath Charnock, Char- 
nock Gogard), Ad. de, vi, 24, 
29m, 337, 136, 206, 207%, 
214"; Agnes (de), vi, 206 m, 277 ; 
Vu, 130"; Anne, vi, 6,15 , 647; 
vu, 105; Bridg., vi, 138, 207; 
Cecily, vi, 24 n, 63 n, 64, 206 n, 


225, 277" > Chris,, vi; 226”; 
Edw., vi, 165”, 207%”, 277; 
Ellen (de), vi, 21”, 2287; 


Emma, vu, 234”; Eudosia, vi, 
140; Gilb., vi, 206”, 2347; 
Hastus de, vi, 207 2; Hen. (de), 
vi, 34”, 82, IoIn, 136, 199”, 
205, 206; vil, 136%; Hester, vii, 
114”; Hugh de, vi, 206”; Isa- 
bel de, vi, 207 ”; Jas., vi, 192 n, 
206 n, 207; Joan (de), vi, 33 ”, 
63”, 165”, 206; vii, 138%”; 
John (de), vi, 3”, 8n, 15m, 24, 
24, 29M, 30n, O61 nN, 65, 73H, 
Ill, 206, 206n, 207n, 208n, 
214, 225,277; Vil, 136 n, 138, 
165”, 308”; Jordan de, vi, 
205”, 214”; Juliana de, vi, 
214; Kath., vi, 30”; Marg. 
(de), vi, 138, 206, 206m, 207, 
214, 277; Margery, vi, 206 n, 
207”; Mary, vi, 214; Percival 
de, vi, 206 » ; Ralph de, vi, 140 n, 
206 n, 213, 214; Randle de, 
vi, 206; Rich. (de), vi, 21 2, 22 n, 
24,27, 58n, 64 n, 136n, I40n, 
182, 204, 205 n, 206, 207 n, 213 0, 
214n, 224", 288; Rob. (de), 
vi, 6,15”, 16, 24m, 61, 63n, 
71 n, 136, 138, 183 , 192 n, 206, 
206”, 207, 207m, 208, 213, 
214, 216, 217 n, 346n, gol n, 
511m; vil, 114”; Rog. (de), vi, 


354 


Charnock (cont.) 
3”, 6,15, 24", III M, 207M; vit, 
123; Susan, vi, 15 »; Capt. Thos., 
vi, 16%; Thos. (de), vi, 15, 24m, 
63, O4n, IIL M, 136, 138, 142, 
205M, 206, 207, 207M, 208n, 
210; Will. (de), vi, 15, 15, 24H, 
30M, 57%, OI NM, 71M, 72, III AK, 
199m, 206, 200N, 207M, 214n, 
277", 321; Vil, 130"; Rev. 
—, vi, 88; fam., vi, 69”; se; 
also Gogard 

Charnock Gogard (Gogarth), tnshp., 
see Heath Charnock 

Charnock Green (Charnock Rich- 
ard), vi, 182, 204 

Charnock Hall, see Leyland Old 
Hall 

Charnock Heath, tnshp., see Heath 
Charnock 

Charnock House (Claughton), vii, 


325 

Charnock Moss (Penwortham), vi, 
6I1n 

Charnock Richard, vi, 187 n, 204-8; 
char., vi, 9”, 192; ch., vi, 208; 
man., vi, 204; vii, 130”; mkts. 
and fairs, vi, 205 

Chastel, brook, see Chester 

Chatburn, vi, 349, 356”, 372-3, 
521m, 552, 554, 550”; Vu, 307; 
adv., vi, 373 ; Char., vi, 372; ch., 
vi, 361, 373; man., vi, 232, 
233”, 361, 372, 489; mill, vi, 
372, 373; Noncont., vi, 373; 
place-names, vi, 372"; quarmies, 
vi, 372; Rom. coins, vi, 372 

Chatburn, —, vi, 372” 

Chatburn Hollins (Chatburn), vi, 


373” 
Chatburn Score (Chatburn), vi, 373 
Chatburn Wood (Chatburn), vi, 


373” 
Chatbutts (Clitheroe), vi, 365 ” 
Chatteburn, see Chatburn 
Chattox, Old, see Whittle, Anne 
Chaygeslegh, see Chaigley 
Cheetham (Manchester), vii, 120” 
Cheetham, fam., see Chetham 
Cheker (Bispham), vi, 1o1 ” 
Cheldesey, Phil. de, vi, 58 
Chepin, see Chipping 
Cherestanc, see Garstang 


Cherle, Cherlegh, Cherley, see Chorley 


Chernocke, Chernok, Chernoke, see 
Charnock 

Cherry Tree (Livesey), vi, 263, 284 

Chesham, Lds., vi, 76 ” ; vii, 277”; 
Chas, C. W. Cavendish, vi, 76; 
vii, 281 

Cheshire, John, vi, 65; Rich., vi, 
65”; see also Chester 

Chester, brook, vii, 36 , 45 ”, 46” 

Chester, bps. of, vi, 74 ”, 429 n, 518; 
vii, 64, 74, 188, I90n, 210, 299, 
334”; Bridgeman, vi, 181, 222, 
299, 516; Chadderton, vi, 4, 185, 
227, 359”, 496"; Gastrell, vi, 
III, 128, 318, 426, 453%, 486, 
541, 558n; Vil, 40, 44%, 60n, 
Ub, 149N, 158 MN, 165, 165 , 205, 
205 N, 218, 292, 312, 334”; Pep- 
loe, vii, 86 n; Stratford, vii, 42", 
86”; Walton, vi, 86; dean of, 
vi, 189 

Chester, Ranulf (Randle), earl of, 
vi, 65 , 193 %, 260; Vil, 256” 

Chester, Jas., vii, 127; Pet. de, 
vi, 328 n, 350, 355, 356, 382, 
387%, 390, 407”, 413, 414% 
505, 506m, 509”, 550m; Sir 
Rob. de, vi, 373, 388 ; Rob. de, 
vi, 552, 553”; Sim. de, vi, 241; 
Will. de, vi, 201; see also 
Cheshire 


Chesterfield, Phil. Stanhope, earl of, 


vi, 293” 

Chester gate (Ribchester), vii, 49 ” 

Chetham (Cheetham), Edw., vi, 
272”; Ellen, vi, 216”; Humph., 
vi, 424; Mary, vi, 415; Rob., vi, 
216; Will, vi, 425” 

Chetwynd, Barbara, vi, 59 » ; Walt., 
vi, 8", 59% 

Chevassiit, Rev. Fred. G., vi, 334 

Chevilli, Almiria de, vii, 1807; 
Thos. de, vii, 180 

Chew, man. (Billington), vi, 325, 
326, 327 

Chew (Chewe, Cho, Chow), Avice 
del, vi, 326; Rev. Chas. A., vi, 
334; Hen. del, vi, 326; Hugh 
del, vi, 326 ; John (del), vi, 326 , 

87, 388n, 506”; vii, 1382”; 
Rich. del, vi, 326, 327; Thos. 
del, vi, 3262; W. R,, vi, 496; 
fam., vi, 332 

Chewe (Goosnargh), vii, 195 ” 

Chew Mill (Billington), vi, 326 

Chew Yard (Billington), vi, 328 

Cheydeslega, see Chaigley 

Chicheham, see Kirkham 

Chichester, Ralph Brideoake, bp. 
of, vi, 189, 192 ” 

Chierche, Chiereche, see Church 

Childe, Ad. de, vi, 408; Rob. de, 
vi, 408 n 

Childers, Marg. de, 
Will. de, vii, 125 ” 

Childwall, vi, 426 

Chilers, Thos., vi, 494 ” 

Chilsey Green (Aighton), vii, I 

Chimelli, Will. de, vii, 263 ” 

Chingle Hall (Whittingham), vii, 
102 m, 207, 211 ; mill, vii, 211 

Chingle Hall, New (Haighton), vii, 
124 

Chinmyre (Pendleton), vi, 394 ” 

Chipin, Chipinden, see Chipping 

Chippenley, Rog. de, vii, 46 

Chippindale (Chippingdale), Ad. de, 
vii, 29”; John de, vii, 297; 
Siegrith de, vii, 29”; Thos. de, 
vii, 29”; Will. de, vii, 29”; see 
also Chipping 

Chipping, V1, 230, 233%, 234; vii, 
I, 20-32, 43, 59 ”, 71, 84”, 119”, 
128 n, 199 n, 321 n; adv., vii, 23 ; 
chant., vii, 25, 26; char., vii, 
26; ch., vi, 380; vii, 20; fairs, 
vii, 27; ind., vii, 27; man., vi, 
40, 232; vii, 20, 27-31; mill, 
vii, 27”; Nonconf., vii, 32 

Chipping, brook, vi, 233", 379”; 
vii, 27” 

Chipping, Alex. de, vii, 29 ”; Alice 
de, vii, 29”; Benedict de, vii, 
30 n ; Cecily, vii, 35 ” ; Christiana 
de, vii, 28”; Emma de, vii, 
29n; Geoff. de, vii, 30”, 281”; 
John de, vii, 27, 28n, 29n, 
30, 34”; Margery de, vii, 27, 
29n, 30”; Rich. de, vii, 277, 
28n, 29n, 30”, 281 n; Rob. de, 
vii, 28, 29”, 30”; Rog. de, 
vii, 29”, 30”, 35”; Siegrith 
(Siota) de, vii, 27”; Thos. de, 
vii, 28 n, 34 ”; Will. de, vii, 29 2, 
30%; see also Chippindale 

Chippingdale, vi, 233, 379; vii, 
20, 28 n, 32, 38 n, 54”, 697 

Chippingdale, fam., see Chippindale 

Chipping Lawn (Leagram), vi, 379 ” 

Chirche (Gt. Harwood), vi, 339 ” 

Chirche (Whalley), see Church 

Chirche Holt, see Churchholt 

Chisnall (Coppull), vi, 224, 226 

Chisnall, Alice de, vi, 226; Anne, 
vi, 226 n, 227 n ; Cicely, vi, 277” ; 
Sir Edw., vi, 226, 227; Edw., 


vii, I257”; 


INDEX 


Chisnall (cont.) 
vi, 186, 202 n, 224, 226, 227n; 
Eliz. (de), vi, 73”, 226n; Tae 
de, vi, 226 »; John de, vi, r1o0 n, 
164”, 170, 171 n, 177 n, 182 n, 
185, 223M”, 226, 228, 229; 
Juliana de, vi, 226; Marg., vi, 
202 n, 226; Maud (de), vi, 164 n, 
177, 186, 226; Nich. de, vi, 
226n; Pet., vi, 277"; Rich., 
Vl, 217 m, 220”; vii, 98 n, 170 n, 
182”; Rob. de, vi, 186, 226, 
226”; Rog. de, vi, 226, 228”; 
Thos. (de), vi, 226, 229; Will. 
(de), vi, 226 , 227; Capt., vii, 


75 

Chisnall’s Buildings (London), vi 
226n 

Cho, see Chew 

Chokedrode (Clitheroe), vi, 365 

Cholmley, Eliz., vii, 309%; Thos., 
vii, 309 

Chor, brook, vi, 129 

Chorlegh, see Chorley 

Chorlesykehurst, vi, 547 

Chorley, vi, 1, 81, 86”, 91%, 92, 
129-49 ; vii, 79 n, 80n; adv., vi, 
146; chap., vi, 89”; char., vi, 
148; vii, 20”; ch., vi, 6, 144; 
ind., vi, 130; man., vi, 130; 
mkts. and fairs, vi, 130, 143, 
144; mills, vi, 130, 142; Non- 
conf., vi, 147; Rom. Cath., vi, 
148; sch., vi, 148 

Chorley, Ad. de, vi, 134”, 140”; 
Agnes (de), vi, 134 ”, 277; Alex., 
vi, 430”; Alice de, vi, 347, 
134”; Bridg., vi, 135”; Cath., 
vi, 135”; Chas., vi, 135; Cecily, 
vi, 134”; Eliz., vil, 89”, 300; 
Ellen (de), vi, 134 ”, 135 ”, 326”, 
327”; Ellis (de), vi, 134, 134”, 
142; Hen. (de), vi, 134%”; vii, 
80; Herb. de, vi, 134”; Hugh 
de, vi, 134”; Isabel de, vi, 
135”; Joan de, vi, 134-5; John 
(de), vi, 134, 135%, 277; Jos., 
vii, 89 , 300; Josiah, vi, 1357”; 
vii, 80; Leonard, vii, 85, 213”; 
Marg. (de), vi, 135, 135”, 198” ; 
Margery de, vi, 77”, 134; Mary, 
vi, 430”; Maud de, vi, 1347; 
Pet., vi, 238”; Ralph de, vi, 
77”, 134, 296%; Rich. (de), vi, 
130, 134, 134%, 135, 142; Vil, 
59”, 78; Rob. de, vi, 134%, 
135”; Rog. (de), vi, 134 , 140 n, 
146, 147; vii, 85; Sim. de, vi, 
134”; Steph. de, vi, 134”; 
Thos. de, vi, 79, 134 #; Will. (de), 
vi, 34”, 50”, 77%, 82, 109%, 


5) 


134, 135, 141, 142, 143, 146, 
166 ”, 296”, 430%”; vii, 85, 205, 
213”, 326”; Mrs., vi, 130; 


fam., vii, 102 

Chorley Hall (Chorley), vi, 133, 134 

Chorley Moor, vi, 129 

Chorley Survey, vi, 135 

Chorley-with-Bispham, vi, 100 » 

Chorlton, see Carlton and Charleton 

Chornet, man. (Rossall), vii, 246 

Chow, fam., see Chew 

Chrichley (Chrichlowe), Rev. Jas., 
vi, 55, 333 . 

Christadelphians, vi, 248 

Christ Church (Oxf.), vii, 145, 151, 
152” 

Christiana, vi, 485”, 538”; d. of 
Godith, vii, 324”; d. of Nich., 
vii, 114 ” 7 

Christian Brethren, vi, 248; vii, 
218 

Christians (Wrightington), vi, 174 ” 

Christ’s Croft (Preston), vii, 134 

Church (Goosnargh), vii, 191 


je5 


Church (Whalley), vi, 233 2, 234, 
349, 356 Nn, 376 N, 399-404, 421, 
428, 504”; adv., vi, 404; char., 
Vi, 344, 404; ch., vi, 403; ind., 
vi, 399; man., vi, 232, 399; 
mill, vi, 400 x, 402 »; Nonconf., 
vi, 404; St. Oswald’s Well, vi, 
400 ”, 403 ” 

Church, Ad. de, vi, 400, 401 n, 
402 ”, 419; Agnes de, vi, 4oon; 
Alex. de, vi, 406; Alice de, vi, 
400 n, 402"; vii, 65”; Christ- 
iana de, vi, 401 n, 402; Ellen 
de, vi, 4o1n; Ellis de, vi, 406; 
Hen. de, vi, 400%, 4027; 
Humph, de, vi, 402”; John de, 
vi, 401; vii, 65”; Marg. de, 
vi, 503 »; Margery de, vi, 506” ; 
Maud de, vi, 400”; Nich. de, 
vi, 402”; Pet. de, vi, goon, 
401 n, 402”, 408; Rich. de, 
vi, 402 m, 503 n, 506”; Rob. de, 
vi, 400”, 4oIn; Rog. de, vi, 
402 n; Sim. de, vi, 401 n, 4027; 
Uctred de, vi, 399, 400, 401 7, 
402 2, 417; Will. de, vi, 401 n, 
402 

Church Clough (Colne), vi, 530” 

Churchfield (Church), vi, 403 ” 

Church Hill (Blackburn), see 
Churchholt 

Church Hill (Padiham), vi, 493 

Churchholt (Blackburn), vi, 250 

Church House (Broughton), 
120” 

Church of Christ, sect, vi, 147 

Church Town (Bispham), 
246n 

Churchtown (Garstang), vii, 293, 
312, 313, 314 

Chyry, Ad., vii, 53 ”; Will., vii, 53 

Cilnegreve (Cuerden), vi, 28 2 

Civil War, vi, 290; vii, 75, 76, 220, 
292, 319 

Clacton, Clactune, Claghton, Clag- 
ton, Clahton, see Claughton 

Claifurlang (Salesbury), vi, 253 


vii, 


vii, 


Claiton, see Clayton 


Claitteburn (Clitheroe), vi, 365 

Clakerkelde (Preston), vii, 134” 

Clancutt, brook, vi, 204 

Clapham, Alan, vii, 323; Alice, 
vii, 323 ” 

Clare, John de, vii, 209”; Maud 
de, vii, 209 ” 

Claremont (Blackpool), vii, 250” 

Claremont Park (Blackpool), vii, 


243 


Clarence, Lionel, dk. of, vi, lol ” 
Clark (Clarke), Alex., vi, 80; Geo., 


vi, 55; Rev. Hen., vii, 314”; 
Hen., vii, 227 2; Rich., vi, 907 ; 
Rob., vii, 216”, 227”; Sarah, 
vii, 314”; Rev. T., vii, 221, 
224; Thos., vi, 322 ”, 367 ”, 521 ; 
Capt., vii, 314; see also Clerk 


Clark’s field (Euxton), vi, 21” 


Clarkson (Clerkson), Ann, vi, 547 ”; 
Edm., vii, 259”, 266”; Elisha, 
vi, 416, 496; Rev. Geo., vi, 36; 
Geo., vii, 62 », 113”; Hen., vil, 
80x”; John, vi, 447; vil, 50”, 
284; Lawr., vii, 80; Leonard, 
vii, 261 ”; Mich., vii, 50%; Per- 


petua, vii, 289”; Rich., vii, 
289 n; Rev. Thos., vil, 23, 253 
Thos., vii, 126 2; Will. vii, 


on 
Claughton, vi, 58 ” ; vil, III, 113 ”, 
I7I”, 194”, 266m, 269, 273, 
288 n, 291, 292, 293, 296, 296%, 
297 2, 299, 313 %, 318 m, 324-30 ; 
chap., vii, 330; char., vil, 300; 
man., vii, 291, 325; Rom. Cath., 


vi, 330 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Claughton, Ad. de, vil, 172 m, 325” 
326, 328, 330”; Agnes de, 
vii, 48; Avice de, vii, 3307; 
Bimme de, vii, 326; Cecily de, 
vu, 98”; Dawkin de, vii, 487; 
John, vi, 198”; Jordan de, vi, 
g8n; Lawr., vi, 198; Margery 
de, vil, 326”; Maud de, vii, 
326 n, 325; Mich. de, vii, 325 n, 
328; Patrick de, vii, 3267; 
Ralph de, vii, 326; Rich. de, vii, 
130 n, 325”, 326, 328, 3307; 
Rob. de, vii, 107 , 326 n, 328"; 
Rog. de, vii, 326”; Thos. de, vii, 
328; Walt. de, vii, 325 ”, 326 7, 
328 n; Will. de, vii, 328 n, 330” 

Claughton Hall (Claughton), vii, 
328 

Claughton House (Claughton), vii, 

307 

Claughton-on-Brock, see Claughton 

Claverell Hey (Clitheroe), vi, 366 ” 

Claverhole (Marsden), vi, 540 

Claxton, Lawr., vii, 80 

Clay, Alf. B., vi, 291; Rev. John, 


vl, 299 

Claybutts (Shevington), vi, 202 n 

Clay Croft (Wigan Woodhouses), 
vi, IgI n 

Claycroft Yate (Clayton-le-Moors), 
vi, 418 0 

Clayton, brook, vi, 289 

Clayton, Abigail, vi, 64”, I50n, 
250; vil, 215”; Ad. (de), vi, 47, 
12M, 24m, 29, 30, 30”, 347, 
399, 492"; vii, 55”; Agnes de, 
vi, 347"; Aldred de, vi, 258; 
Ahce (de), vi, 29”, 30n, 34n, 
250, 402m, 418; Vii, 55”; 
Anne, vi, 285-86; Avice de, vi, 
bon; Beatrice de, vi, 255; 
Benj., vi, 50%; Cecily de, vi, 
418; Dorothy, vi, 35; Edw., vi, 
250, 202"; Eliz., vi, 30”, 543; 
Ellen (de), vi, 12”, 30, 35%, 
250; vil, 55”; Fran., vi, 344; 
Geoff. (de), vi, 250, 320, 324; 
Geo., vi, 19 n, 250, 269 n; Gerald 
de, vi, 1, 29, 59; Giles, vi, 250, 
416; Grolamby de, vi, 77; 
Hamlet de, vii, 55  ; Hawise de, 
vi, 29”; Henrietta, vi, 219; 
Hen. (de), vi, 245, 249, 258, 
259, 282, 347, 390, 398, 400, 
499 2, 410, 411 , 412, 413, 414 7, 
417, 418, 475 2, 499, 499 n, 552 2; 
vu, 16, 43, 43”, 54”, 557, 
57”; Hugh, vi, 200; Isabel (de), 
V1, 30, 63, 457, 474.7, 47772; 
vu, 16, 55”; Jas. (de), vi, 30, 
499 2 ; Jane, vi, 35 n, 250; Janet, 
vi, 35”; Joan (de), vi, 212, 
77”; Rev. John, vi, 29; John 
(de), vi, 3%, 10, 10 n, ign, 21 -n; 
79, 30, 32, 34, 35, 37, 49, 
50 n, 55 n, 62 n, 63 n, 69 n, 777, 
TIOm, II3”, 219n, 246n, 250, 
251, 260, 393”, 409, 410, 418, 
473", 543, 545, 547; vii, 55 7, 
I20H, 135”, 218; Jordan de, 

vi, 255; Leonard, vi, 237, 241, 

263, 490; Marg. (de), vi, 250, 

250, 335%, 411, 418, 543, 547; 

Margery (de), vi, 347, 1097, 

282; vii, 557; Mary, vi, 141; 


Matilda de, vi, 418; Maud, vi, 


30; Miles, vi, 510”; Nich., vi 
250; Pet., vi, 16”; Phil. de, vi 
34%, 457, 474”, 477”; vii, 16, 
55”, 57; Ralph (de), vi, 27 n, 
39, 30%, 35, 249, 250, 258, 259, 
295 2, 475 n, 553.0; vii, 54”, 55, 
57”; Sir Rich., vi, 218, 2109, 
219M, 220, 223, 279; Rev. Rich., 
V1, 353 Rich. (de), vi, 23, 29 n, 


Clayton Hall 


Clayton-le-Dale, vi, 235, 


, 


, 


Clayton (cont.) 


34”, 35, 190, 218, 219M”, 279, 
489; Sir Rob., vi, 219; Rev. 
Rob., bp., vii, 138; Rob. (de), 
v1, I, 7m, 147, 26 n, 29, 30”, 
32”, 34:7), 35, 219 4, 25075 Vii, 
16, 552; Rose, vi, 250, 250” ; 
R., vi, 419; Sarah de, vii, 55”; 
Susan, vi, 250, 251; Swain de, 
vi, 324; Col. Thos., vi, 543, 547; 
Thos. (de), vi, 16”, 2b, 25x, 
30n, 327, 35, 50”, 62n, O4n, 
I4I, 150”, 183, 156, 218, 2197, 
223, 223”, 249, 250, 251, 285- 
86, 299, 322 ”, 327 7, 347, 41I, 
417; vil, 55”, 116”, I2I1n, 
138, 218; Warine de, vi, 29, 
30 n, 79n, 262; Rev. Will, vi, 
253; Will. (de), vi, 16”, 277, 


30m, 34%, 357, 36, 48, 250, 
2537, 258, 262”, 282, 298n, 
335; Vii, 42, I20n, 138%, 
228, 2497. Rev. —, Vi, 274 5 ==; 


vi, 446”, 471; fam., vi, 187 7, 
198, 263 ”, 528 


Clayton Brook (Clayton-le-Woods), 


vi, 29 


Clayton Grange (Clayton-le-Dale), 


vi, 258 


Clayton Green (Clayton-le-Woods), 


vi, 10, 29; Rom. Cath., vi, 32 
(Clayton-le-Moors), 

vi, 41 
) 


7 419 
Clayton Hall (Clayton-le-Woods), 


vi, 31 


Clayton Hey (Clayton-le-Dale), vi, 


257, 260 


Clayton in Laylondshire, see Clay- 


ton-le-Woods 


: 257-59, 
393 2; man., Vi, 232, 234, 258 


Clayton - le - Dale - cum - Showley, 


vi, 257 


Clayton-le-Moors, vi, 234, 349, 


356”, 411, 412, 412", 417-23, 
420; vil, 133”, 136”; char,, vi, 
416; ch., vi, 423; coal-mines, vi, 
417, 419; ind., vi, 417; man., vi, 
417, 420”; mill, vi, 418; Non- 
conf., vi, 423 ; Rom. Cath., vi, 423 


Clayton-le-Woods, vi, 3, 6 ”, 29, 37, 


58; char., vi, 10; cross, vi, 29 ; 
man., vi, 29, 39, 64”; Nonconf., 
vi, 32; Rom. Cath., vi, 32 


Clayton Mill (Salesbury), vi, 253 
Cleanfield (Tarnacre), vii, 271 
Clederowe, see Clitheroe 

Clegg, Rich., vii, 145, 148, 149”; 


Mrs., vii 
165 


» 149n; Rev. —, vii, 


Clement, Vincent, vi, 543 
Clerk (Clerke), John, vi, 445, 445”, 


496; Marg., vii, 331 ”, 445; Rob. 
(the), vii, 223, 226, 231n; —, 
vi, 549”; see also Clark 


Clerk Hill (Whalley), vi, 303 ”, 381, 


387 


Clerkson, see Clarkson 

Clett, Rob. de, vi, 72” 

Cleveland, Rich., vii, 71 ” 
Cleveley, vii, 68, 291, 300n, 304, 


304 %, 305; mill, vii, 270 n, 302 n 


Cleveleys (Thornton), vii, 232; ch., 


vii, 236, 237 


Cleyton, see Clayton 

Clibard, vi, 338 n 

Cliderhou, see Clitheroe 

Cliff (Cliffe), Alex. de, vi, 247, 


28; Alice del, vi, 303; John 
(de), vi, 28 n, 103, 290; Kath., 
vi, 28; Rich. (de, del), vi, 28 n, 
89, 107 n, 290 n, 303; Thos., vi, 
28n; Will. (del), vi, 24, 27%, 
28 n, 189 


Cliffe (Gt. Harwood), vi, 338 


356 


Clifford, Lady Mary I... vii, 7» 
Ld., vu, 7 2; Thos., Ll, vi, 3169 

Clifford, Joan, vi, 162"; Matilda 
vi, 316; Thos., vi, 162"; Will. 
v1, 535; —, Vi, 536 

Clifton (Clifton-with-Salwick), vii, 
143, 144%, I4On, 149, 161-5; 
ch., vii, 165 ; man., vil, 161, log n, 
2819 

Clifton (Habergham Eaves), vi 
445%, 454 

Clifton, Alice de, vii, 162"; Aline 
de, vii, 162; Anne, vi, 99n; 
vil, 104%, 198, 215n; Bridg., 
Lady, vii, 164; Chas. F., see 
Donington, Ld.; Christiana de, 
vii, 328; Chris., vi, 95", 99n: 
Sir Cuth., vii, 144, 174”; Col. 
Cuth., vii, 164; Cuth., vi, 339; 
vii, 127, 135m”, 145m, 152n, 
157m”, 158m, 162, 163, 163n, 
164”, 170 Nn, 174”, 175 Nn, 180 n, 
181m, 215, 223m, 241, 2420, 
254M, 200 n, 275 n, 281 n, 2830; 
Dorothy, vii, 164; Capt. Edw., 
vi, 172; Egelina de, vii, 175; 
Eleanor, vii, 164; Eliz. (de), 
vi, 172; vii, 163, 163m, 193n, 
230”, 275m; Ellen, vii, 1030; 
Geo., vii, 164; Gerv., vii, 144, 
149, 164”; Gilb. de, vi, 33n, 
7ON, 79M, 220Nn, 301, 332n; 
vii, 207, 328m; Harriet, vi, 
172; Hen. (de), vii, 151, 161, 
162 2, 174 n, 175 nN, 192 n, 242n; 
Isabel (de), vii, 162”, 163%, 
175”, 192m, 198; Jas., vii, 
149 n, 162 n, 163 n, 164 n, 283 n; 
Jane, vii, 163, 164”, 166n; 
Joan, vii, 198, 198, 269; John 
(de), vi, 89”; vii, 142", Ib2n, 
163”, 104 n, 165”, 175”, 255; 
John T., vii, 164, 215, 218; Kath. 
de, vii, 52m, 118", 162n; 
Lawr., vii, 164; Marg. (de), vi, 
99 %, 303-304 1; vii, 162 n, 164n, 
271; Margery de, vi, 304; vii, 
162", 175; Mary, vil, 164%; 
Matth., vi, 95 ”, 99 ” ; Maud (de), 
vi, 99 ”, 110”; Sir Nich. de, vii, 
162; Nich. de, vii, 163 » ; Osbert 
de, vi, 303; Rich. (de), vi, 304; 
vii, 162, 163”, 193, 198; Sir 
Rob. de, vii, 162; Rob. (de), vi, 
33%; vii, 4”, lon, 162n, 
163”, 166%”, 175, 175”, 230, 
270 ; Rog. de, vi, 98 ”; vii, 110 n ; 
Sir Thos., vii, 145, 164, 218m, 
219; Thos. (de), vi, 98, 99n, 
274, 404, 415, 534”; Vii, 52”, 
118", 142m, 145, 148n, 149M, 
I5Im, 162, 162”, 163, 163%, 
164, 164”, 165”, 170n, 174%, 
175, 175”, 180n, 187 n, 207n, 
216, 217, 218, 219, 241, 242%, 
249; Sir T., vii, 175m; T., vil, 
289n; Walt. de, vi, 303; vii, 
175”, 193”; Sir Will. de, vii, 
162, 163, 175”; Will. (de), vi, 
33”, 99%, 304; Vil, 4m, 41%, 
94, TION, 135%, 149M, I5IN, 
152”, 158m, 161, 161 n, 162m, 
163, 164m, 168 n, 173”, 175”, 
181 n, 192, 193, 193 n, 198, 198”, 
215m, 235%, 242, 269, 271, 
281n; —, vi, 495%; vii, 1047, 
214, 283; fam., vii, 127, [41 M, 
143, 140, 152” 

Clifton House (Goosnargh), see 
Latus House 

Clifton Marsh (Clifton-with-Sal- 
wick), vii, 162 , 165 

Cliftun, see Clifton 

Clippende esche-cloh (Sunderland). 
Vi, 317 


Clipston, Rob. de, vi, 87; Walt. 
de, vi, 87 

Clitherall, Alice, vii, 165; Eliz., 
vii, 150%; Thos., vii, 265; see 
also Clitheroe 

Clitheroe (Clithero), vi, 233 ”, 349, 
356 m, 360-72, 390”, 391, 470n, 
492, 494%, 499, 540, 553%, 558 ; 
vii, I, 23, 307; adv., vi, 370; 
chant., vi, 369, 372 #; char., vi, 
372; ch., vi, 361, 369; cross, vi, 
368”; ind. vi, 361; man., vi, 
364, 497%; VU, 55%, 197, 197%, 
283 n, 331"; mkts. and fairs, vi, 
364”, 368, 369, 375”; mill, vi, 
364 m, 367, 488, 489 ~ ; mines, vi, 
362; Nonconf., vi, 371, 372; 
place-names, vi, 393”; pretors, 
vii, 94”; Rom. Cath., vi, 372; 
sch., vi, 372 

Clitheroe, brook, vi, 365” 

Clitheroe, hon., vi, 230, 232, 233, 
361, 362, 405, 409, 476, 477%, 
489, 497, 503, 545, 5523 Vil, 2, 
27, 36, 45, 52, 54,00 

Clitheroe, Sir Ad. (de), vi, 327%, 
331”, 335, 365%, 375%, 393%; 
vii, 16, 16”, 61, 326; Ad. de, vi, 
233 , 254, 258, 259, 293 ”, 330”, 
335%, 336, 305", 393”, 407, 
503 m, 508 n; vil, 4”, 33, 477, 
55”, 57”; Agnes, vi, 254%, 
366»; Alan de, vi, 365 n, 366 n ; 
Alex. (the Clerk of), vi, 366 ; 
Alex. (de), vi, 365”, 366"; 
Alice (de), vi, 366m”; vii, 17, 
48; Alicia, Lady de, vii, 61 ; 
Amabel de, vi, 254”; Amice 
de, vi, 366”; Annota de, vi, 
366; Avice (Lucy), vi, 365”; 
Buband de, vi, 366”; Cecily 
(de), vi, 253, 254, 258, 2597, 
365", 393”; Vil, 55”, 572; 
Christiana de, vii, 4”; Edm. de, 
vii, 16, 17; Eleanor de, vii, 16 ; 
Eliz., vi, 366; vii, 17; Ellen 
(de), vii, 17, 326; Ellis de, vi, 
365”; Emma, vi, 365”, 3667”; 
Eustachia de, vi, 365”; Geoff. 
de, vi, 365”; Hen. de, vi, 365”, 
366, 503; vii, 3, 14”, 16, I9, 
48"; Sir Hugh de, vi, 3307”, 
365, 368”; Hugh de, vi, 253, 
254, 254n, 258, 2903”, 335%, 
336, 366, 393”; vii, 16, 16”, 
33", 47”, 57; Isabel (de), vi, 
254, 365 %, 390, 471 n; vii, 16 7, 
17, 57”; John (de), vi, 365”, 
366 , 371 2, 377”, 390; vii, 3, 
14”, 16"; Jordan de, vi, 3657”, 
366%; Karnwath de, vi, 365”, 


367, 393”; Lambert of, vi, 
365"; Lucy de, vi, 365”; 
Marg. (de), vii, 17, 208”; 


Nich. (de), vii, 16, 19, 208”; 
Paulin, vi, 366”; Pet. de, vi, 
366”; Quenilda de, vi, 365%, 
393 »; Ralph (de), vi, 358, 365 ”, 
366”, 371”, 393”; vii, 17, 
200 ”, 213”; Rich. (de), vi, 254, 
254", 305", 366, 367"; Vii, 
3, 14”, 17, 57”, 165, 211”; Sir 

ob. de, vi, 365”; vii, 57”; 
Rob. (de), vi, 254, 258-9, 
259%, 331M, 335, 335%, 365%, 
366 ®, 375, 393, 393%, 4711; 
vu, 14”, 16, 17, 17”, I9, 55%, 
57”, 208”; Sir Rog., vii, 16; 
Rog. de, vi, 254, 254m, 258, 
258, 293, 335, 330, 365%, 
366”; vii, 4n, 57”; Sibyl de, 
V1, 254, 258, 259”, 365”, 393 ; 
Siegrith de, vi, 365 2; Thos. (de), 
Vl, 254%, 305”, 366”; vii, 17, 
18; Walt. de, vi, 365 ; Will. de, 


INDEX 


Clitheroe (cont.) 
vi, 365 2, 366 n, 390 nN, 50 
see also Clitherall” ees 

Clitheroe Castle, vi, 230, 231, 
362, 367, 439, 482, 487, 
554”; chap., vi, 369, 552 n 

Clitheroe Estate Co., vi, 362 

Clitheroe Moor, vi, 349 

Cliviger, vi, 233 ”, 349. 356 ”, 441, 
442, 450, 451 ®, 453%, 457, 459, 
478-87, 553; vii, 55; agric., 
vi, 443; ch., vi, 486; coal mines, 
vi, 479, 486; coins, vi, 479; 
gtange, vl, 424; man., vi, 232, 
424, 458, 479; mill, vi, 479; 
quarries, vi, 479; Rom. rem., vi, 
479 

Cliviger, Ad. de, vi, 480, 485n; 
Agnes de, vi, 485; Cecily de, 
vi, 485; Gilb. de, vi, 480n; 
Herb. de, vi, 485 2; John de, vi, 
485"; Matth. de, vi, 485”; 
Maud de, vi, 485”; Reg. de, vi, 
480”; Rob. de, vi, 480 ”, 485” 

Cliviger Moor, vi, 233” 

a Rob. Clayton, bp. of, vii, 


360, 
489, 


13 

Closbroke (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 290 

Close Brow (Rishton), vi, 345 

Cloth Hall (Colne), vi, 523, 533 

Cloudsley, John, vi, 146 

Clough, the (Withnell), vi, 48 ” 

Clough, Ad. de (del), vi, 47”, 336, 
366 n, 503, 508 2; Alice de (del), 
vi, 47”, 503”; Fran., vii, 13 ; 
Joan del, vi, 109 n, 376 n, 397 n, 
504; John del, vi, 366, 376n, 
397”, 503, 504”, 506; Kath. 
del, vi, 376”, 503; Pet., vi, 
377”; Ralph, vi, 377”, 447”; 
Rob. del, vi, 109 ”, 503 ”; Thos. 
del, vi, 374” 

Clough Bank (Ribchester), vii, 57 

Clough Fold (Newchurch), vi, 437, 
439 %, 440, 441 

Cloughhead, beck, vi, 540” 

Clough House (Grindleton) vii, 15 

Clough Houses (Haslingden), vi, 


431 

Cloughson (Worsthorne), vi, 477 ” 

Cloughton’s messuage (Walton), vi 
296 

Clow Bridge (Dunnockshaw), vi, 
597, 514 : nas 

Clyvacher, Clyvechir, see Cliviger 

Cnavnecastel, see Knavecastle 

Cnolal, see Knolhale 

Coal mines, vi, 233”, 270, 272, 
278, 284, 338, 345, 417, 419, 423, 
425, 434, 442, 442”, 454, 468, 
474, 479, 480, 487, 490, 492, 523, 
524, 528”, 537, 547%, 548 

Coalpit Green (Trawden), vi, 552 ” 

Coalpit Moor, see Whinney Edge _ 

Coates (Cotes), Rev. John F., vi, 
334; Hen. de, vi, 556” 

Cobden, Rich., vi, 513 

Cob Oak (Salesbury), vi, 256 x 

Cock and Hen, field (Elswick), vii, 
284n 

Cockayne, Sir Will., vi, 293 ” 

Cock Bridge (Gt. Harwood), vi, 338 

Cockcroft (Ribchester), vii, 49 ” 

Cockden (Briercliffe), vi, 471” | 

Cockden, Higher (Briercliffe), vi, 


47. : 
Cockden Lane (Briercliffe), vi, 469 
Cocker, riv., vii, 69 ” 

Cocker, Anne, vi, 237” : 
Cocker Brook (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 

405 ; ch., vi, 409 
Cockerham, vii, 68, 69”, 71, 291, 

300, 332, 333% 7 
Cockerham, Rog. de, vii, 320” 
Cockersand, Rog. de, vil, 297 


38 


Cockersand Abbey, vi, 25, 28, 29 n, 
48, 67, 68 2, 69 n, 96, 103, 103 n, 
TO4”, 105”, 108, 116, 151, 154, 
164, 170 ”, 171, 176, 180 n, 188 n, 
197, 202, 203”, 214 n, 222; vii, 
16, 19, 52 2, 97, 100 n, 118 n, 126, 
129 N, 130 nN, 132, 132 n, 134, 136, 
153, 157 ”, 161 n, 166, 167 n, 168, 
109, 172 ”, 174, 175, 177 , 179 n, 
180, 180”, 181, 181 n, 183, 184, 
187, 190, 192 ”, 198 n, 199, 207”, 
209 N, 213, 222 n, 227, 228, 242, 
250, 252, 254, 250, 257n, 
259, 271, 272, 273, 277%, 279, 
281, 284, 296, 297, 299, 300, 305 n, 
306 , 31T, 313 #, 318, 324, 328 n, 
339%, 332, 332%, , ; 
abbots of, Hereward, 3 aoe 
260; Rob., vii, 97; Rog., vii, 
297”; Thos., vii, 297 

Cockersley, Rich. de, vi, 405” 

Cockeyside (Rishton), vi, 347 

Cockham (Haslingden), vi, 430 

Cockhill Clough (Trawden), vi, 551 

Cockin, Thos., vii, 165 

Cockleach (Thornley), vii, 32 

Cockpit Field (Preston), vii, 79 » 

Cocks, Thos., see Awton 

Cocksfield (Mawdesley), vi, 99 

Cockshaw (Downham), vi, 556 ” 

Cockshaw Dyke (Downham), vi, 
556 2 

Cockshott (Simonstone), vi, 499 

Cockshott (Cockshutt), Alice, vi, 
250; Amee, vi, 413”; Edm., vi, 
251, 342, 499; Edw., vi, 493; 
Geo., vi, 250; Hen., vi, 494”; 
John, vi, 503; Rog., vi, 342, 
493; Thos., vi, 342, 413; vii, 
291 

Codee (Dutton), vii, 58 ” 

Coer, see Coore 

Cofhill (Coufhull), Ad. de, vii, 57”; 
Rich. de, vi, 249; Rob. de, vii, 


a7 % 

Coghull, Joan de, vi, 321; Rog. de, 
vi, 321 

Coins, vi, 115, 182, 235, 259, 301; 
vii, 179; Portuguese, vi, 465 ; 
Rom., vi, 10, 32, 50, 69, 108, 278, 
289, 372, 442, 479, 523, 523” 
vii, 219” 

Cokayne-Frith, Rev. Colin, vi, 
22n; Col. Reg., vi, 22; Maj., 
vi, 22” 

Cokewell butts (Clitheroe), vi, 368 ” 

Colborne (Culban), Chris., vii, 167 ”; 
Hen., vii, 149”, 205, 206”; 
John, vii, 158 ” 

Colcoth, —, vi, 106 

Coldcoats, vi, 349, 388, 391, 421 2, 
457) 458 ’ 

Coldcoats, Hugh de, vi, 3917”; 
Joan de, vi, 391”; Rich. de, vi, 
391, 391 2; Will. de, vi, 391 ” 

Cold Coniston (Yorks), vi, 551” 

Coldewelding (Clitheroe), vi, 365 # 


Cold Hill (Welch Whittle), vi, 
204” ; 
Coldweather House (Marsden), vi, 
540, 546 2 : : 
Coldwedridding (Clitheroe), vi, 


305% ; 
Coldwell (Briercliffe), vi, 468, 
524%, 530% a 
Cole, Dorothy, vii, 314; Jane, vil, 
239 2; Thos., vil, 239%; Thos. 
B., vii, 314; Will, vil, 76, 86 
Cole Clough (Burnley), vi, 448”, 


is (Preesall), vii, 256 ” 

Coleford (Preston), vii, 137” 

Coler, Eliz., vi, 16 2; John, vi, 16”; 
Margery, vi, 26”; Rob., vi, 26”, 
28 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Colevill (Colville), Avice de, vi, 
296; John de, vi, 29%; Marg., 
vi, 290; Will. de, vi, 291, 296 


Colicroft (Ribchester), vu, 55 ” 

Collan, Ad., vii, 173: Alice, vn, 
171 n, 173m"; Juliana, vii, 173"; 
Rob., vi, 336; Rog., vu, 1710, 
173” 

College farms (Hothersall), vii, 66 » 

Colley, Reg., vil, 13 

Colley’s Garden (Preston), vii, 79” 

Collinge, Misses, vi, 471 ” 

Collinhouse (Hapton), vi, 511 

Collins, Rev. Thos., vi, 452; 
F., vi, 404 

Collinson, Agnes, vi, 411”; Alice, 
vi, 402 n, 411 n; Edm., vi, 402"; 
Hen., vi, 402 ” ; Isabel, vi, 400 n, 


Thos. 


402; John, vi, Ilo, 402%, 

411m; Rich., vi, 110”, 411”; 

Rob., vi, 260; Sam. E., vii, 124 ; 

bigs vi, 4027, 425.2; Will. 
» 400 M, 4020; —, Vil, 781 


Collond Banks (Alston), vii, 63 
Colmore, Rich., vii, 190  ; Will. de, 
vii, 188, 189 
Colne, vi, 349, 356”, 459, 492, 
522-36, 537, 538, 539 %, 540, 546, 
547) 547, 559, 552; adv., vi, 
534; Angel’ inn, vi, 536; 
chaps., Vi, 532-3, 535, S447; 
char., vi, 530; ch., vi, 530, 543, 
544%, 54725 Cloth Hall, vi, 
523; coal- mines, vi, 523”, 524, 
547%; CTOSS, VI, 524, 534, 535; 
earthworks, vi, 523”; ind., vi, 
5233; man., vi, 232, 233 ”, 361 1, 
480, 524, 5515 mkts. and fairs, 
Vi, 523; mills, vi, 524, 540; 
Nonconf. , Vi, 535; Rom. Cath., vi, 
536; Rom. Tem., vi, 523; sch., 
vi, 523, 536; sundial, vi, 533 
Colne Co-operative Society, vi, 525 
Colne Hall (Colne), vi, 523, 525 
Colneknoll, Rich. de, vi, 480 
Colne Viver (Colne), vi, 527” 
Colne Water, vi, 522, 536, 541, 548, 


549 n 

Colous, Janet, vii, 306”; Will., 
Vii, 300" 

Colsnapehead = (\Worsthorne), — vi, 


477" 
Coltepark (Dutton), vii, 57” 
Colthey (Myerscough), vii, 139" 
Colthurst (Clitheroe), vi, 367 n 


Colthurst, Abra., vi, 419; Ad. de, 
vi, 390; Agnes de, vi, 390; 
Anne, vi, 419; Edm., vi, 3667, 
367m, 395; Edw., vi, 367; 
Eleanor, vi, 367; Ellis de, vi, 
390; Giles, vi, 395, 396; Hen., 


Vi, 367°, 395, 396; Jane, vi, 
3957; Marg. de, vi, 390; Rich., 
vi, 395”; Thos., vi, 367” 

Coltman, Alice, vi, 34”; Thos., vi, 
347 

Colton, Rev. Will, vi, 299 

Colville, see Colevill 

Combe Hill, vi, 548 

ale Mill Cross (Trawden), vi, 
54 

Comberhalgh (Whittingham), vii, 
194%”, 207, 208 n, 209 n, 210, 212 

Comberhalgh (Cumberhalgh), Ag- 
nes de, vii, 197»; Alice de, vii, 
212 23 Amery de, vii, 209%, 
212; Eva de, vii, 212 2: Hen. 
de, vii, 209, 212”; Rich. de, 
vli, 209”, 2127; Rog. de, vii, 
107%, 212% Thos. de, vii, 
209 n, 212" 

Comey, Geo., vi, 88 

Comforth Hall, man. 
ham), vii, 208 

Compley (Poulton), vii, 225 


? 


(Whitting- 


Compsy (Compsty), Ad. de, vii, 
107; Alice de, vii, 107 »; Hen., 
vii, 106 2 ; John, vil, 106”; Will, 
vil, 106” 

Compton (Ribby), vii, 158 

Compton, Sarah M., vi, 23 ” ; Thos., 
vi, 23” 

Comylache (Leyland), vi, 15 

Coney, Sir Will, vi, 226” 

Congregationalists, vi, 17, 74, 108, 
114, 147, 154, 220, 248, 252, 275, 
278, 283, 289, 299, 334, 348, 371, 
352 n, 396, 399, 409, 427, 441, 
453, 468, 496, 535, 541, 5443 vii, 
19, 32, 51, 53, 103, 113, 138, 171, 
I8I, 190, 205, 218, 237, 251, 284, 
304, 311, 312 

Coniers, see Conyers 

Conigree (Claughton), vii, 322, 329 ” 

Coningsby, Sir Rich., vii, 199”, 
216%” 

Conisburgh, John de, vii, 71 ”, 147 

Conishead Priory (Ulverston), vi, 
383; vil, 200 

Connell, Geo., vi, 237” 

Consett, Mary, vi, 286; Ralph, vi, 
286 

Constablee, Constablegh, see Con- 
stable Lee 

Constable Lee (Lower Booths), vi, 
233 2, 435-36 . , 

Conway, Ellen de, vii, 62"; Sir 
Hen. de, vii, 27 n, 62 

Conyers (Coniers), Agnes de, vii, 
173; Alice de, vii, 171 n, 172” ; 
Joan, vii, 173”; Ralph de, vii, 
173”; Sir Rob. de, vii, 172”; 
Rob. de, vi, 314”; vii, 171”, 
172 n, 173"; Will. de, vii, 172”, 
173” 

Conylache (Leyland), vi, 11 m, 109 ” 

Coo Hill (Coohyll) (Ditton), vi, 265 

Cook (Cooke), Eliza, vi, 118; John 
(the), vi, 95, 497; vii, 263"; 
Margery, vi, 4977; Rich. (the), 
Vi, $52.%, 555°: Rog. the, vi, 
4971; Capt., Vi, 361; Mrs., vi, 

7In; —, Vil, 2437 

Cookall, W ill., vii, 150” 

Cooke's House | (Mawdesley), vi,94n 

Cook Green Farm (forton), vii, 300 

Cookson, Rich., vii, 205 n, 206 

Cooling, see Cowling 

Coomber, Mary, vii, 264”; Thos., 
vii, 2547” 

Coombes, Will., vi, 181 

Coope, see Cowpe 

Cooper, Anne, vi, 149”; Benj., vi, 
51, §2, 114, 229; Eleanor, vi, 
28n; Eliz. vi, 148, 191”; 
Hugh, vi, 129, 130, 148, 149%, 
191 n, 198"; vii, 194; John, vi, 
167, 206 n, 297, 307; vii, 181 ; 
Oliver, vi, 147; Rich., vi, 149”, 
166 n, "260; Rob., vi, 28n, 14gn; 
Rev. ’Thos., vi, 319; Thos., vi, 


149 7; vii, 246 nN; see ‘also Cowper 


Cooper’s Lane (Heskin), vi, 166 
Coore (Coer, Couer, Coure, Cover, 


Covere), Ad. de, vii, 196, 196” ; 
Alice de, vii, 198”; Christiana 


de, vii, 196; Geoff. de, vii, 196, 
196 n, 197 n; Gilb. de, vii, 196” ; 
Grimbald de, vii, 196, 198 2 ; 
Hilda de, vii, 196 n; Jane de, vii, 
196n; John’ de, vii, 31 n, 196 2: 
Maud de, vii, 31”; Rich., vii, 
31 n, 196 ; Will. de, vii, 196 n, 198 
Cooton, see Cottam and Cotton 
Cophull, Cophulle, see Coppull 
Copp (Gt. Eccleston), vii, 276 
chap., vii, 266; sch., vii, 266” 
Copp, hill, vii, 276 
Coppedhurst (Chipping), vil, 30n 
Coppedhurst, John de, vi, 202 


a 
335° 


Coppedlaw (Clitheroe), vi, 365 

Coppel, see Coppull 

Coppetlauche (Clitheroe), vi, 365 

Copphull, see Coppull 

Coppinger, Hen., vi, 200n 

Coppull, vi, 58 n, 182, 187, 224-9; 
char., vi, 191; ch. vi, 229; 
man., vi, 224; Nonconf., vi, 229 

Coppull (Cophull, Cophulle, Coppel, 
Copphull, Crophull), Agnes de, vi 
225m, 226m; Alice (de), vi, 
225”; vii, 166 1; Amice de, vi, 
2250; Cecily (de), vi, 15M, 225; 
vii, IoIn; Clemency de, vi, 
225 24 Emma de, vi, 164n, 
225; Gilb., vi, 225"; Hen. (de), 
vi, 15m”, 225%; vii, 101m; 
Isabel, vi, 225; Jas., vi, 2250; 
Joan de, vi, 225n; John (de), 
vi, 15”, 62, 142, 164M, 212m, 
224M, 225. nN, 226n, 228 n, 267 n, 
285"; vii, IoIm, 1257, 166 n, 
169 n, 173 n, 284; Margery de, 
vi, 225; Maud (de), vi, 225”; 


Rich. (de), vi, 62, 224, 225n, 
285"; Rob., vi, 225”; Thos. 
(de), vi, 224m, 225m, 2279; 


Will. (de), vi, 142, 160, 180n, 
225 n; vii, 166”; fam., vii, 283 
Coppull Hall (Standish), vi, 183 
Coppy Clough (Church), vi, 399 
Copthull, see Coppull 
Copthurst (Padiham), vi, 493 
Copwood, WillL., vii, 333 ” 
Corbridge, John, vi, 372 
Corcola (Stalmine), vii, 252 
Corcolcar (Kirkham), vii, 160 
Cordell, Thos., vi, 160” 
Core (Chipping), vii, 26; 
vii, 31 
Corfield, Rev. Ashley T., vi, 283 
Corles, fam., see Corless 
Corles Mill, vii, 270” 


man., 


Corless (Corles), John, vii, 300; 
Tim., vi, 74, 74%; vii, 291 

Cornall, Rich., vii, 273; see also 
Cornoe 


Cornay, Ad. de, vii, 153”; Row- 
land, vii, 179”; Warine de, vii, 
271 

Corner Row (Kirkham), see Cornoe 

Cornfield (Ightenhill Park), vi, 487, 


489 

Cornfield Close (Medlar), vii, 153 

Cornholm (Larbreck), vii, 182 ” 

Cornholme (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Cornhull, Will. de, vi, 413 ” 

Cornhurst (Accrington), vi, 425 ” 

Cornleyyeth (Ribchester), vii, 48 7] 

Cornoe (Greenhalgh), vii, 179, 
180”; man., vii, 181; sch., vil, 
181 

Cornoe, Ad. de, vii, 179; Hen., 
vii, 181”; Rob., vii, 181”; 
Rowland, vii, 181%; see also 
Cornall 

Cornthwaite, Rob., vii, 81 

Cornwall, John, earl of, vii, 302 ” ; 
Rich., earl of, vii, 146” 

Corrit, John, vii, 245 

Cort, Edw., vi, 404 

Cortes (Cortays), Agnes de, vi, 


398n; Emot, vi, 398”; Rob., 
vi, 398"; Will, vi, 398 n; vii, 
204 

Corwyn, Will., vii, 245” 


Coseney (Cosney), ‘Dorothy, vii, 89; 
John, vil, 113"; Thos., vii, 138" 

Cosson, John, vii, 113 n; Thos. ; 
vii, 113 

Coteflatt \(Hackinsall), vii, 256” 

Cotes, see Coates 

Cotham, see Cottam 

Cotom, Coton, see Cottam and 
Cotton 


Cottam, vii, 72, 76, 79, 80, 91, 129, 
132%, 133”; fisheries, vii, 136 ; 
ind., vii, 129; man., vii, 134; 
Rom. Cath., vii, 104 

Cottam (Cotom), Ad., vi, 353, 354, 
355, 383”, 388; Alice, vi, 354; 

vii, 152”; Amice, vli, 152”; 

Anne, vi, 262 », 405 n; Avice de, 
vii, 136 2; Denise de, vii, 288 n ; 
Dorothy, vii, 53”; Edith de, 
vii, 134%; Edm. (de), vii, 53”, 
136 n; Edw., vi, 405 ”; vii, 47” ; 
Eliz., vii, 331”; Ellen, vii, 53 x ; 
Ellis, vii, 37, 47%, 53”; Geoff. 
(de), vii, 134”, 136m, 3319”; 
Geo., vii, 125”; Hen. (de), vii, 
125 #, 136 mM, 152 M, 213 , 331M ; 
Hugh, vii, 330”; Jas., vil, 152», 
200”; Janet, vii, 200”; Joan, 
vii, 152”; John (de), vi, 295; 
vil, 53, 125”, 134”, 136”, 147, 
152”, 169 n, 200 n, 2605 Nn, 272n, 
288 n, 331”; Lawr., vu, 49”, 
53m, 265”, 329”, 330”; Marg. 
(de), vii, 136”, I52”, 3310”; 
Margery (de), vi, 405”; vii, 
136”; Maud, vii, 210; Nich., 
vil, 331”; Oliver, vii, 292”, 
331m; Pet., vil, 152”; Pris- 
cilla, vi, 295; vil, 272”; Rich. 
(de), vi, 343; Vu, 53”, 134”, 
136, 297%, 329”, 331, 331”; 
Rob. (de), vii, 53”, 66 », 134, 
152m”, 200", 331”; Rog., vii, 
152”; Thos., vii, 36, 53, 152”, 
165”, 200”; Uctred, vii, 53”; 
Will. (de), vi, 262”; vu, 537”, 
64n, 66, 76m, I25n, 152%, 
210”, 331; fam., vi, 444; see 
also Cotton 

Cottam Hall (Preston), vii, 767, 
135 ”, 291 

Cottam Moss (Preston), vii, 134 ” 

Cottesbach, Eustace de, vii, 84, 
162 n, 321 n, 326" 

Cottingham, Hugh de, vi, 87 ” 

Cotton (Coton, Cooton), Eliz., vi, 
92; Marg., vii, 30 ” ; Nich., vii, 
30”; Rog., vi, 92”; Will., vii, 
89; see also Cottam 

Cotton manufacture, vi, 260, 263, 
270, 276, 278, 284, 289, 326, 338, 
345, 350, 361, 372, 399, 405, 406, 
409, 417, 423, 427, 434, 439, 437, 
442, 469, 474, 492, 503, 507, 512, 
513, 515, 519, 523, 537, 542; 544, 
548; vu, 27, 36, 5i, 78, gf, 150, 
153, 167, 320 

Cottun, Cotum, Cotun, see Cottam 

Couburgh, see Cowburn 

Coucy, Ingram (Enguerrand, Ingel- 
Tam) de, vii, 302, 303, 303%; 
Isabella de, vii, 303 ; Philippa de, 
vii, 303 ; Will. de, vii, 181 ”, 230, 
277, 277 N, 301 N, 302, 303, 306, 
308, 309, 313, 318”, 326%; see 
also Gynes 

Coufhull, see Cofhill 

Couhillands (Wilpshire), vi, 335 

Coulborne, see Cowburn 

Coulthard, T., vii, go ” 

Coulthurst, Abra., vi, 447; Alice, 
vii, 56 

Coulton, John, vii, 334; Rev. Will., 
Vi, 343, 344 . ” 

Countes Hey (Chipping), vii, 29 ” 

Counton (Ribby), see Compton 

Coupe, see Cowpe 

Couper, see Cowper and Cooper 

Coupland, Joan de, vii, 303 ; John 
de, vii, 303, 316 ” 

Cour bridge, vi, 122 » 

Coure, see Coore 

Court House 


340” 


(Martholme), vi, 


INDEX 


Coventry, Hen., vii, 88n; Rich., 
vii, 41 

Cover, Covere, see Coore 

Covihill (Chipping), vii, 29 » 

Cowanthwaite mill (Whittingham), 
vii, 209 n 

Cowban (Cowborne), Geo., vii, 
100”; John, vi, 32n; —, vii, 
242; see also Cowburn 

Cowburn (Cowburgh), man. (War- 
ton), vil, 159”, 172, 214n 

Cowburn (Coulborne, Cowborne), 
Cecily, vi, 265 ; Chris., vii, 170n ; 
Ellen, vii, 170; Geo., vi, 265, 
285, 288; vii, 175”; Hen., 
vi, 205; vil, 170”; Janet, vii, 
17on; Joan, vii, 170”; John, 
vi, 2605; vil, 170; Judith, vii, 
17on; Lawr., vii, 170”, 171 n, 
250”; Thos., vi, 265; Will., vii, 
170 nv; see also Cowban 

Cowden Brook, see Cole Clough 

Cowdray (Cowdrey), John, vi, 74Nn; 
Marg. de, vii, 180%, 2837; 
Margery de, vii, 180 x; Rob. de, 
vi, 113%; vii, 180 n, 283 n; Will. 
de, vu, 180 n, 283” 

Cowehey (Clayton -le-Moors), vi 
418 n 

Cowell (Rishton), see Cowhill 

Cowell (Cawvell), Anne, vii, 213”; 
Geo., vii, 62 ; Joan, vii, 119”; 
Jobn, vii, 59”, 62”; Rob., vii, 
85 ; Thos., vii, 119 ”, 213 n; Will. 
vi, 517; vii, 124”; see also 
Cowhill 

Cowfield (Catterall), vii, 324 

Cowgill, Jas., vi, 571, 558 . 

Cowhey Wood (Whittingham), vii, 
2137 

Cow Hill (Haighton), vii, 124 

Cowhill (Rishton), vi, 346”, 347; 


’ 


vii, 42” 

Cowhill (Koul), Ad. de, vi, 347”; 

Rich. de, vi, 345, 347 ”; Rob. de, 

vi, 400”; Thos. de, vi, 4o2”; 
Uctred de, vi, 400 2 ; Warine de, 
vi, 400”; Will. de, vi, 400n, 
402 2; see also Cowell 

Cowhill Moss (Rishton), vi, 345 

Cowhope, man., vi, 233” 

Cowhope, fam. ; see Cowpe 

Cowhouses (Accrington), vi, 233”, 
424 1, 425 ; 

Cowling (Chorley), vi, 129 

Cowling (Cooling), Jas., vi, 143”; 
Thurstan, vi, 143”; Will, vi, 
143” 

Cow Moss (Coppull), vi, 229 

Cowopp, see Cowpe ; 

Cowpe (Lower Booths), vi, 436 

Cowpe (Coope, Coupe, Cowhope, 
Cowopp), Geo., vi, 301 ; Hen. de, 
vi, 480, 481”; Jas., vi, 237%, 
280; Rich., vi, 301 ; Thos., vii, 
77; Will, vi, 303, 431%”; Vii, 
138” ; ; 

Cowper, Alice, vi, 260”; Eliz., vi, 
415; Gilb., vi, 260”; Hen., vi, 
260 ”, 371”; Jas., V1, 273, 274; 
vii, 158%; John, vi, 3”; Jos., 
vii, 124 ; Maud, vii, 253 ”; Thos., 
vi, 17”; Will, vi, 17”, 57”; 
vil, 253 2; see also Cooper 

Cowthorpe man. (Yorks), vi, 421” 

Crabby Nook (Penwortham), vi, 
56; vii, 90” 

Crabtree, Alice M., vi, 441; Hen., 
vi, 381 ; Miles, vi, 519; Will., vi, 
149 : 

Grist (Penwortham), vi, 68 x 

Cragg, the (Foulridge), vi, 546” 

Cragg, Eleanor M., vi, 213 ”, 229”; 
Matth., vi, 167”, 213”, 2297; 
Rich., vii, 26 ” 


359 


Crages, the (Pendle), vi, 233 2, 51 

Craitate, Alured, UME .- a 

Crakemer (Catterall), vii, 323 » 

Cramer-Roberts, Rev. Fran, A. R. 
vi, 242 

Cranage, Thos., vi, 80 ; vii, 204 

Cranberry Moss, vi, 269 

Crane, Agnes, vii, 234”; Anne, vii, 
234”; Edw., vi, 165; vii, 80; 
Ellen, vi, 175 ; Geo., vii, 234”; 
Hen., vi, 496 ” ; Janet, vii, 2342; 
John, vi, 165”, 166 n, 175 n; 
Marg., vii, 234m; Mary, vi, 
165”; Rich., vii, 250; Rob., 
vll, 250”; see also Craven 

Cranmer, Thos., archbp., vi, 298 ; 
vii, 275” 

Cranshaw, fam., see Cronkshaw 

Crapot (Balderston), vi, 314 

Crappencrop (Kirkland), vii, 313 

Crauthornland (Lea), vii, 130” 

Craven (Yorks), vi, 491 

Craven, Ad. de, vi, 374; Agnes, 
vi, 359”; Hen., vi, 359, 496 ; 
Nich., vi, 448; Rich., vi, 237”, 
337, 381”; Rob., vi, 237 n, 337, 
398 n ; see also Crane 

Craven Fold (Dinckley), vi, 337 

Crawshaw (Adlington), vi, 217 

Crawshaw (Aighton), vii, 1,14, 14” 

Crawshaw, Jas., vi, 438; Thos., vi, 
438, 438 2 

Crawshaw Booth, vi, 233 ”, 433-4 

Crawshaw Hall (Crawshaw Booth), 
V1, 434 

Crawshaw Head, vi, 438 ” 

Crawshaw Walshman’s Croft (Bai- 
ley), vii, 17 

Crawshey (Colne), vi, 525 ” 

Creek, Quenilda at, vii, 183 2; Rog. 
at, vi, 183 ” 

Creichlow, see Critchlow 

Cresswell Syke (Chipping), vii, 29 » 


? 


Creswallsyke (Penwortham), vi, 
62%” 

Cribden Moor, vi, 230 

Crichelowe, Crichlaw, Crichley, 


Crichlow, see Critchlow 
Crigleston, John de, vi, 545, 546 
Crinsil, brook, vii, 46 
Cripple Oak (Chipping), vii, 34” 
Crisp (Crispe), Eliz., vi, 180%; 

Isabel, vi, 159”; John, vi, 161; 

178, 180; Mary, vi, 180”; Thos., 

vi, 158, 180 n 


Critchlow (Creichlow, Crichelowe, 
Crichlaw, Crichley, Crichlow, 
Critchley), Anne, vii, 289”; 


Grace, vii, 136%; Jas., vi, 50; 
John, vi, 32, 272”; Lawr., vi, 
298 n; Oliver, vi, 23”; Ralph, 
vi, 3”, 23”, 288”; Rich., vi, 
23”; vii, 330”; Thos., vi, 283, 
Will., vi, 23”, 208, 283”; vii, 
98 n, 1367, 213” : 
Crocke, the (Simonstone), vi, 499 ” 
Crocland (Hothersall), vii, 63 » 
Croft, Gt. (Rufford), vi, 120 7 
Croft, Chas., vi, 118 ; Ellen de, vii, 
169 x; Emma de, vi, II ”, 109”, 
150”, 159”; Gabriel, vii, 270” ; 
Sir Hen. de, vii, 274, 328%; 
Hen. de, vii, 268 n, 278 n, 322 n, 
324; Isabel (Isolda) (de), vu, 
270 N, 274, 316, 323”; Joan 
de, vii, 268, 322”; John de, 
vi, Il”, 10gn, 150m", 159”; 
vii, 241, 316”, 322”; Nich. 
(de), vii, 169”, 241”; Rog. de, 
vii, 322”; Will. de, vi, 174%, 
177”; Vii, 316” : 
Croft at the Town (Cuerden), vi, 


2 a . oe 
Croftland (Upper Rawcliffe), vil 
268” 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Crofton Anne A., vi, 325; Lt.-Gen. 
Js Fig 01-325 

Crofts (Lea), vil, 1330” 

Crogrefield (Eccleston), vi, 104” 

Croke, see Crook 

Crokeshagh, Will., vi, 438” 

Croking (Penwortham), vi, 60” 

Cromanhalgh (Hothersall), vii, 65 ” 

Crombleholme (Crombilholme, 
Cromleholme, Crumbleholme), 
Chris., vii, 35 ”; Edw., vu, 264 7, 
265”, 200; Eliz., vii, 57”; Ellis, 
vii, 44; Joan, vii, 35”; Rev. 
Rich., vii, 264”, 275”; Rich., 
vi, 265, 398 n, 538; vu, 17 7, 18, 
18”; Rob., vu, 42, 51”, 56”, 
59, 97 N, 190, 265, 260; Thos., 


vii, 35”; Rev. Will, vi, 283; 
Will, vii, 59”, 266; fam., vi, 
380n 

Crombleholme Fold (Threlfall), vii, 
196” 


Crombock (Comberhalgh), vii, 208 


Crombock, Clement, vi, 398”; 
Eleanor, vi, 387”; Eliz., vi, 
398; John, vi, 387, 397", 


398 n, 399”, 491, 515m, 549M; 
Rich., vi, 387, 387”, 398, 492 ; 
Thomasine, vi, 398”; Will, vi, 
355%, 387, 3987, 519; —, VI, 
549; fam., vi, 395 ” 

Crombrook (Habergham Eaves), vi, 
457, 457" 

Cromford, man., vii, 80 

Cromleholme, see Crombleholme 

Crompton, Abra., vi, 135, 143, 148 ; 
John, vi, 135, 148; vil, 507”; 
Mabot de, vi, 267; Rich., vii, 
50; Sam., vi, 148, 270, 2867 ; 
Sarah, vi, 145”; —, vi, 426; vii, 
65n 

Cromwell, Oliver, vi, 129”, 139, 
290; Vii, 2, 76, 144” 

Cronekiscar (Blackburn), vi, 246” 

Cronerberihall (Eccleston), vii, 63 

Cronershalgh (Hothersall), vii, 65 

Cronkshaw (Habergham Eaves), vi, 
454, 468 n 

Cronkshaw, brook, vii, 52 

Cronkshaw, John, vi, 512”, 513”; 
Lawr., vi, 513”; Leonard, vi, 
512; Ralph, vi, 542”; Rich., vii, 
158"; Rob., vi, 513; Thos., 
vi, 512 n, 513”; Will, vii, 22 

Cronshaw, Rev. Chris., vi, 119 

Crook, the (Dutton), vii, 54” 

Crook (Standish), vi, 199 

Crook (Thornton), vii, 235 

Crook (Whittle), vi, 32 7, 34, 35 

Crook, the (Wrightington), vi, 174 

Crook (Croke, Crooke), Ad. del., vi, 
32"; Agnes de, vi, 29n, 347; 
Alice de (del), vi, 34 2; Anne, vi, 
34"; vil, 121m; Ant., vi, 34; 
Cecily, vi, 34m; Chris., vi, 327; 
Clemency de, vi, 34”; Eliz., vi, 
33; Ellen (de), vi, 34”, 1677; 
Emma del, vi, 34”; Geo., vii, 
82m, 121m, 124m, 144, 152n; 
Gilb., vi, 34 2; Godith, vi, 34”; 
Greg., vi, 175”; Helen, vi, 
392 n; Hugh (de, del), vi, 34”; 
vu, 75,121"; Jas., vi, 36, 150”; 
vu, 159”; Janet, vi, 34”; vii, 
121; Joan, vi, 34”; John (de), 
V1, 34, 77, 167, 5137; Vii, 
I21m”, 124”; Kath., vi, 347; 
Mabel de, vi, 29”; Marg., vi, 
228", 250; Mary, vi, 342; 
Matth., vi, 517”; Rich. (de), 
V1, 34%, 65, 77”, 99”, I5I Nn, 
228m, 513", 521; vii, 1577, 
212”; Rob., vi, 512”; Rog. 
(del), V1, IOMn, 30n, 34m, 521; 
Sam., vi, 6, 10, 17, 33 m, 36, 90%, 


Crook (cont.) 
143, 229; Thos. (de), vi, 16, 34.7, 
QI Mm, 100, 150 MN, 250, 300, 521; 
vii, 90 n ; Will. (de), vi, 29 ”, 32 n, 
33, 34", 77, 121M, 169M, 224, 
228m, 229; vii, 179"; —, Vi, 
153 ”, 183, 312; vil, 120”; fam., 
vi, 64 

Crookacre 
399 # 

Crookall, Eliz., vu, 141”; Susan- 
nah, vi, 207” 

Crooked Riddings (Ribbleton), vii, 
106” 

Crookedroyds (Ribchester), vii, 44 7 

Crookhalgh (Worsthorne), vi, 474 ” 

Crook Hall (Durham), vii, 124” 

Crook Hall (Shevington), vi, 202 

Crook Hall (Whittle-le-Woods), vi, 
32, 35” 

Crooklands (Hutton), vi, 67 n, 69” 

Crooklands (Marton), vii, 240 ” 

Crook of Beanhill (Chatburn), vi, 
3727 

Crophill (Crophull), see Coppull 

Cropper, Rich., vii, 223 

Croskell, Oswald, vii, 334 

Cross, fam., see Crosse 

Cross Bank (Padiham), vi, 493 ” 

Crosse (Cross), Alice, vi, 216%, 
225”; Anna M., vi, 141; Anne, 
vi, 141; Blanche, vi, 141 n, 142; 
Dav., vii, 324  ; Egerton, vi, 273; 
Eliz., vi, 141 2; Frances, vi, 141 ; 
Hen., vi, 147”; Jas., vi, 133”, 
141, 216, 229”; Joan, vi, IgIu ; 
Rev. John, vu, 113 ; John (de la), 
vi, 18m, 140, I4I, 216, 225n, 
237M, 239M, 263m, 272, 272; 
vii, 102 n, 109M, I4I, 200, 332; 
Juliana, vi, 141 ; Marg., vi, 141 7, 
272; Margery de la, vi, 18”; 
Mary, vii, 89, 90, 105m, I41; 
Nich. (del), vi, 546”; vii, 128”; 
Rich. (del), vi, 133, 140, 141, 
225 n, 272, 318 ; vii, 123 n, 183”; 
Rob. de la, vi, 391”; Rog., vi, 
140, 141”, 216", 219”; Sarah, 
vi, 36; Thos., vi, 36, 141, 143, 
263 ; Vu, 265, 266; Thos. B. J., 
vi, 141; Thos. R., vi, 141; T. B., 
vi, 133; Will, vi, 141m, 272; 
VU, 53, 62, 90, 109, 114; Will. A., 
vu, 109»; Col., vii, 108 ; —, vii, 
305"; fam., vii, 135 

Crossed Ake (Osbaldeston), vi, 
320" 

Crosse Hall (Chorley), vi, 129, 130, 
140 

Crosse Hall (Liverpool), vi, 141 

Crossens (Tarleton), vi, 115 

Crosses, anc., vi, 10, 18, 29, 32, 47, 
56, 57, 65, 69, 75, 81, 91, 96, 
103, 108, 115, 120, 127, 130, 166, 
169, 192, 244, 276, 278, 283 n, 
290, 301, 349, 355, 381, 396, 405, 
427, 434, 441, 442, 442, 443, 
45°, 451%, 455, 463, 469, 479, 
513, 524, 534, 535”, 537, 542, 
545, 548, 551, 552; vil, 2, 36, 54, 
75) 76, 78m, 82, 91 n, 105, 108, 
117, 123, 124, 127, 150, 167, 174, 
300, 305, 311, 313 

Cross Field (Habergham Eaves), vi, 


(Wiswell), vi, 398 7, 


455 
Cross-flat (Freckleton), vii, 168 
Crossford (Gt. Eccleston), vii, 277 
Cross Ground (Goosnargh), vii, 197 ” 
Crosshill (Clitheroe), vi, 365 n 
Cross Hill (Scorton), vii, 300 ; sch., 
VU, 305 
Cross Hill (Treales), vii, 178 
Crosshill butts (Clitheroe), vi, 
368 n 


360 


Cross House (Gt. Eccleston), vii 
2°70; 2'sti;249 

Cross How (Lytham), vii, 215 » 

Crossley, Rev. Dan., vi, 441; Dav., 
vi, 248; Ellen, vi, gos n; John, 
vi, 408 n, 491 ; Pet., vi, 436 

Cross Mill (Upper Kawclitte), vii, 
270n 

Cross Moor, vii, 279, 280, 2819" 

Crossnapholm (Charnock Richard), 
Vi, 2006 ”% 

Cross Slack (Lytham), vii, 213 

Crostanesnape (Whittingham), vii, 
209 n 

Croston, vi, 1, 58m, 68m, 81-111, 
452; adv., vi, 86; char., vi, 90; 
ch., vi, 82; man., vi, 91; mkts. 
and fairs, vi, 95; Nonconf., v1, 
96; Rom. Cath., vi, 96; sch., vi, 


89 
Croston, Ad. de, vi, 166"; Alice 
de, vi, 95 ; Cecily de, vi, 95n; 
Dowe de, vi, 95”; Edm., vi, 
95; Edw., vi, 95”, 96”; Eliz. 
de, vi, 95”, 96; Gerv. de, 
vi, 92”; Hen. (de), vi, gon, 
93”, 95, 95%, 96, 96 n, 146, 147, 
106; Hugh, vi, 95m, 96n; 
Isabel, vi, 90”; Joan (de), vi, 
95", 96”; John de, vi, 95n, 
216, 432”; Maud de, vi, 92 n, 
95; Nich. de, vi, 87; Pet. de, 
vi, 96”; Reyner de, vi, 92m; 
Rich., vi, 95”, 96”, 128, 166m, 
217; Rob. de, vi, 95”, 96%; 
Rog., vi, 93"; R, vi, 519; 
Sibyl, vi, 95%; Thos. de, vi, 
95”; Walt. (de), vi, 93 n, 95 n, 
96; Will. (de), vi, 95, 95”, 
96, 96. n, 166”; fam., vi, 116" 
Croston Hall (Croston), vi, 95 
Croueshah (Over Darwen), vi, 271 
Crouke Spit (Osbaldeston), vi, 319 
Crowdhurst (Eccleston), vi, 192 ” 
Croweshagh, see Crawshaw Booth 
Crow Hall (Goosnargh), vii, 205 
Crowhaw (Wheelton), vi, 49 ” 
Crow Hill, vi, 548, 551, 552 
Crowhill Well (Trawden), vi, 551 
Crowle, John C., vi, 323” 
Crownest (Longton), vi, 70” 
Crown Point (Habergham Eaves), 
vi, 454 ; 
Crowpark Wood (Whalley), vi, 
382 
Crowpool (Warton), vii, 171” 
Crow’s Orchard (Catterall), vii, 322 
Crowther, Joshua, vi, 541” 
Crow Trees (Barrowford), vi, 542 
Crow Trees (Cuerden), see Wood- 
cock Hall 
Crowwood (Burnley), vi, 441 
Croxenshangend, vi, 233” 
Croxston, Croxton, see Croston 
Croysdale, Thos., vi, 513” 
Croysitland (Leyland), vi, 34” 
Crumbleholme, see Crombleholme 
Crumboc-halgh (Clayton-le-Dale), 
vi, 258” 
Cuburch, Cuburne, sez Cowburn 
Cuckoo, Alice, vi, 29”; Will, vi, 


29n 

Cuckstool Pit Meadow (Preston), 
vii, 79 ” 

Cudworth, Eliz., vi, 419; Ellen de, 
vi, 429”; John, vi, 419; Rich. 
de, vi, 429” ' : 

Cuerdale, vi, 235, 300-3; coins, VI, 
301; mam., Vi, 301, 555"; mills, 
vi, 301 n, 302” 

Cuerdale (Cuerdall, Keuerdale, 
Kiuerdale, Kuerdale), Ad. de, 
vi, 301; Agnes de, vil, 249%; 
Alex. de, vi, 271, 301, 314% 
315, 552; Alice de, vi, 279, 


Cuerdale (cont.) , 
jor, 302", 314m", 315; vii, 
249"; Avice de, vi, 3017; 
Dionisia de, vi, 301; Diota de, 
vi, 303”; Ellen de, vi, 301; 
Geoff. de, vi, 61”, 270, 2817, 
301, 314", 553”; vii, 106 7, 
249»; Gospatric, vi, 301; Hen. 
de, vi, 301”; vii, Iorn; Joan 
de, vi, 301, 301”, 302”; vil, 
106"; John (de), vi, 61%, 
270M, 301, 302”, 314”, 384; 
Margery de, vii, 249”; Mary de, 
vi, 301, 315”; Pet., vi, 301; 
Rich., vi, 301, 303; vil, 98”; 
Rob. de, vi, 301, 301 2; Rog. de, 
vii, 101m; Siegrith, vi, 301; 
Warine de, vi, 301, 303; Wasce 

e, vii, tor 2 ; fam., vi, 280, 296 

Cuerdale Hall (Cuerdale), vi, 302 

Cuerdale Hey (Cuerdale), vi, 300 

Cuerdale lands (Penwortham), vi, 
61n 

Cuerdall, see Cuerdale 

Cuerden, vi, 3,6”, 23-9, 58”, 68n; 
char., vi, IO; Man., vi, 23, 472; 
sch., vi, 29 

Cuerden, fam., see Kuerden 

Cuerden Green, see Lostock Hall 

Cuerden Hall (Cuerden), vi, 23, 
25, 290 

Cuerden Nook (Cuerden), vi, 23 

Culban, see Colborne 

Culcheth, vii, 307 ” 

Culcheth, Agnes de, vi, 67 »; Anne, 
vii, 278 ; Gilb. de, vi, 71 m, 221 n ; 
Hugh de, vi, 221”; Iseult de, 
vi, 67; Kath., vi, 94; Rich. de, 
vi, 67; Thos. (de), vi, 94, 278, 
279; fam., vi, 310 

Culmariclough (Chorley), vi, 129 

Culme, Ben., vi, 86 ” 

Culmerley, Alice de, vi, 1407; 
Hugh de, vi, 140”; Rog. de, vi, 
140” 

Culmylache, see Cumaleach 

Culnstyde, see Kilnstead 

Culwen, Joan de, vii, 316; Rob. de, 
vii, 316; see also Curwen 

Cumaleach (Culmylache), Ad. de, 
vi, 15”; Hen., vii, 115”; Will. 
de, vi, 15” 

Cumbelow (Staynall), vii, 252” 

Cumberhal, Cumberhalgh, see Com- 
berhalgh 


Cumberland, Hen., earl of, vii, 
303 

Cumeragh, see Comberhalgh 
Cuncliffe, Cundeclif, Cundecliffe, 


Cundeclive, Cundeclyve, see Cun- 
liffe 
Cundeshalgh, man., vii, 321 ” 
Cunliffe (Anderton), vi, 220 
Cunliffe (Billington), vi, 222, 325, 


331 

Cunliffe (Rishton), vi, 331, 347; 
quarries, vi, 345 

Cunliffe (Cundecliffe, Cunteclyve), 
Ad. de, vi, 222, 267%, 331, 
331”; Alice (de), vi, 222 ”, 331, 
336, 418 n, 423 1; Allan, vi, 331 ; 
Anne, vi, 332, 423”; Avice de, 
vi, 220”; vii, 54”; Cath., vi, 
416; Chris., vi, 422, 4237; 
Edayne (Idonea) de, vi, 259, 
266%; Eliz., vi, 337, 423, 5495 
552; Ellen (de), vi, 222, 331, 
336; Ellis, vi, 425”; Foster, vi, 
549”; Gilb., vi, 336, 337; Grace, 
vi, 422, 549”; Hen. (de), vi, 
277 %, 331 2, 337, 425; Vil, 57”; 
Hen. O., vi, 549 ; Isabel, vi, 337; 
Jas., vi, 277; Jennet, vi, 419; 
Joan, vi, 66”; John (de), vi, 
331m, 336, 415, 418m, 423, 


7 


INDEX 


Cunliffe (cont.) 
423”, 425, 520, 549; Marg. (de), 
V1, 222, 331, 402 ”, 429; Margery 
de, vi, 222 m, 331, 3317; Mary, 
vl, 415, 423”; Nich., vi, 516, 
549, 551; Rich. (de), vi, 222, 
237 ®, 331, 332, 345, 402 2, 426; 
Rob. (de), vi, 220, 221 n, ae n, 
259, 206, 267m, 326, 331, 
337) 349, 347”, 418 nv, 419, 422, 
423, 429, 549”; vii, 54; Rog. 
(de), vi, 222, 331, 336, 344; 
Thos. de, vi, 418”, 423”; Will, 
(de), vi, 267m, 418"; Mrs., vi, 
53°; —, V1, 326, 497, 425, 549, 
550 

Cunliffe House 
250M, 4257 

Cunningham, Rob. 
190” 

Cunscough (Dutton), vii, 59 n 

Cunstabellegh, see Constable Lee 

Cunteclyve, see Cunliffe 

Cunuyld Wall (Dutton), vii, 57 ” 

Curling, Edw., vi, 558 

Cursed Mere (Lytham), vii, 214 2, 
216%” 

Curtasfaldwrigis (Freckleton), vii, 
168 n 


(Accrington), vi, 


(Noble), 


vii, 


Curtes (Curteys), Alice, vi, 374”; 
John, vi, 294 M ; Vii, 212 n, 226 n ; 


Marg., vii, 212”; Rich., vi, 
374% 

Curwen, Geo., vii, 196”; Gilb., 
vii, 195m; Hen., vii, 2767; 


Jas., vil, 271 ”; Janet, vii, 196 ; 
Nich., vii, 196”; Pat. de, vi, 
290; Thos., vii, 196”, 249”; 
Walt., vii, 196”; Will. de, vii, 
306 2; see also Culwen 

Curzon, Assheton Curzon, vsct., vi, 
332, 383 m, 404 m, 558n 

Curzon, G. A. W., vi, 416”, 558”; 
Mary, Lady, vi, 383 ”; Sir Nath., 
vi, 370, 383”, 404, 415, 518, 
557, 558”; Nich., vi, 416”; 
Penn A., vi, 3567, 383, 383%, 
387; fam., vi, 366 

Curzon-Howe, Rich. W. P., see 
Howe, earl 

Cuthbert, St., legend, vii, 217 

Cutler, John, vii, 51; Thos., vii, 63 

Cyprus, vi, 475” 


Dacre, Lds., vi, 164; vii, 116” ; 
Rich., vi, 162”; vii, II5%”; 
Thos., vi, 162, 163; vii, 115 ” 

Dacre, Edm. de, vii, 162 ”, 287”; 
Eleanor, vii, 115”; Ellen de, 
vii, 287 n; Godith de, vii, 287 ” ; 
Sir Hugh de, vi, 162 »; Humph., 
vi, 162”; Joan (de), vi, 162”, 
164”; Marg. de, vi, 159”; Sir 
Randle (de), vii, 115”, 330”; 
Randle (Ranulf) de, vi, 21 ”, 140, 
159”, 162”, 165m, 166; vii, 
115m, 215”; Rob. de, vii, 
287; Sir Thos., vi, 162; vii, 
115 ”; Sir Will. de, vi, 21 7; vil, 
115”; Will. de, vi, 162 », 163 n, 
164”; Vii, 115 #; —, Vil, 116 

Dale, Thos., vi, 312” 7 

Dalebridge Head (Newton), vii, 
166” 

Dalebut, brook, vi, 207” : 

Dalrymple, Diana, vi, 163 »; Will., 
vi, 163 ” 

Dalston, Frances, vi, 292»; John, 
vi, 292” . 

Dalton, vi, 90 ”, 233”; Vu, 177” 

Dalton, man. (Yorks), vi, 478 # 

Dalton, Alice de, vi, tor; Anne, 
vi, 94, 102 n; vil, 259”, 260 n, 


361 


Dalton (cont.) 
333; Eliz. (de), vi, 92 n, IOI 
2067 ; Ellen de, vi, cate Isabel 
de, vl, Iornm; Jas., vi, 92n; 
Jane, vi, 102 »; vii, 333”; Joan, 
V1, 92 2, 94, 95", 96m, 102” ; 
Sit John (de), vi, ror; vii, 269 0 ; 
John (de), vi, 206; vii, 2570; 
Kath. de, vi, 101; Marg., vi, 
92; Margery de, vi, ror ; Mary 
de, vi, torn; Rich. (de), vi, 88, 
95”, Iol, 102 n; Sir Rob. de, vi, 
98, tot; Rob. (de), vi, 92", 
94, 95M, 97M, IOI, 102, 206, 
208 ; vil, 257 ”, 259, 260 n, 333; 
Rog. (de), vi, 82, 92 , 102, 132; 
vu, 255%, 259, 259, 260n, 
333 ”, 334”; Thos., vi, 96 7, 384 ; 
vu, 259”, 292m; Will. (de), vi, 
92M, 95M, 96 Nn, 102 ; vii, 333 7 ; 
—, Vi, 322; vii, 9”; fam., vi, 
84, 100, 205 ; vii, 73.” 

Dam, John del, vi, r10” 

Damascus, Hugh, archbp. of, vi, 127 

Damstead Wood Farm (Parbold) 
vi, 180 

Dancer House (Burnley), see Danes 
House 

Danderidding (Hoghton), vi, 37 ” 

Dandy (Dande), vi, 469”, 538 

Dandy, Andr., vi, 29, 295, 296, 
300; Geo., vi, 94”, IIlon, 118; 
Hen., vi, 107”, 116, 118%” 
Jane, vi, 96”; Jenet, vi, 107”; 
Rob., vi, 118”; Will., vi, gon, 
116", I17, 296, 307n; —, vi, 
298 n 

Dandy land (Croston), vi, 91 ” 

Dandyson, Hen., vi, 471 ” 

Danes House (Burnley), vi, 441, 
445 

Danes Pad, vii, 129, 161, 176, 332 

Daniel (Daniell, Danyers), Cle- 
mency, vii, 182”; Edw., vii 
121”; Fran., vii, 13; John, vii, 
I2I 7”, 124, 182, 183”; Nich., 
vii, 85; Rob., vii, 36; Thos., vii, 
121 ”, 182 , 183 n, 213”; Will., 
vi, 389”; vii, 90, 121, 182n, 


322”; Col. vi, 361”; Mrs., 
vii, 90 

Daniel’s Cross (Broughton), vii, 
II7” 


Daniscoles (Aighton), vii, 3 * 

Daniscoles (Daniscales), John, vii, 
3m; Osbert de, vii, 2”, 13; 
Ralph de, vi, 387”; Rich. de, 
vii, 13 

Dannett, Thos., vii, 215 2, 218 © 

Danson, Jas., vii, 255; Thos., vii, 
2550 

Danvers, Eleanor, vi, 421; Eliz., 
vi, 421; Sir John, vi, 421 

Danyers, see Daniel 

Darbyshire, Abigail, vi, 250; Jas. 
D., vi, 199”; John, vi, 250; see 
also Derbyshire 

Darcy, Sir Arthur, vi, 317, 375 "3 
vii, 29”, 58”; Aymer, vi, 
303 ”; Sir Thos., vi, 86 

Dardeslow, Ralph de, vii, 288%; 
Rob. de, vii, 288 ” 

Darell, Cecily, vi, 265%”; Marma- 
duke, vi, 265” : 

Darlington, Frances, vi, 192 

Darney, Will., vi, 440 

Darwen, Lower, vi, 235, 269, 275-8; 
ch., vi, 278; ind., vi, 276; man., 
vi, 276, 397%, 421, mill, vi 
277; Nonconft., vi, 278; Rom. 
Cath., vi, 278; sch., v1, 278 

Darwen, Over, vi, 235, 269-753 
char., vi, 275; ch., vi, 274; coal 
mines, vi, 270, 272%; ind., vi, 
270; man., vi, 279; mkts. and 


46 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Darwen (cont.) 
fairs, vi, 274; mill, vi, 272"; 
Nonconf., vi, 275; pks., vi, 274; 
Rom. Cath., vi, 275 

Darwen, riv., vi, 36, 41, 235, 244, 
263, 266, 275, 278, 289 

Darwen (Derwent, Derwin, Der- 
wynd), Ad. de, vi, 270, 272; 
Alan de, vi, 272; Alex. de, vi, 
270; Alice de, vi, 270; Allen de, 
vi, 270; Benedict de, vi, 417; 
Cecily de, vi, 50»; Ellen, vi, 344, 
404; Evan, vi, 237”; Hen., vi, 
237"; John de, vi, 50", 417"; 
Juliana de, vi, 270; Rich. de, 
vi, 270, 272; vii, 50; Thos., vi, 
344; Siward de, vi, 270 

Darwen Bank (Higher Walton), vi, 
289 

Darwen Hall (Walton-le-Dale), see 
Banister Hall 

Darwen Head (Over Darwen), vi, 
2729" 

Darwen Moor, vi, 235, 269 

Darwen Moor, Lower, vi, 276 

Darwen Paper Mill Co., vi, 270 

Dashwood, Rich., vi, 86; Mrs., 
vi, 86 

Daubeny, see Dawbeny 

Dauncey, Edw., vi, 554, 558 

Dautrey, see Hautrey 

Davenport, Agnes de, vi, 292; 
Bathsheba, vi, 441; Sir John de, 
vii, 286”; John (de), vi, 292; 
vil, 159”, 286; Ralph, vi, 36; 
Will., vi, 281 

David, vi, 417, 424”; vii, 158" 

Davies (Davie), Anne, vii, 327” ; 
Rev. Edw. J. M., vi, 299; Rich., 
vii, 238; Rob., vii, 327; Thos., 
vii, 167; see also Davy 

Davil Meadows (Preston), vii, 90 

Davy, Jas., vii, 157”; Margery, 
vil, 166; Rich., vii, 147, 149 n, 
I5I mn, 163"; Thos., vii, 166; 
see also Davies 

Davy Field, brook, vi, 278 

Dawbeny (Daubeny), Eliz., vii, 
301 n; Jas. R. B.C., vi, 219, 223 ; 
Kath., vii, 301 x; Sir Ralph, vii, 
301 Nn 

Dawes, Rev. John, vi, 435 

Dawfield (Ashton), vii, 133 

Dawfield (Claughton), vii, 326 

Dawmogh, Hugh, vi, 211 ; Rich., 
vi, 211”; see also Dormer 

Dawridding (Heath Charnock), vi, 
215” 

Dawson, Gabricl, vii, 334; Hen., 
vii, 90; John, vii, 89; Rich., vi, 
367; Thos., vi, 375; Will. vi, 
28n, 392, 535; —, vi, 374” 

Daye, John, vi, 301 

Daykergate (Preston), vii, 102 

Deadwenclough (Newchurch - in - 
Rossendale), vi, 233”, 437, 438, 
439 2, 441 

Dean (Higham), vi, 512 

Dean, Lower (Higham), vi, 512 

Dean, brook, vi, 337; vii, 1 

Dean (Dene), Ad. de (del), vi, 332 n, 
438 2; Agnes (de), vi, 332, 332 2, 
555”; Alex. de la (del), vi, 332, 
438n; Elias (Ellis) de, vi, 332, 
506; Geoff., vi, 455”; Hen., 
Vi, 332, 332”, 455; Joan, vi, 
332", 555”; John (de), vi, 332, 
506", 555, 559; Maud, vi, 
332; Rich. (de), vi, 332, 343; 
Rob., vi, 332, 455 ”, 468 n; Rog., 
vi, 332"; Thos., vi, 506”; Will. 
(de), vi, 332, 332”, 506, 555; 
fam., vi, 326 

Deangate (Cliviger), vi, 480” 

Dean Head (Gt. Harwood), vi, 338 


Dean Hill (Billington), vi, 332 

Deansgate (Myerscough), vii, rgon 

Dear-bought (Charnock Richard), 
vi, 205” 

Dearden, see Duerden 

Debaud, John, vii, 273 

Decoy, Rev. —, vi, 333” 

Ded Banks (Clayton-le-Dale), vii, 
20n 

Dedecarr (Wrightington), vi, 173 ” 

Dedequenclogh, see Deadwenclough 

Dedesike (Eccleshill), vi, 279 ” 

Dedsyke (Habergham Eaves), vi, 


By 
Dedeincite, see Deadwenclough 
Deepclough (Hoghton), vi, 37 ” 
Deepdale (Fulwood), vii, 137” 
Deepdale, Ad. de, vii, 79; Maud 
de, vii, 79” 
Deeplache Croft (Briercliffe), vi, 
4732 : 
Deeplieginger, vi, 233 
Deerplay (Newchurch-in-Rossen- 
dale), vi, 437 
Deerplay Moor (Cliviger), vi, 479 
Deerstone Moor, vi, 524” 
Deerstones (Colne), vi, 524”, 536, 


552 : 

Delalond, Felix, vi, 181" 

Delves, vi, 536 

Demdike, Old, see Southerns, Eliz. 

Denby, Marg., vii, 136”; Will., 
vii, 136” 

Dene, brook, vi, 290 ” 

Dene, vi, 18” 

Dene, fam., see Dean 

Denebutts (Heath Charnock), vi, 
215” 

Denecrage (Gt. Ha1wood), vi, 338 

Denefeld (Gt. Harwood), vi, 339, 


340 

Denham Hall (Brindle), vi, 77 

Denise, w. of Ad., vi, 65 

Denison, Jos. G., vi, 404 

Dent, Rev. Thos., vi, 334 

Denwall, Amery de, vi, 66”; Will. 
de, vi, 66 

Derby, Agnes, ctss. of, vi, 1507; 
Alice, ctss. of, vi, Ilo n, 150”; 
vii, 34, 185, 242; Charlotte, 
ctss. of, vi, 13; vii, 281 »; Doro- 
thy H., ctss. of, vii, 319 ”; Eliz., 
ctss. of, vii, 307; Marg., ctss. of, 
vil, 303 ; earls of, vi, 2n, 59 n, 
75", 104, 107M, I16n, 122n, 
140, 140m, I61, 195”, 204n, 
206, 219”, 243, 292, 298, 306, 
312, 349, 368m, 394, 445, 525, 
549%; vil, 18, 23, 26, 28 n, 29, 
29 N, 32, 34, 35, 36, 62, 63, 63 n, 
66, 70, 74, 75, 76, 78 n, 91, 97”, 
100 n, 102, 107 n, 113 n, 118, II9, 
120M, 131, 139, I4om, I44n, 
152n, 154,156, 158n, 159 n, 160n, 
164%”, 166, 167”, 169”, 170n, 
173 n, 175 n, 176, 178, 180, 180 n, 
181 n, 183, 185, 189”, I90n, 
197, 207%, 208, 2IIn, 212n, 
213, 215, 233, 234n, 241, 
242, 250%, 253, 271, 272, 273, 
274, 275 N, 277, 281, 282, 282 n, 
283, 284n, 287n, 303, 311 n, 
319, 325, 331”; Chas., vii, 176, 
319; Edm., vii, 325”; Edw., 
vl, 102, II0, III m, 174, 225m, 
227, 229M, 271, 272 n, 316; vii, 
70 n, 80, 118 n, 120 n, 281 n, 307 ; 
Ferdinando, vi, 123; vii, 347, 
7on, 160n, 169, 185; Hen., 
Vii, 6, 119 m, 126 n, 166 n, 278n; 
Jas., vi, 108, 381; vii, 62n, 
7°”, 319”; Thos., vi, 93”, Ior, 
IoIn, lo4n, I1on, 179, 225%, 
304, 316, 316m, 321; vii, 33, 
52m, 62m", 7on, 118 nN, 125n, 


362 


Derby (cont.) 

169, 175, 176m, 1851n, 199, 
207 m, 281 n, 283 n, 329m; Will, 
vi, ILO, 130, 131, 132, 150, 159, 
174", 193, 214M, 225, 304; vii, 
27, 34, 169n, 194M, 281 nN: see 
also Ferrers 

Derby, Joan de, vi, 229n: John 
de, vii, 311 ; Rob. de, vi, 229 n ‘ 
Will. de, vi, 181” 

Derbyshire, Nancy, vi, 244; Rachael, 
vi, 79; Rich. de, vil, 970; see 
also Darbyshire 

Derden, see Duerden 

Dereslowe (Winmarleigh), vii, 306 n 

Derham, Ellen, vii, 170n 

Derneclough (Longton), vi, 70 n 

Dernelegh-brook, vi, 266 n 

Dernerakes (Bilsborrow), vii, 332 » 

Derwaltshaw, John de, vi, 223n; 
Matth. de, vi, 223 n 

Derwent, see Darwen 

Derwent o’ the Mores, see Darwen, 
Over 

Derwentwater, Jas., earl of, vi, 290 

Derwin, Derwynd, see Darwen 

Despenser (Despencer, Dispencer, 
Dispenser), Ad. le, vi, 37n; 
Rich., the, vii, 284; Thos. le, 
vi, 26m", 37", 38n; see also 
Spencer 

Dethfield (Wrightington), vi, 173 n 

Dethick, Sir Gilb., vi, 421” 

Deuhihurst, see Dewhurst 

Deuyas (Deuias, Dewias, D’Ewyas), 
Ad., vi, 305”; Alex., vi, 3110; 
Alice, vi, 261 ”, 304, 305; Cecily, 
vi, 304, 305 ”, 312 n; Isolda, vii, 
I11#; Joan, vi, 305; Sir John, 
vi, 262, 304 ; John, vi, 261, 263 n, 
311 m, 312; vii, 73; Margery, 
vi, 305”; vii, 162%”; Matilda, 
vi, 305”; Sir Nich., vi, 304; 
Nich., vi, 261 », 262 n, 263 n, 271, 
304 ”, 305; vii, 62", 73, loon; 
Rich., vi, 305 ”; vii, I11 n, 162; 
Rog., vi, 305”; Thos., vi, 305; 
vii, 100 n; Will., vi, 305, 305 n, 
311 H; Vii, 73 

Device (Devys), Alison, vi, 515; 
Eliz., vi, 515, 520; Jas., vi, 515; 
Jenet (Jennet), vi, 516", 520n; 
John, vi, 515”; Will., vi, 516” 

Devis, Arth., vii, 80 

Devonshire, ctss. of, vi, 80 ; dks. of, 
vi, 76, 80; Will. Cavendish, vi, 
76"; earls of, vi, 76n, 80; 
Chas., vii, 139”; Will. Caven- 
dish, vi, 221 

Devys, see Device 

Dewhurst (Wilpshire), vi, 335 

Dewhurst (Deuhihurst, Dewehirst, 
Dewyhurst), Ad. de, vi, 335; 
Anne, vii, 49”, 65”; Avina 
de, vi, 320; Eliz., vii, 44, 
49”; Ellen, vi, 261; Geoff., vii, 
51”; Giles, vi, 346m, 401"; 
Grace, vi, 335, 408m"; vil, 49; 
Hen. (de le), vi, 335; Jas., vii, 
18, 39; John, vi, 260 n, 335, 336, 
408, 419n; Vii, 32m, 447, 
48n, 49, 65; Mary, vii, 18; 
Nich., vii, 62”; Rich., vi, 81, 
229, 260; vii, 50; Rev. Rob., vi, 
440; Rob. (de le), vi, 335, 432; 
vii, 18, 44 ; Rog. (de le, del), vi, 
260”, 320, 335; Thos., vi, 48, 
320; vii, 49”; Will. vi, 181, 
261, 335, 336; vii, 49”, 50, 65; 
—, vii, 58”; fam., vi, 246"; 
vii, 63 

Dewias, see Deuyas 

Dewsbury, Alice de, vii, 134”; 
John de, vii, 134” 

D’Ewyas, see Deuyas . 


Dewyhurst, see Dewhurst 

Deyne (Pendleton), vi, 393 

Diana, the Anker maiden, vii, 44 ” 

Dicconson (Diccenson, Dicxonson, 
Diconson), Agnes, vi, 172”; 
Alice, vi, 165; Anne, vi, 172; 
Cecily, vii, 283 ” ; Chas., vi, 172 ; 
Edm., vi, 165”; Edw., vi, 155, 
165, 171, 172, 186, 201 n, 204n, 
224 ; vii, 158  ; Elisota, vi, 26  ; 
Eliz., vi, 26”, 163m, 172; 
Frances, vi, 516 ; Geo., vi, 298 n; 
Hen., vii, 34”; Hugh, vi, 57, 
162”, 163”, 165, 169, 172, 
172m, 205", 322"; Jane, vi, 
165", 172”; John, vi, 22”, 
26”, 27 N, 155, 165, 190 n, 207 n, 
515, 516; vii, 283 2; Juliana, vi, 

2 1720; Kath., vi, 165”; Lawr., 
vi, 528”; Margery, vii, 158”; 
Martha, vi, 172”; Mary, vi, 
158, 172, 172m, 201m”, 2047; 
Meliora, vi, 158 ; Rich., vi, 163 ”; 
vii, 213”; Rob., vi, 129, 373”; 
Rob. J. G., vi, 172; Rog., vi, 
172; Thos., vi, 22”, 26m, 165, 
172, 207 N; Vil, 170 n, 256; Will., 
vl, 22”, 26", 95%, 99M, III Nn, 
158, 165, 166, 172, 178, 180, 202, 
204, 207; Will. C., vi, 172; —, 
bp., vi, 259”; —, vi, 5247”; 
vii, 283; fam., vi, 164; see also 
Dickinson 

Dickenson’s tenement (Tockholes), 
vi, 283 

Dickinson (Dickonson), Anne, vi, 
216; Chris., vi, 494; Jonathan, 
vi, 528; Rich., vi, 216 ; see also 
Dicconson 

Dickridding (Church), vi, 402 n 

Dickson (Duxon), Fran. J., vii, 
43, 245; Grace, vi, 77”; John, 
vii, 165  ; Martin, vi, 371 ; Rich., 
vii, 259”; Will., vi, 475”; vii, 
148 ; see also Dixon 

Dicon, John, vi, 476” 

Diconson, see Dicconson and Dick- 
inson 

Didsbury, vii, 286 

Dieulacres Abbey (Staffs.), vii, 170, 
170 N, 235, 236, 279, 281 n 

Dikounridding (Claughton), vii, 


325” 
Diksnape Syke (Chipping), vii, 
29n 


9 

Dilworth (Dileworth, Dillesworth, 
Dilleworth), vii, 36, 37, 38”, 50”, 
51-4, 56, 59n, 61, 63, 118, 118%, 
11g”, 126”, 194, 198%; ch., vii, 
53; fairs, vii, 51; ind., vii, 51; 
man.,vi, 41”; vii, 52, 62”; Non- 
conf., vii, 53 ; quarries, vii, 51 

Dilworth, Ad. de, vii, 53”; Agnes, 
vi, 556”; Barth. vii, 327”; 
Hugh de, vii, 46”, 53”; Jas., 
vii, 18”; Janet, vi, 556”; John, 
vii, 121”; Juliana, vii, 53”; 
Margery de, vii, 53”; Osbert 
de, vii, 52; Rich. de, vii, 467”, 
53”, 121”; Rob. de, vii, 52”; 
Rog., vi, 556”; Steph., vii, 36; 

OS., vi, 556”; vii, 347”; 

Uctred de, vii, 53”; Will. de, 
vii, 53%; —, vii, 124” 

Dilworth Hall (Dilworth), vii, 53 ” 

Dilworthsed, brook, vii, 52 

Dimpenley Clough (Roughlee 
Booth), vi, 519 

Dimples (Barnacre), vii, 312, 315, 
319, 320” 

Dimples Field (Barnacre), vii, 300 

Dimples House (Barnacre), vii, 
319% 

Dinckley, vi, 235, 334, 335, 336-7, 
387, 398”, 421; Vii, 1147”; 


INDEX 


Dinckley (cont.) 


man., Vi, 232, 336; mill, vi, 336; 
Rom, rem., vi, 336 


Dinckley, brook, vi, 252, 325 
Dinckley (Dinkedley, Dinkley, Dun- 


kekanlega, Dynkedley), Ad. de, 
Vi, 211m, 224”; Alice de, vii, 
29; Bern. de, vi, 320, 328; 
Christiana de, vi, 336; Elias de, 
vi, 336; Gilb, de, vii, 29”; 
Hen. de, vii, 29 », 35 2; Joan de, 
vi, 211m, 224”; John de, vi, 
328, 330”, 336; vii, 29n; 
Matilda, vi, 336; Maud de, vii, 
29n; Nich., vi, 216; Rich. de, 
vi, 328 ; Rob. de, vi, 330”; Rog. 
de, vi, 211”; vii, 29; Uctred 
de, vii, 29 ”; Will. vi, 358 


Dinckley Hall (Dinckley), vi, 337 
Dinelay, Ad. de, vi, 365, 366”, 


481 n, 553”; Agnes, vi, 553%, 
554”; Alice de, vi, 553”; Anne, 
vi, 378 n, 395 7, 554”; Cecily de, 
vi, 366; Edw., vi, 553”; Eliz. 
de, vi, 553; Grace, vi, 554”; 
Hen. (de), vi, 395 ”, 480 n, 481 x, 
553, 554, 555; Isabel de, vi, 
481n, 508”, 553”; John de, 
vi, 366, 3607”, 371”, 374%, 
377", 481, 508”, 519, 552”, 
553, 555”, 559”; Marg. de, vi, 
366 n, 553”, 559”; Matth. de, 
vi, 480, 481”; Oliver de, vi, 
481 2; Rich. de, vi, 366 ”, 481 n, 
553; Will. (de), vi, 378 ”, 395”, 
480, 481 2, 554, 550; —, vi, 556 


Dineley (Cliviger), vi, 479, 4807; 


man., vi, 481 


Dineley, brook (Cliviger), vi, 481 ” 
Dinkedelay, Dinkedelegh, Dinked- 


ley, Dinkley, see Dinckley 


Diota, vii, 192 ” 
Diring, Rog., vii, 147 
Dirley, Ad. de, vi, 211”; Hugh 


de, vi, 211” 


Dirpley Moor, see Deerplay 
Disherson, Agnes le, vi, 34; John 


le, vi, 34”; Will. le, vi, 34” 


Dison, see Dyson 
Dispencer, Dispenser, see Despenser 


and Spencer 


Dissheford, Ad. de, vii, 257%”; 
Alice de, vii, 257” 

Disteshaw, Ad. de, vii, Ilo”; 
Rich. de, vii, 110 

Ditchfield, Dorothy, vi, 206”; 


Edw., vi, 57, 206”, 489%”; vii, 
138; Eliz., vi, 206”; Marg., 
vi, 135”; Rob., vii, 298 


Ditton, see Dutton — - 
Dixon (Duxon), Chris., vii, 126”; 


Damaris, vii, 90; Grace, vi, 77 #3 
Jas., vii, 174 ”; John, vi, 526, 
533 ”; Rich., vii, 66,66, 174%”; 
Rob., vi, 531 #; Thos., vu, 
126”; Will, vii, 124,174; see 
also Dickson 


Dobberydyng (Sunderland), vi, 318 
Dobbes Hope (Gt. Harwood), vi, 


339 
Dob Brow (Charnock Richard), vi, 


20. 
Diabarolt (Preston), vii, 84 

Dob Cross (Croston), vi, 91 
Dobhey (Parbold), vi, 173 %, 174 % 
Dobhole Bridge (Darwen), vi, 275 
Dobin, vii, 116 ” , 
Dob Meadows (Over Darwen), vi, 


270 


Dobson, Agnes, vi, 217 7; Geo., V1, 


358, 359; Hugh, vi, 118, 380 ; 
Isabel, vii, 66”; Jas., vi, 342; 
John, vi, 217”; Jonathan, vi, 
266; Rich. vii, 247%; Rev. 
Rob., vi, 344; Rob., vil, 66 n, 


363 


Dobson (cont.) 

174”; Thos., vii, 32”, 260 
Will, vii, 81, a n 

Dockesbyry, see Duxbury 

Dodd, Chas., vi, 18 

Doddeson, see Dodgson 

Dodding, Sarah, vi, 383; Col., vii, 
292 

Doddingfell, fam., vi, 85 » 

Doddington, John, vii, 97”; Will., 
Vil, 263 ” 

Dodgecroft (Whittingham), vii, 
2130” 

Dodgson (Doddeson, Doggeson), 
Grace, vi, 391”; Rev. Jas., vi, 
283; John, vi, 366, 3917; 
Rich., Vi, 391”; vii, 234; 
Rog., vi, 391 2; Will, vi, 110” 

Dodhill (Dutton), vii, 57 », 58” 

Dodhill, brook, vii, 54”, 57 

Dodhill, Dodhull, fam., see Duddell 

Dods Hall (Ribchester), vii, 44 

Dodsworth (Holcroft), vi, 120, 122 n 

Dodsworth, Rog., vi, 120 

Doggeson, see Dodgson 

Dog Meadow (Haslingden), vi, 428 x 

Dokysbiri, see Duxbury 

Dole House Estate (Gt. Harwood), 


V1, 344 

Dolphin Hill, vi, 32 

Dolphinholme (Nether Wyresdale), 
Vii, 300, 304; weir, vii, 270” 

Don, riv., vi, 441, 468, 472 

Donington, Chas. F., Ld., vii, 164 ” 

Donote, vi, 393 ” 

Donum, see Downham 

Dore, Ellen, vii, 327 ” 

Dormer, Dorothy, vi, 63”; Sir 
John, vi, 31”, 64m”; Sir Rob., 
vi, 31 ”, 64”; see also Dawmogh 

Dorset, Thos. Grey, marquess of, 
vi, 132 

Dorsett, John, vii, 138 

Douaneshaigh Moss (Claughton), 
vii, 326” 

Douansargh, see Dowanshargh 

Douay, Rog. de, vi, 116 

Douay Seminary, vii, 236 

Douenay, Agnes, vi, 366”; John, 
vi, 366” 

Doughty, Cecily, vii, 34”; Eliz., 
vi, 525; Hen., vi, 525; vii, 34, 
35”; John, vi, 525; vii, 34; 
Mary, vii, 34 ; Mich., vii, 34, 35%; 
Susan, vii, 34; Will, vii, 34 

Doughty pasture (Trawden), vi, 552 

Douglas, riv., vi, 69, 81, 91, 100, 
102, III, 115, 149 is 

Douglas, Alex., marquess of, vil, 


04 nN 
Dengias, John, vi, 158, 161, 332 ” 
Douglas Chapel (Parbold), vi, 91 7, 
180 
Dounanesbreck (Newton), vii, 166 ” 
Doune, Cecily de, vi, 390”; Rob. 
de, vi, 390” 
Dounom, Dounum, see Downham 
Doustisykes (Cliviger), vi, 485 ” 
Dove Stones (Trawden), vi, 552 
Dowanshargh (Claughton), vii, 296, 
330, 330% . 
Dowanshargh, Pet. de, vil, 330” 
Dowbridge, vii, 166 : 
Downeclough-with-Mete, vi, 233 ” 
Downham, vi, 233%, 349, 355%, 
368 n, 375 #, 552-8, 559%; adv., 
vi, 557; Chap., vi, 558; char., vi, 
558; ch., vi, 556; Cross, Vl, 552; 
man., vi, 232, 382, 552, 560 7 ; 
mill, vi, 552%, 553) 554%; Nut- 
shaw Farm, i 558; Old Hall, 
j ; sundial, vi, 557. |, 
Dewateen (Dunham), Christiana 
de, vi, 556”; Hawise de, vi, 
393; Hen, de, vi, 393%, 552) 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Downham (cont.) 

553”, 555, 556”; Hugh de, vi, 
552m”; Sir John de, vi, 3277; 
John de, vi, 555; Marg. de, vi, 
553 2; Rob. de, vi, 556” 

Downham Green (Downham), vi, 
373, 552, 553, 554 : 

Downham Hall (Downham), vi, 
555. , 

Downing, Edm., vi, 90” 

Downs, Edw., vii, 144” 

Dowshay Clough (Colne), vi, 536 

Dowson, Eliz., vi, 237” 

Dransfield, Marg. de, vii, 3 »; Will. 
de, vii, 37” 

Dreng (Warton), vii, 172” 

Drewitt, Hen., vi, 239” 

Driver, Jas., vi, 549; John, vi, 
528, 549; Thos., vi, 528, 530, 
5492; —, Vi, 524” 

Drogo, rector of Ribchester, vii, 40 

Dronsfield, Marg. de, vi, 3977; 
Will. de, vi, 397 ” 

Druell, Hen., vi, 521 

Drummond, Lady, vii, 213, 249 

Drummond, Jas., vii, 75» 

Drury, Amery, vii, 107”; Rich., 
vii, 107m, 208n, 212”; Rob., 
vii, 107 n; Will, vii, 107 n, 208 n 

Dukesbiri, see Duxbury 

Dubberfield —_ (Bilsborrow), vii, 
3317 

Dublin, Hen. de Lourdes, archbp. 
of, vil, Tyo 

Dubworth, Chris., vi, 414 ” 

Duce, Edelina, vi, 159 

Duckett (Ducket), Alice, vii, 211 7 ; 
Anne, vii, 63%; Fran., vii, 35; 
Jane, vii, 35; John, vii, 637; 
Rich., vii, 58 

Ducksbury, see Duxbury 

Duckworth, vi, 405, 406, 408-9, 
429, 430; ch., vi, 409 

Duckworth, Ad., vi, 425; Alice, 
vi, 425; Anne, vii, 63 7; Cecily 
de, vi, 408”; Chris., vi, 403; 
Eliz., vi, 237”; Ellis de, vi, 
408 n ; Geo., vi, 272 ; Hawise de, 
vi, 408; Hen. de, vi, 4087; 
Janet, vi, 380; John, vi, 403, 
425%, 430, 432; Vil, 637; 
Margery de, vi, 408; Mary de, 
vi, 408n; Rich. (de), vi, 405”, 
408 n, 438; vii, 2132; Rob. 
de, vi, 408 » ; Rog. (de), vi, 408, 
4qo8n, 425n; Sam., vi, 272; 
Thurstan, vi, 557; Rev. Will. A., 
vi, 272; Will., vi, 272, 278, 408; 
Mrs., vi, 243, 430 

Duckworth Hall (Oswaldtwistle), 
Vi, 4307” 

Ducworth, see Duckworth 

Duddell (Dodhill, Dodhull, Dudell, 
Dudhill), Alice de, vii, 1147; 
Anne, vii, 183”; Geo., vii, 
183", 234", 287; Grace, vii, 
63”; Hen., vii, 153”; John (de), 
vu, 27”, 29”, 57. n, 58 n, 287n; 
Rich. (de), vii, 57 ”, 287 1; Thos. 
(de), vii, 57", 59, 63”, 1618n; 
Wiul. (de), vii, 27, 577, 63%, 
II4m, 195, 183, 287"; —, 
Capt., vii, 287n; —, vii, 8n; 
fam., vii, 49 n, 1817 

Dudhill (Dutton), see Dodhill 

Dudhill, fam., see Duddell 

Dudley, Edm., vi, 104 », 163, 164 n, 
316; vu, 52, 95, 107 n, 115 n, 
118 n, 125, 169 n, 185 n, 199 x, 
233 n, 283 n, 287 n, 325 n, 331 ; 
Eliz., vi, 163 ; Joan, vi, 163%”; 
Sir John, vi, 163”; John, vi, 
163, 251; vii, 115”; Rob., see 
Leicester, Rob., earl of ; —, vii, 
Ibgn 


Duell (Dule), Agnes, vi, 556”; 
Hen., vi, 556”; Thos., vii, 128 ; 
see also Dylle 

Duerden (Dearden, Derden, Dur- 
den), Geo., vi, 434”; Hen. (de), 
vi, 406 n, 438, 438 n, John (de), 
vi, 280, 406m"; Margery de, vi, 
406"; Nich. vi, 431, 434"; 
Rich. (de), vi, 406”, 431; Rob. 
(de), vi, 406 , 431 2, 438 n 

Duffield, man. (Yorks), vu, 1557” 

Dugdale (Dugden, Dukedale), Ad., 
vi, 416; Chris., vi, 373, 373”; 
Edm., vi, 367”; Edw., vi, 325; 
Eliz., vi, 367; Giles, vi, 366, 
367"; Hen., vi, 367”; Jas., vi, 
367 m; vil, 297; Janet, vi, 367”; 
John, vi, 325, 363 ”, 367, 367%, 
475, 495m; Vu, 291; Jos., vi, 
323, 3253 Nach., vi, 367 7 3 
Rich., vi, 367", 381, 382”; 
vi, 212”; Rog., vil, 297”; 
Thos., vi, 387 ; Sir Will., vi, 367 ; 
Will, vi, 367; —, vi, 372%, 


374” 

Duke’s Cross (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Dule, see Duell 

Duleshope, vii, 69 ” 

‘“Dule upo’ Dun’ inn (Clitheroe), 
vi, 361 

Duleys, Gerard de, vi, 193 ”, 2007 ; 
Hugh de, vi, 193 , 200 

Dunandespool (Rawcliffe), vii, 271 

Duncan, vi, 360 

Dun Cow Rib Farm (Whitting- 
ham), vii, 206 », 207 

Dunderdale, John, vi, 533”; Rev. 
—, vi, 344 

Dunepool (Fulwood), vii, 137” 

Dungecarre, see Dunscar 

Dunham, see Downham 

Dunkaneshalghe, Dunkanshalgh, 
see Dunkenhalgh 

Dunkedeley, Dunkekanlega, see 
Dinckley 

Dunkenhalgh = (Clayton-le-Moors), 
vi, 249", 345, 401, 417, 421; 
man., Vi, 419-22 

Dunkenhalgh (Dunkanshalgh), Ad. 
de, vi, 401 »; Rog. de, vi, 400 n, 
40I n, 402, 419; Will. de, vi, 


419 

Dunkenhalgh Hall  (Clayton-le- 
Moors), vi, 422 

Dunkythele, see Dinckley 

Dunn (Dunne), Edm. N., vi, 153; 
Jos., vii, 105”; Mary, vi, 153; 
Will, vi, 249 2; Rev. —, vii, 96 

Dunn and Hansom, vii, 10 n 

Dunning, vi, 303” 

Dunnockschae, Dunnockschaghe, 
see Dunnockshaw 

Dunnockshaw, vi, 230, 349, 493, 
5°97, 514 

Dunnockshaw Close (Dunnockshaw), 
Vi, 514 

Dunnokschaw, see Dunnockshaw 

Dunnyshope (Accrington), vi, 405 ”, 


423 

Dunscar (Rishton), vi, 338” 

Dunsop, riv., vi, 247 

Dunston (Lincs), vi, 459 

Dunton, see Dutton 

Dunum, see Downham 

Durham, Cuth. Tunstall, bp. of, vi, 
160%; Jas. Pilkington, bp. of, vi, 
242 

Durham Priory, vii, 214; priors, 
vii, 172m”, 175m, 215n, 216n, 
332"; Rich., vii, 229n 

Durham’s Croft (Poulton), vii, 225 

Durning, Rich., vi, 91 », 102 

Durning House (Croston), vi, 94” 

Durton (Broughton), vii, 117, 119, 
120n, 1219” 


364 


Durton Green Crosses (Broughton), 
Vu, Lit #n 

Durton Lane Cross (Broughton), 
vii, 117" 

Dustesahe (Dustescahe) (Preston), 
vii, 97", 116” 

Dutton, vil, 17, 19, 36, 37, 43, 48, 
50”, 54-61; char., vii, 20n; 
mans., Vi, 232; vii, 54 

Dutton, prior of, vii, 40" 

Dutton, brook, vii, 54 

Dutton, Ad. de, vil, 57, 64n; 
Agnes de, vii, 48”, 55”; Alice 
de, vi, 34”; Vil, 54”, 57m; 
Avice de, vi, 34; Benedict de, 
vii, 54 ”; Christiana de, vi, 34.” ; 
Edusa de, vii, 64”; Eleanor, vii, 
303; Emma de, vi, 34”; vii, 
54”; Geoff. de, vi, 338; vii, 
57; Godith de, vii, 57; Hen. 
de, vii, 48 2, 58 n, 63 »; Hugh de, 
vii, 207; Isabel de, vi, 34%, 
305; Vil, 53; John, vi, 34n, 
305; Jordan de, vi, 347; vii, 
53”, 54m”, 57; Rich. de, vii, 
50%, 54”, 57", 58n, 247; Rob. 
de, vii, 54”, 55, 58 n, 207; Sir 
Thos., vi, 305; Thos. (de), vii, 
54”, 239; Thomasine, vii, 
239"; Uctred de, vii, 54; Will. 
(de), vii, 50”, 54”, 55”, 56%, 
57 ”, 58 n, 63 n, 100 N, 130n 

Dutton Hall (Dutton), vii, 56 

Dutton Hedges (Dutton), vii, 55” 

Dutton Holme (Dutton), vii, 54” 

Dutton Huntingdon (Dutton), vii, 


55” 

Dutton Lee (Dutton), vii, 58” 

Dutton Place (Church), vi, 401 

Duuenshaw (Barnacre), vii, 318” 

Duval, Steph. P., vi, 518, 535 

Duxbury, vi, 58, 182, 187, 208-13; 
vii, 157”; char., vi, 192; man., 
vi, 208 ; mill, vi, 142 

Duxbury (Ducksbury), Ad. de, vi, 
I3I nm, 142, 208, 209n, 211 n, 
212 n, 218; Agatha de, vi, 209 » ; 
Agnes de, vi, 208”, 209n; 
Cecily de, vi, 212 ”; Eliz. de, vi, 
211”; Ellen de, vi, 208”; Hen. 
(de), vi, 142 n, 207 n, 208, 209 n, 
212m, 218, 271; Hugh (de), 
vi, 208, 211 mn, 212n, 2184n, 
229 n, 277; Jas., vi, 416; John 
de, vi, 211”; Lawr., vi, 265, 
342, 407 2, 513”, 515M, 560N,; 
Mabel de, vi, 212”; Magnei de, 
vi, 208; Marg., vi, 277; Nich., 
vi, 265, 343, 407", 423, 494%, 
515”, 517, 560”; Rich. de, vi, 
211 n, 218 n, 229”; Rob. de, vi, 
208 n, 211”; Robin, vi, 414"; 
Rog. de, vi, 208”; Siward de, 
vi, 208, 212, 217; Thos. (de), 
vi, 211”, 219”, 229n, 288n ; 
Ughtred (Uctred) de, vi, 142", 
211”, 219n, 288n; Ulf de, vi, 
208; Will. (de), vi, 55, 211”, 
212M", 452; vii, 204; —, VI, 
431”; fam., vi, 184” 

Duxbury Hall (Duxbury), vi, 208, 
210, 211” ; 

Duxendean (Whittingham), vii, 207 

Duxen Dean Cross (Broughton), vil, 
117” 

Duxon, see Dickson and Dixon 

Duxon Hill (Brindle), vi, 75” ; 

Dwerryhouse (Wrightington), Vv}, 
174” 

Dwerryhouse, Ad. de, vi, 176"; 
Agnes, vi, 176 ” ; Hen., vi, 176" ; 
Jane, vi, 176"; Rich., vi, 176"; 
Rob. de, vi, 17" : 

Dyeing and Colour Works, vi, 27°, 
289, 399 


Dykes (Newchurch-in-Rossendale), 
i, 438 


vi, 43 : 
Dylle, Thos., vi, 127”; see also 
Duell ; 
Dynkedley, Dynkley, see Dinckley 
Dyrpool (Cabus), vil, 305 ” 
Dyson, Harriet A., vii, 259; John, 
vi, 526, 533 


Eafward (Efward, Eward), vi, 74 1 ; 
vii, 171, 172 ”, 173 ®, 177 

Eagland Hill (Pilling), vii, 332 

Earlsgate, Will. de, vii, 118 

Earl’s Meadow (Penwortham), vi, 

8 n 

pe aacale (Over Darwen), vi, 269, 
270, 274, 280 

Earnsdale, brook, vi, 275, 280 

Earnshaw Bridge (Leyland), vi, ro 

Earpe, Will., vi, 249 # 

Easden Clough (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Eases (Brockholes), vii, 111 ” 

Easington, vi, 393 ” 

Eastcliff (Preston), vii, 83 ” 

Eastfield (Church), vi, 402 » 

Eastgate (Burnley), vi, 453 

Eastgreaves (Lea), vii, 130” 

Eastham (Estham), Arth., vi, 296, 
298”; Edm., vi, 237”; Fran., 
vi, 296; Lawr., vi, 298”; Marg. 
de, vi, 296; Rich., vi, 296; 
Thos. de, vi, 296 

Eastley Field (Cottam), vii, 136 » 

East Moors (Habergham Eaves), 


vi, 457 

Easton Neston (Northants), vi, 123 

Eastwood (Hothersall), vii, 64 ” 

Eastwood, Cath., vi, 77; John, vi, 
477 2; —, vi, 78% 

Eaton, see Eton 

Eaves (St. Michael-on-Wyre), vii, 
285 

Eaves (Eves), Ad. del, vii, 212”; 
Alice del, vii, 212”; Eliz., vii, 
136”; Joan del, vi, 412”; John 
del, vi, 412 ”, 463; Oswald, vii, 
136 n; Rob. del, vi, 397 , 412 7; 
vii, 116; Steph. del, vi, 131, 
134”; Thos. (del), vi, 107, 
397; Will., vi, 512; see also 
Eyves 

Eaves Barn (Hapton), vi, 507 

Eaves Green (Goosnargh), vii, 191, 
198 

Eaves Hall (Chorley), see Crosse 
Hall 


Eaveshey (Chorley), vi, 133 , 140 

Eccles, Agnes, vii, 35 ”; Benj., vii, 
63; Edw., vii, 36”; Frances, 
Vil, 35”; Jos., vi, 288-9; J., vii, 
202; Marg., vii, 272; Rich., 
vii, 31 2, 34”; Seth., vii, 447; 
Thos., vi, 276 ; vii, 36, 44 ”, 63 n, 
272, 282; Will., vi, 270; Miss, 
Vi, 206 ” 

Eccleshill, vi, 39, 235, 269, 278-80, 
419, 429; coal mines, vi, 419; 
ind., vi, 278; man., vi, 279; 
mill, vi, 279; Rom. rem., vi, 278 

Eccleshill, Lower, vi, 279 

Eccleshill, Hen. de, vi, 279; vii, 
109”; Rich. de, vi, 279, 279”; 
Rob. de, vi, 279, 279 n; Rog. de, 
vi, 270 

Eccleshill Fold 
279 n 

Ecclesia of the Messiah, vi, 248 

Eccleston, vi, 1, 2, 58”, 155-66; 
adv., vi, 158; chant., vii, 170 7; 
char., vi, 90 ”, 161 ; ch., vi, 155; 
ind., vi, 162 ; man., vi, 11 2, 162; 
vii, 115 n, 138, 235 2; Nonconf., 
vi, 166 


(Eccleshill), vi, 


INDEX 


Eccleston, Gt., vii, 181, 183 n, 
229, 260, 261m, 2604n, 266, 
269, 269n, 276-9, 281, 284 n, 
302 m, 319”; ch., vii, 279; fairs, 
vil, 270; man., vil, 182, 276, 
280, 288; mill, vii, 278; Non- 
conf., vii, 279; Rom, Cath., vii, 
279 

Eccleston, Little (Little Eccleston- 
with-Larbreck), vii, 143, 143 n, 
I44, 144”, 150, 150n, 181-3, 
200, 209, 276, 280n, 288n, 
302 %; man.,, vii, 182 

Eccleston, Mickle, Much, see Eccle- 
ston, Gt. 

Eccleston (Eggleston), Ad. (de), vi, 
Og N-165; vii, 182”, 183 2, 
270-7, 278, 279”, 330n; Alan 
de, vi, 291 ”; vii, 272 n, 278n; 
Anabil de, vii, 278 x; Anne, vii, 
278; Beatrice de, vii, 1837; 
Cecily de, vi, 201 n; Edw.,, vii, 
35”; Ellis de, vii, 183 x; Emma 
de, vii, 277”; Geotf. de, vii, 
272; Hen., vi, 177”; Hugh, 
vi, 165”; Joan, vi, 1657; vii, 
1977”; John (de), vi, 163 n, 
165”; vii, 180 n, 278”; Kath., 
vu, 211; Ralph (de), vii, 144, 
182, 183 , 187 n, 270; Rich. de, 
vil, 272”, 277”, 279n, 280, 
280 n ; Rob. de, vi, 163 ”, 165”; 
vii, 183”, 277”; Rog. de, vii, 
Iogn, 277, 280n, 330”; 
Steph. de, vi, 164; Thos. (de), 
Vi, 165”, 172, 177, 194%; Vii, 
120”, 153, 174m”, 182, 1837, 
187 n, I97N, 211, 234”, 2727”, 
277, 278; Uctred de, vii, 277; 
Will. (de), vi, Io0 n, 164 2-65 n, 
166; vii, 19, 153, 187, 1977, 
272, 270 Nn, 277, 278 Nn, 288n; 
Winifred, vii, 190”; fam., vii, 


283 n, 284 

Eccleston Green (Eccleston), vi, 
162, 166 

Eccleston Hall (Gt. Eccleston), vii, 
278 


Eccliston, see Eccleston 

Echelyston, Echilston, see Elston 

Echemeswyk, Eckeleswyk, see Els- 
wick 

Eckersall, Jas., vii, 329”; Thos., 
vii, 329 ” 

Ecleston, see Eccleston 

Ecroyd (Acroid, Akeroyd, Ake- 
royde), Edw., vi, 540; Eliz., vi, 
470; John, vi, 470, 471; Rich., 
vi, 470, 471; Sam., vi, 496; 
Will., vi, 470; W. F., vi, 540 

Eda, w. of Rob., vii, 160 ” 

Edcroft (Adlington), vi, 218 7 

Eddy, Steph. R., vi, 80 

Edeleswic, see Elswick 

Edelston, Joan de, vi, 376”; Rog. 
de, vi, 376” 

Eden, Jas., vi, 259 

Edeston (Clitheroe), vi, 365 ” 

Edgar, Hannah, vi, 148 

Edge, the (Sefton), vi, 301, 321” 

Edge, Bridg., vi, 154”, 194”; 
Ellen, vii, 194”; Geo., vil, 
194”; Jas., vi, 154”; Jos., Vi, 
154”; Rich., vii, 194 #; Sarah, 
vii, 194%; Thos., vi, 154; Vu, 
194”; fam., vi, 240” 

Edgend (Marsden), vi, 549, 540 # 

Edgeside (Newchurch), vi, 440 

Edgeworth, Ad. de, vi, 405”; Rob. 
de, vi, 405 2; Will. de, vi, 405 ” 

Edielies, Ad. de, vii, 16 ; Christiana, 
vii, 16 


Ediholes Harwood), vi, 


(Little 


251 ; 
Ediholes, fam., see Hediholes 


365 


Edisford (Clitheroe), vi, 366 x. 


chant., vi, 371; leper hosp., vi, 


371 

Edistord (Edisforth), Eve de, ae 
34”; Marg. de, vii, 4”; Rich. 
de, vi, 371”; vii, 4”; Will. de, 
VU, 4”, 34” 

Edisford Bridge (Whalley), vi, 360 

Edisforth, fam., see Edisford 

Edith, vii, 130” 

Edmundson (Edmondson), Benj., 
vl, 147, 159; Chris., vii, 298; 
Ellen, vi, 543”; Ewan, vi, 
166”; Hiet, vii, 298%; Rich., 
vi, 155; Will, vii, 89 

Edolf Acre (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 290 

Edresford, Will. de, vii, 230 

Edricholme (Lytham), vii, 216 ” 

Edsforth, John, vii, 141 

Edusa, w. of Rob., vii, 134 ” 

Edward, the Confessor, vi, 1, 57, 
291 

Edward I., vii, 92 », 249 

Edward II, vi, 235; vii, 177 », 487 

Edward IV, vi, 61 2 

Edward, rector of Standish, vi, 187 

Edwards, Marg., vii, 193 », 322”; 
Rob., vi, 388 ”; Will., vii, 322 2 

Edwin, Ad., vii, 1302; WilL, vii, 
130” 

Edyefholes, fam., see Hediholes 

Eegh Marsh (Penwortham), vi, 
58n 

Ees, the (Bretherton), vi, 102 

Efward, see Eafward 

Egerton, Agnes, vi, 76; Dav. (de), 
vi, 76, 79; Jas., vi, 159, 161; 
Pet., vi, 215 ” 

Egerton Moss, vi, 280 

Egginsike (Wilpshire), vi, 335 ” 

Eggleston, see Eccleston 

Eghardhull (Clitheroe), vi, 365 ” 

Eghes (Eghs), Amabel del, vi, 
510%”; Joan del, vi, 456”; John 
del, vi, 510”; Rich. del, vi, 
456; Will. del, vi, 510 ” 

Eglestun, see Eccleston 

Eidsforth (Barnacre), vii, 315, 318 

Eilsi, see Ailsi 

Eissilache (Mellor), vi, 263 

Elberton, Hen., vi, 51” 

Eldred, John, vii, 263 ” 

Elesburne (Pleasington), vi, 266 ” 

Elewynekar (Little Harwood), vi, 
249 n 

Elfward, vi, 538” 

Elim (Burnley), vi, 453 

Elisburn(e), Tiv., vi, 262 , 268 

Elizabeth, queen, vii, 133 ”, 136”, 
138” : 

Elizabeth, d. of Leuot, vi, 485 ” 

Elker (Billington), vi, 328 _ 

Elland (Ellend), Alex. de, vii, 16 2; 
Hen. de, vi, 342, 417, 479, 481; 
Hugh de, vi, 479; Rich. de, vi, 
424, 479, 481 ; Will. de, vii, 16 ” 

Ellaston, Avice de, vi, 170”; vu, 
321 2; Hen. de, vi, 170%; Mich. 
de, vi, 170” ; vii, 321 

Ellel, vii, 282 ”, 300”, 301, 319 %, 
3331... ie f 

Eliel (Ellill), Ad. de, vii, 62%; 
Alice, vii, 49 2; Ellis, vii, 62"; _ 
Grimbald de, vii, 282 ” ; John de, 
vi, 396; vii, 62 2; Rich. (de), vit, 


62, 282”; Rob., vil, 62”; 
Walt. de, vii, 282%; see also 
Sowerby 


Ellen, vii, 283 ; recluse, vi, 360” 
Ellend, see Elland 

Eller, Ad. de, vii, 53” | 

Elleray, Rev. Thos., vi, 333, 334) 


344 : 
Ellerbeck (Duxbury), vi, 208, 211 
Ellerbeck, brook, vi, 208, 217 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Ellercarr meadow (Little Carleton), 
vu, 229n 

Ellerker, John de, vi, 159 

Elleslegh, Ellesley, see Ellisley 

Ellesmere, Alice, Lady, vii, 185, 
208n, 283; Thos., Ld., vu, 
34 n, 185 n, 208 n, 253" 

Elleston, see Elston 

Elleswyk, see Elswick 

Elletson (Elotson), Cath., vil, 257; 
Dan., vii, 259, 333; Eliz., vii, 
258; Emily, vii, 333; Hen. C., 
vii, 257 ; John, vi, 97 ” ; vii, 257; 
Marg. J., vii, 333; Rog., v1,97"; 
WiUL, vu, 258 , 333, 335% 

Ellill, see Ellel 

Ellingthorp, Rich., vi, 268 

Ellis, vi, 469”, 477; vu, 169m; 
the harper, vi, 455 7; thegn, vi, 
3047 

Ellis, Jas., vi, 518; Steph., vi, 
453”; Thos. vi, 515”; Rev. 


—, VI, 51 

Ellisley (Elleslegh, Ellesley), Alice 
de, vi, 60 n, 303 ; John de, vi, 60, 
303 ; Rich. de, vii, 109 

Ellisley lands (Penwortham), vi, 60 

Ellison, Hen., vii, 275"; Stan- 
hope, vi, 114 ; Thos., vi, 114, 147, 
153; Will., vi, 153, 272” 

Ellison House, vu, 275” 

Ellis’s houses (Stonyhurst), vil, 4” 

Ellott, Isabel, vi, 527; John, vi, 
527m; —, Vi, 5247 

Elmetridding (Chipping), vil, 62 1 

Elmfield (Church), vi, 399 

Elminrode (Eccleston), vi, 164” 

Elmridge (Chipping), vii, 26, 31 

Elnor (Farington), vi, 62 

Elondes (Brockholes), vii, 110” 

Elotson, see Elletson 

Elremurcarr (Bretherton), vi, 103 ” 

Elresbaree (Salesbury), vi, 252 

Elrington, Edw., vi, 163”; vi, 
115”; Grace, vi, 163 ” 

Elston, vi, 37; vil, 72, 73 ”, 76, 79, 
83, 106, 108, 113-15, 127%, 
205, 212”; Char., vil, 90, 106 ; 
man., vii, III m, 113; mills, vu, 
114”; Nonconf., vii, 115; Rom. 
Cath., vii, 115 ; Rom. rd., vu, 108 

Elston (Elliston, Ethelston), Agnes 
(de), vii, I11m, 114m; Alex., 
vi, 429; vil, 114m; Alice de, 
vu, 114”; Amabel, vil, 48"; 
Anabella (Anabel), de, vi, 320; 
vil, 125; Anne, vii, III , 112; 
Arth. de, vii, 114”; Benj., vi, 
430n,; Cath. (Kath)., vu, 106, 
1o7m, 111m; Cecily de, vii, 
11g; Christiana de, vii, 1147, 
126m; Eliz. (de), vi, 30”, 429, 
430; Vil, 47”, 114; Ellen (de), 
vu, III 2, 126; Emma de, vi, 
114m; Godith de, vii, 125”; 
Isabel, vi, 294; Jas. de, vil, 114”; 
Jane, vii, 248”; John (de), vii, 
47 nm, 106%, IO7N, ILI nN, 113", 
IIl4, IIqgm, 125; Marg., vii, 
III, IlIm, 125”, 127; Mar- 
gery de, vu, 114”; Maud de, 
vu, 114; Nich, vii, 125”; 
Paulin (de), vu, 107”, 114%, 
125m”, 126”; Ralph (de), vii, 
III m, 114m, 115 n, 1257”; Reg., 
vil, 125”; Rich. (de), vi, 30%, 
237; Vii, 107”, I1Im, 114”; Rob. 
(de), vi, 294, 405”, 429; vii, 
room, III, Ill m, 112, 114%, 
125 n, 126m; Rog. (de), vi, 305 », 
320, 339"; Vii, 45, 49n, 62 n, 
105, 106, 107 ”, III, III m, 113 7, 
114”, 125 n, 136, 137”; Thos. 
(de), vil, 125”, 245”; Warine 
de, vil, 114m, 126; Will. (de), 


Elston (cont.) 
vi, 294, 305m; vii, 88m, 106, 
106”, 107, 109M, III nN, 113, 
114m, 125”, 245, 248; fam., 
vii, 166 

Elston Hall (Elston), vii, 115 

Elswick (Mellor), mineral spring, 


vi, 260 

Elswick (St. Michael-on-Wyre), vi, 
37, 58; vii, 156, 163 n, 106 n, 
167,n, 165 n, 178, 180n, 1581, 
207 n, 260, 261, 264n, 269n, 
278, 279m, 280n, 281 n, 282-4, 
309; chap., vu, 284; ch., vu, 
284; man., vii, 252; mill, vii, 
283 n, 284, 284; Nonconf., vii, 
284 

Elswick, Ad. de, vii, 208 , 212 n, 
254m, 279", 283 n, 284, 2847; 
Alan de, vii, 179”; Alex. de, vu, 
208 n, 212 n, 254 nN, 323 n; Edm., 
vii, 198, 212”; Eva de, vii, 
254”; Hen. (de), vii, 195%, 
284n; Hugh de, vii, 279%, 
284"; John (de), vi, 263; vu, 
41, 43”, 62”, I99n, 212n, 
283 n, 284"; Marg., vil, 212"; 
Rich. de, vii, 283 ”, 284; Rob. 
de, vii, 284”; Rog. de, vii, 284 ; 
Steph. de, vii, 284”; Thos. de, 
vil, 179 n, 212 n, 323; Will. de, 
vii, 179”, 208%, 212m, 284, 
3237 

Elswick Grange (Elswick), vii, 282 

Eltonhead, Alice, vi, 34”; John, 
vi, 34 n 

Elvetham, Hen. de, vi, 338; Hugh 
dew, 338 

Elvive Furlong (Freckleton), vu, 
170” 

Ely, Jas. Stanley, bp. of, vi, 160 n, 
418 n 

Emery, Mary, vi, 11”; Thos., vi, 
In 

Emma, vi, 367”; d. of William, 
vii, 27 

Emmesone, Dobbe (Dowe), vi, 339, 


339" 

Emmott (Colne), vi, 356”, 455”, 
525, 528; Rom. coins, vi, 523 ” 
Emmott (Emott), Chris., vi, 529; 
Edm., vi, 529”; Eliz., vi, 529”; 
Geo., vi, 549; Hen. (de), vi, 
528n, 529n, 548, 551; Humph., 
vi, 529 n; Jas., Vi, 447 2, 529”; 
John, vi, 529, 530, 536, 545%; 
Marg., vi, 530; Margery, vi, 
5457; Rich., vi, 529 ”; Rich. W., 
vi, 529; Rob. (de), vi, 528, 549, 
549 ”, 552; Thos., vi, 529, 529 ”, 
530; Will. (de), vi, 528”, 529, 
539, 533, 551; —, vi, 524%, 

549” 

Emmott Bridge (Trawden), vi, 551 

Emmott Floodgate (Trawden), vi, 
551 

Emmott Hall (Colne), vi, 523, 529 

Emmott Moor, vi, 522, 529, 549 

Emott, see Emmott 

Emsworth (Yorks), chant., vi, 
314%” 

Enam (Singleton), vii, 183 

Enfield (Clayton-le-Moors), see Hen- 
field 

Enfield House (Claughton), vii, 
3297 

England, T. T., vi, 527 

English, Will. the, vii, 303 » 

Engleshel{e], LEnglisle, see Lea, 
English 

English Lea, see Lea, English 

Entwisle (Entwistle), Ad. de, vii, 
54”, 56; Anne, vi, 272; Sir 
Bertin, vi, 110”; Edm., vi, 
429n; Edw., vii, 56; Ellis de, 


366 


Entwisle (cont.) 
vil, 134"; Jane, vii, 56, 58 ; John 
de, vu, 56m, 134”; Rich. de, 
vil, 54”, 56"; Townley, vii, 56m; 
ene v1, 439" 

Erdington (Birmingham), vi, 49 

Ereley (Mellor), see Arley 

Ereley, Kich. de, vi, 262 

Erghum, fam., see Arrom 

Erlesgate, Godith del, vii, 200; 
Will. de, vii, 123 

Erley, vii, 46 

Erlnefield (Huncoat), vi, 411 

Ernesdene, brook, vi, 281 y 

Erneshalgh (Farington), vi, 62 

Ernistone (Foulridge), vi, 547 

Emshaw, Abra., vi, 301 

Erskine, Capt., vii, 77 

Eschayt, see Hesketh 

Escolme, Geo., vi, 557 

Esholt nunnery (Yorks.), vi, 533 

Eskehagh, see Hesketh 

Eskham (Pilling), vii, 332 

Eskholme Houses (Pilling), vii, 334 

Eskland (Garstang), vii, 306 n 

Espes, the (Farington), vi, 62 

Esprick, vii, 150”, 163”, 176n, 
179, 180n, 181, 266, 274n, 
279, 308 

Esprick, Ad. de, vii, 179”; John 
de, vil, 179 m; Will. de, vu, 


179” 

Essex, Will., earl of, vii, 303 

Est Chernoke, see Heath Charnock 

Estebrec, see Esprick 

Estern, John le, vi, 207; Will. 
(the, le), vi, 206 n, 207 ” 

Esthalle, Rich. de, vi, 259” 

Estham, see Eastham 

Estholme (Lytham), vii, 214" 

Estholme Carr (Lytham), vii, 216 

Eston, Estone, Estun, see Ashton 

Etheleston, Etheliston, Ethelston, 
see Elston 

Etheliswyck, Etheneswyk, Etles- 
whic, see Elswick 

Eton (Eaton), Cecily de, vii, 286 ; 
Isabel de, vii, 286”; Joan de, 
vii, 286”; Rich. de, vii, 286"; 
Rob. de, vii, 286%”; Nich. de, 
vii, 286 2, 325 , 328” 

Euerby, Cecily de, vi, 365” 

Eustace, vi, 503 ” 

Euxton, vi, 3, 6”, 18-23, 58”; 
vii, 79, 205; chap., vi, 8, 9n, 
22; char., vi, 9, 91 ”; ch., vi, 22; 
cross, vi, 18; man., vi, 18; mkt. 
and fair, vi, 19; Nonconf., vi, 
23; sch., vi, 23; Rom. Cath, vi, 
23 

Euxton, Avice de, vi, 18”; John 
de, vi, 19”, 224”; Marg. de, 
vi, 19”; Margery de, vi, 181"; 
Rich. de, vi, 18 n, 19 n; Rob. de, 
vi, 21”; Steph. de, vi, 18%; 
Thos., vi, 17 n, 19; Will. (de), 
vi, 17 n, 21N; vii, 93; see also 
Exton 

Euxton Burgh (Euxton), vi, 18, 
20” 

Euxton Hall (Euxton), vi, 17, 18, 
20, 21, 23 

Eva (Eve), w. of Ad., vii, 160"; 
w. of Will. the carpenter, vu, 
98 n : 

Evangelical Protestant Church, vi, 
248 

Evans, Thos., vi, 181 ; 

Everage Clough (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Every, Edw., vi, 543 

Every-Clayton, Edw., vi, 476, 543; 
Eliz., vi, 476, 543; Capt, vi, 
528 n, 543 ; 

Every-Halsted, Chas. E., vi, 476 

Eves, le (Studlehurst), vi, 324” 


Eves (Whittingham), vii, 209m, 
210 N, 212” 

Eves, brook (Evesbroke), vi, 290 ; 
vii, 29", 93 ” 

Eves, fam., see Eaves and Eyves 

Evesham Abbey, vi, 6, 11, II ”, 14, 
18, 52, 53%, 54, 55”, 58, 62, 65, 
67, 69, 79, 71 M, 72 N, 73H, 17I MN, 
215 %, 291% 

Evis-brook, see Eves, brook 

Evyn pool (Ribble), vi, 58» 

Eward, see Eafward 

Ewese, see Eves 

Ewewood Holme (Trawden), vi, 551 

Ewood (Blackburn), vi, 276, 277”, 
287-8, 497 2; ch., vi, 288 

Ewood (Haslingden), vi, 428 

Ewood (Ewode, Hewode), Ad. de, 
vi, 287; Avice de, vi, 511”; 
Hen. de, vi, 511”; John de 
(del), vi, 246%, 2872, 428 n, 
511 #, 548 ; Marg., vi, 287 ; Rich, 
de, vi, 287; Will. de (del), vi, 
246 2, 287 n, 428m; —, Vi, 413 ” 

Ewyas, see Deuyas 

Exeter, Fred. Keppel, bp. of, vii, 
311 2; John Veysey, bp. of, vii, 
42; John Wolton, bp. of, vi, 


95 
Exeter, duke of, vi, 271 
Exeter, Will. de, vi, 87, 146 
Exgangedoles (Ribchester), vii, 48 
Exton, John, vii, 24; Rev. Thos., 
vi, 274, 319; see also Euxton 
Extwistle (Extwesil, Extwesl), vi, 
349, 356%, 443, 447%, 450, 454, 


459, 408-73; man., vi, 471; 
mill., vi, 459 ”, 472; Rom. camp, 
vi, 469 


Extwistle, Alex. de, vi, 473”; 
Avice de, vi, 473 »; Hen. de, vi, 
473”; Mabel de, vi, 473”; 
Matth. de, vi, 473; Nich. de, 
vi, 473”; Rich. de, vi, 473”; 
Sabina de, vi, 473”; Will. de, 


vi, 473% 

Extwistle Hall (Extwistle), vi, 138, 

109, 472 
Eyerley (Ribchester), vii, 43 ” 

Eyes, the (Brockholes), vii, 112 ” 

Eyes, the (Witton), vi, 265 

Eyre, Rob. the, vii, 52”; Will, 
vii, 13 

Eyves (Fishwick), vii, 116 ” 

Eyves, Grace, vi, 27”; Jame, vii, 
115”; Ralph, vii, 117; Rich., 
vi, 27; vii, 117; Rob. del, vii, 
116; Thos., vii, 117; fam., vii, 
137”; see also Eaves 

Eyves Hall (Goosnargh), vii, 197 

Eyvill, Margery de, vii, 277%”; 
Thos. de, vii, 277 ” 


Faceby-Stubbyng, le (Sunderland), 
vi, 318 

Faethewra (Marton), vii, 240 ” 

Fairbank (Fairebank), Gilb., vi, 
451; John, vi, 547; Will, vi, 


534% 

Fairclough, Ad. de, vi, 211 ” ; Alex., 
vi, 188, 191; Almarica del (de), 
vi, 201 n; Edw., vi, 201 ”; Eliz. 
de, vi, 211”; Ellen, vi, 229”; 
Grace, vi, 173 ”, 201 n; Vii, 32; 
Hen. (de), vi, 201”; John del 
(de), vi, 201 n; Lawr., vi, 191 7, 
201”; Marg., vi, 105”, 201”; 
Margery de, vi, 201”; Ralph 
(de), vi, 105”, 173”, I9QI”, 
201 ”; Rich., vii, 66”; Rob. del 
(de), vi, 201 », 229”; Thos., vi, 
191m; Will., vi, 9”; fam., vi, 
200 


INDEX 


Pere (Fairstead), Jas. de, vii, 


4 

Fairhaven (Lytham), vii, 213; 
Nonconf., vii, 218 

Fairhurst (Charnock Richard), vi, 
206 n 

Fairhurst (Goosnargh), vii, 
197 ”, 199 

Fairhurst (Wrightington), vi, 169, 
175, 180” 

Fairhurst, Ad. del (de), vi, 166, 
201 n, 207”; John de, vi, 207” ; 
Margery de, vi, 201, 207”; 
Rob. de, vi, 207 ”; Will. de, vi, 
2077” 

Fairhurst Hall (Wrightington), vi, 
174”, 181 n 

Fairland (Croston), vi, 92 ” 

Fairoak (Bowland), vi, 380 

Fairs, see Markets and Fairs 

Fairsnape (Bleasdale), vii, 141 7, 
142”, 164” 

Fairsnape, Lower (Bleasdale), vii, 
I41 

Fairsnape Fell, vii, 20, 26, 68, 141 

Fairstead, see Fairford 

Faisacre, Alan de, vii, 284 ” ; Cecily 
de, vii, 284 ” 

Falbothgrene (Goosnargh), vii, 193 ” 

Falconer, Harvey the, vii, 306; 
Warine the, vii, 129” 

Faldworthings (Cuerden), vi, 24 

Faldworthings (Norbreck), vii, 247 ” 

Faldworthings (Thurstan), vi, 234 ” 

Faldworthings (Faldworthing), John 
de, vi, 11”, 15 », 24; Rog. de, 
vi, 24”; Thos., vi, 27”; Will. 
(de), vi, 15 2, 24”, 27” 

Falegh (Faleghs), John, vi, 394”; 
Rob, de, vii, 199 ” 

Falklough, man., vi, 233 ” 

Fall, the (Ribchester), vii, 48 ” 

Fallingstone (Mabwood), vi, 338 ” 

Fallonwelhalgh (Ribchester), vii, 


IgI, 


40n 
Fallowfield, John, vii, 82” 
Fallrode (Cliviger), vi, 485 ” 
Falsnape (Bleasdale), see Fairsnape 
Falsnape Cloughfield (Haighton), 
vii, 125-6” 
Falsnape Cloughhead (Haighton), 
vii, 125” 
Falsnape Wray (Haighton), vii, 
126” 
Falwalshalgh (Ribchester), vii, 47 ” 
Faniscliffe, see Feniscliffe 
Fanshawe (Fanshaw), John, vii, 


142n, 184”; Sim., vii, 184 ; 
Thos. E., vii, 184”; Will. vii, 
184 


Fanyscowles, see Feniscowles 

Faringdon, see Farington 

Farington, vi, 52, 58, 61-5; ch., 
vi, 65; man., vi, 59, 62, 68 ; 
Nonconf., vi, 65; sch., vi, 62 

Farington, Little, vi, 64 

Farington (Faringdon, Farrington), 
Ad. de, vi, 62”; Agnes (de), vi, 
64”, 110”; Alb. de, vi, 627; 
Alice (de), vi, 52”, 62, 63”, 
64n, 67; Vii, 307%, 320%; 
Ameria (Amery) de, vi, 62%; 
vii, 200; Anne, vi, 12%, 53, 63, 
64; Bradshaw, vi, 14”; Cecily, 
vi, 24”, 64”, 206%; vii, 307%, 
320; Chas., vi, 64%, 68 n, 
73”, 106”; Chris., vi, 28”; 
Dorothy, vi, 12 ”, 63; Edm., v1, 
14; Edw., vi, 299; Eliz., vi, 
6, 63", 64”; vii, 136”, 314”; 
Fran., vi, 67 , 68 ”, 322; Geoff., 
vi, 64; Geo., vi, 14, 110”; Vu, 
135”, 160m; Sir Hen., vi, 9; 
II #, 12, 57 %, 63, 65, 68, 10”, 
113”, 164”, 292%; Hen. (de), 


367 


Farington (cont.) 
V1, 2%, 13, 14H, 52H, 57n-58n, 
62, 64, 67%, IoQ9n, LION, 
118, 164”, 206”, 412"; vii, 
74, 135 ”, 183 n, 320”; Hen. N. 
vi, 14; Hugh, vi, 73 2; vii, 106, 
107, 107, 117m; Humph., vi, 
var Isabel, vi, 3”, 30, 63 ”, 293; 
Jas., vi, 14, 73 ” ; vii, 205 ; Jas. N. 
vil, 14; Jane, vii, 106”; Joan 
(de), vi, II, 30, 61”, 63, 71 n, 
TIO M, 113 2, 305”; Sir John de, 
vi, 64; John (de), vi, 11», 18, 
21n, 61 n, 62, 63n, 64n, 73H, 
TIO”; VU, 75, 90, 1o6n, 226n, 
320n; Lawr., vi, 17”; Marg, 
vi, 30 ”, 64”; vii, 106 ; Mary, vi, 
9, 322; Mary H., vi, 14; Nich. 
(de), vi, 14”, 62”, 64”; vii, 
226n, 320”; Pet. (Piers), vi, 
I2n, 24n, 52n, 57M, 63n, 64, 
65, 72, 71”, 73m”, 293; Ralph, 
vi, 7, 64”; Rich. (de), vi, 15 7, 
35 2, 62 n, 63 n, 06 n, 68 n, 737, 
74; vii, 106", 107"; Col. 
Rich, A., vi, 14; Rob. (de), vi, 
Il”, 12”, 42”, 62n, 63, 65%, 
74, 87, Ilon, 146; vii, 226"; 
Rog. (de), vi, 3”, 62”, 64n, 
IIo”, 131%; vii, 200; R., vi, 
85”; Sarah, vii, 136”; Susan, 
vi, 13”, 58”; Susan M., vi, 14; 
Thos. (de), vi, 3”, 12”, 13”, 
I4n, 17n, 28n, 32”, 52, 63, 
63 n, 64”, 67 nN, 71 nN, 73H, 1ION, 
282 n, 307”, 314n, 320”; Val, 
vii, 135”; Warine de, vi, 62”, 
66; Sir Will, vi, 11, 12”, 
14; Rev. Will, vi, 13”; Will. 
(de), vi, 3”, 4, 4%, 9, II, II”, 
12, 13, 14, 15”, 17%, 30, 30%”, 
31 n, 35%, 51, 57%, 58%, bon, 
61, 62, 63, 64”, 65 n, 68 n, 69 n, 
72", 73%, 85, 87”, 107 Nn, 109, 
10g”, 110”, III, III Mm, 113”, 
131”, 160%”, 164”, 166%”, 298, 
305”, 319; vii, 98n, 160n, 
atin; Will. E., vi, 14; Will. J., 
vi, 14; —, vi, 500”; fam., vi, 
18, 28, 52, 71m, 296 

Farington Hall (Farington), vi, 52 

Farington Hall (Ribbleton), vii, 
105; char., vii, 106” 

Farington Moss, vi, 62 

Farington Park (Ribbleton), vii, 
105 

Farmer, John, vii, 41 

Farnworth, Avice de, vi, 226”; 
Edw., vi, 21”, 210”; Hen. de, 
vi, 226”; Joan de, vi, 226”; 
John, vi, 18; vii, 120”; Ralph, 
vii, 120” 

Farrand (Farron), Rev. Rog., vii, 
123, 291 ; Will., vi, 395 

Farrer, Bridg., vi, 367; Fran., vi, 
424”; Hen., vi, 539, 551; Will., 
vi, 424, 470; vii, 288”; —, vi, 
524; see also Ferrers 

Farrington, see Farington 

Farron, see Farrand 

Farthingbutt (Cuerden), vi, 27 ” 

Farthing Hill (Preston), vil, 102 ” 

Farthings, the (Altham), vi, 413 ” 

Fastenfields (Fastandfield), (Rib- 
chester), vii, 49 ”, 51” 

Fauconberg, Ld., vi, 164, 252, 
405; Thos. Belasyse, vsct., vi, 


2 
Fauconbete, Agnes de, vii, 301; 
Hen., vi, 150”; John de, vil, 
301; Sir Walt. de, vil, 301; 
Walt. de, vii, 301, 302, 320%; 
Will. de, vii, 301 ; fam., vii, 316 ” 
Fauerbeck (Preesall), vii, 256 ” 
Fauvell, Will., vi, 548 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Fawcett, Thos., vii, 309”; Mrs., 
vi, 413; —, Vi, 205” 

Fayles (Goosnargh), vii, 199 ” 

Faytehurst (Gt. Harwood), vi, 


339" 

Fazakerley, Hen., vi, 133 ; Hen. H., 
G.,. vi, 133 H. He, ‘vy, 156215 
Matilda H., vi, 133; vii, 156”; 
Nich., vi, 110”; Rog., vi, 219” 

Fazakerley-Westby, Jocelyn T., vi, 
133; Vil, 156,150”; Matilda H., 
vi, 1335 vil, 156 2 

Featherston (Federstun, Fether- 
stan), Alice de, vi, 556; Gilb. 
(de), vi, 350m, 556; Rob. de, 
vi, 556”; Sarah de, vi, 5567; 
Will. de, vi, 291 ”, 350 7, 556 

Fegherby, see Fetherby 

Feilden (Felden, Feldhend, Fielden), 
Alice, vi, 216; Cecil W. M., vi, 
256; Eliz., vi, 456”; Geoff., vi, 
456"; Hen., vi, 236", 246, 265, 
286, 288m, 342; Jas., vi, 408; 
Capt. Jas. H. G., vi, 240, 265, 
283 n, 286, 307; John, vi, 246,534, 
535; Jos., vi, 24%, 247, 265, 317; 
Marg., vi, 407; Nich., vi, 3947”; 
Oliver, vi, 216; Pet. (Piers), 
vi, 407; Kev. Randel H., vi, 299 ; 
Rob, (de), 1;, 127 %,. 237", 342, 
555n; Sir Will, vi, 250, 288; 
fam., Vi, 347 ”, 395” 

Felgate, Thos., vii, 66; Will, vii, 

3n 

Felicklough, man., vi, 233” 

Fell, John, vii, 288n 

Tell House, see Rigmaiden House 

Fellows, Bridg., vi, 154; Rice, vi, 
154; Rice G., vi, 154; Sam., vi, 


154 

Felongley, Hen., vi, 367” 

Felton, Jas., vi, 208”; John, vi, 
208 n 

Felyhalfeld (Fenwick), vi, 305 » 

Fenays, see Fiennes 

Fence, vi, 513, 521, 522-3 

Fence Gate (Fence), vi, 522 

Fence Gate (Salesbury), vi, 256 

Feniscliffe (Livesey), vi, 282, 288 

Feniscowles (I’cniscoales) (Pleasing- 
ton), vi, 269, 288 ; ch., vi, 288 

Feniscowles, Ad. de, vi, 288 

Feniscowles Hall (Pleasington), vi, 
2606 

Fennifold (Habergham Eaves), vi, 
4550 

Tenniscoles, see Feniscowles 

Fennycotes, John de, vi, yoo; 
Maud de, vi, 49”; Kandle de, 


VL, gh at 

Fennviold, Ad. de, vi, s1on; 
Amabel de, vi, 510; Nich. de, 
vi, 5Ion 

Fennyfolds (Hapton), vi, 5107, 


512” 

Fennyschull, 
Feniscowles 

Fens in Penhill, see Fence 

Fenton, Jas., vii, 55, 255; Jos., vii, 
48, 553 Nich., vi, 435; Rob. 
K., vii, 55 ; Will., vii, 142 

Fenwick, Eliz., vi, 525 » ; Will, vi, 
5257 

Fenys, see Fiennes 

Feredale (Newton), vii, 166 

Feris, Rich. de, vii, 209” 

Fermanholes, man. (Whittingham), 
vu, 208 

Fermer, see Farmer 

Fermbreck (Stalmine), vii, 252 » 

Ferncroft (Cuerden), vi, 27” 

Fernhagh (Accrington), vi, 425 

Fernhurst (Lower Darwen), vi, 278 

Fernihurst, Rich. de, vi, 335 

Fernleys, the (Trawden), vi, 552 » 


Fennyshales, see 


Ferns, the (Poulton), vii, 226" 

Fernside (Colne), vi, 528 , 534” 

Fernyhalgh, vii, 117, 118”, 119, 
120, 141; chap., vii. 1249; 
oratory, Vil, 124 

Fernyhalgh Cross (Broughton), vii, 
ll7jn 

Fernyhurst (Bilsborrow), vii, 332 

Fernyside, Pet. del, vi, 548 ; Randle 
de, vi, 548 

Ferrers, earls, vi, 108, 149, 162; 
Vi, 132”, 240, 264%; see also 
Derby, earls of ; Will. Ferrers, 
Ld., vi, 217 

Ferrers (Ferrer), Agnes le, vi, 171 » ; 
Eliz., vii, 241”; Hen. de, vi, 
13I, 132; Hugh le, vi, 171”; 
Joan, vi, 132 »; Rob. de, vi, 131, 
204”; Rog. le, vi, 171”; Thos., 
vi, 96; Sir Will. (de), vi, ror, 
131, 194m, 2067, 2412; Will. 
de, vi, I, 2, 2”, 29”, 99, I00, 
IOI Mm, 103m”, 105”, 131, 132, 
140, 143, 150 m, 197, 199 m, 203 %, 
205, 208, 213, 217, 218%, 260; 
see also Farrer, and Derby, 
earls of 

Ferriby (Yorks), vii, 328 ” 

Ferriby, fam., see Fetherby 

Ferryman, Ad. the, vil, 50” 

Ferryman Ley (Penwortham), vi, 
587 

Fetherby (Fegherby, Ferriby, Fey- 
reby. Fotherby), Ellis de, vii, 
325 n; Hen. de, vii, 326 », 3282; 
Isolda de, vii, 328"; Joan de, 
Vil, 313", 326, 328; John de, 
vii, 321”; Margery de, vil, 328%; 
Nichola de, vii, 3282; Will. de, 
vii, 328 n 

Fetherstan, see Featherston 

Fevre, Ad. le, vii, 209 ” 

Feyreby, see Fetherby 

Feysandforth, see Heysandforth 

Fevser, Chris., vi, 309” 

Fidler, WilL, vii, 135” 

Field, John, vii, 190 ; see also F'yld 

Fielden, see Feilden 

Fieldiny, Anne, vii, 239 » ; Gabriel, 
vii, 239”; Hen., vii, 138, 320%; 
Hen. B., vii, 138, 320”; John, 
vil, 239”; Rich., vi, 515 

Fieldingfordwray (Greenhalgh), vii, 
1807 

Fieldplumpton, see Plumpton, Gt. 
and Little 

Tiennes (Fenays, Fenys), Celia, vii, 
77, 293; Joan, vi, 162 ; Sir Rich., 
vi, 162; Thos., vi, 163”; Will. 
del, vi, 525”; see also Dacre, 
Lds. 


Filbard, vii, 94” 

Fildingford (Garstang), vii, 313 ” 

Filly Close (Filicloos, Vilieclose), 
Vi, 349, 445, 488, 489, 490, 
491 

Finch, Arth., vi, 177”, 180%; 
Chnis., vii, 234 7; Eliz., vi, 96"; 
Ellen, vi, 96”; Hen., vi, 82n, 
100, 192 ” ; Jas., vi, 100”; John, 
vi, 25”, 155,177,199”; Kath., 
vi, 177”, 180”; Lawr., vi, 177 7”, 
180 ; Marg., vi, 96 , 177 »; Mar- 
gery, vi, 28; Mary, vii, 135”; 
Rich., vii, 234; Rob., vi, 177, 
224m; vii, 190”, 234”; Thos., 
vi, 100 n; vii, 135”; Rev. T. R., 
vi, 57; Will., vi, 96,1777” 

Finesdenbrook, vi, 38 

Finnay, fam., vi, 471 

Finnescliffe Bridge, (Witton), vi, 
235 

Finney (Croston), vi, 92 ”, 96 

Finney House (Croston), vi, 96” 

Finsley (Marsden), vi, 537 


368 


Finsley Meadow, see 
Bank 

Firth, Thos., vii, 179 

Fischwic (liscuic), see Fishwick 

Fish (lisshe, 'yshe, Fysshe), Anne, 
vi, 278; Evan, vi, 77"; Jas., vi, 
77", 277"; Mich, vi, 273; 
Miles, vi, 277 ” ; Ralph, vi, 272 9; 
Rob., vi, 273 "; Thos., vi, 272 n, 
273, 274, 280n; WIIL, vi, 278 n 

Fishburne, Thos., vi, 87 

Fisher, Ellen, vi, 9; Hen., vi, 
100 n; Jas., vii, 242, 259 n, 298, 
312; John, vi, 52, 176"; vii, 
148, 245, 259; Rich., vi, 176n; 
Thos., vi, 100 n, 176"; Will, vi, 
176n; —, vii, 242” 

Fisherfield (Wrightington), vi, 174 n 

Fishergate (Preston), vii, 76, 77», 
89 2,97", 99N, IOI Nn 

Fishergate well (Preston), vii, 96 » 

Fisher Tree bridge (Rufford), vi, 
122” 

Fishwick, vi, 162 ; vii, 72, 73 n, 76, 
79, 83, 89, 91m, tor, 114n, 
115-17, 194m; chap., vii, 115"; 
cross, Vil, 91 ”; man., vii, 102 n, 
1r5; mill, vii, 115”, 116m; 
Rom. Cath., vii, 115 

Fishwick, brook, vii, 116” 

Fishwick, Ad. (de), vii, 116 ”, 194 n, 
201 n, 212 n; Alan de, vii, 1167; 
Amabel de, vii, 116  ; Auger de, 
vu, 116”; Cecily de, vii, 125”; 
Chas., vii, 194”; Christiana de, 
vii, toon; Edm., vii, 2057; 
Ellen, vii, 212”; Gilb. de, vii, 
100 » ; Greg., vii, 116  ; Hen. de, 
vii, 105; Hugh de, vii, 100n; 
Rev. Jas., vii, 194”; Jas., vi, 
406 n, 496; Vil, 194, 212 »; Jane, 
vii, 212”; John (de), vi, 47; 
vii, 100”, I16”, 194n, 212 n, 
223; Margery de, vi, 154”; 
Maud de, vii, 105, 116”; Nich. 
de, vii, toon; Rich. (de), vii, 
113”, 116, 125, 212; Rob. 
(de), vii, 116, 194; Rog. de, 
vii, 100”, 116”; Sim. de, vii, 
116”; Thos., vii, toon, 1947 ; 
Will. (de), vi, 154”; vii, 100%, 
116 ”, 212 n; fam., vii, 133 7, 
288 n 

Fishwick Banks (Ribbleton), vii, 
106 n 

Fishwick Cross (Preston), vii, 91 » 

Fishwickgate (Preston), vii, 99 

Fishwick Hall (Fishwick), vii, 115, 
116 

Fiskwic, Fissewyk, Fisshewyke, Fis- 
wick, Fiswike, see Fishwick 

Fisshe, see Fish 

Fitel, Rich., vi, 474”; Rob., vi, 


Saunder’s 


4742 
Fitel Green (Worsthorne), vi, 474 
Fitton (Fiton), Amiria, vi, 34%; 

Anabil (Amabel), vi, 120-1; 

Edm., vi, 29”, 37, 47%, 339; 

Sir Edw., vii, 286; Eliz., vi, 

120”, 375”, 403”; Emma, vi, 

34”; Hugh, vi, 338; vii, 97%; 

John, vi, 29”, 37, 50, 120n, 

338, 339, 417; Marg., vi, 120%, 

264; vii, 130”, 339; Mary, vil, 

286”; Maud, vi, 120-1; Sir 

Rich., vi, 120, 339; Rich. (de), 

vi, 29, 33, 37, 39, 48m, 108, 

120, 130, 196n, 264, 282, 338, 

339, 341, 347", 375", 403%, 

418, 475”; Will, vi, 34%, 

120 n, 339 
FitzAward, Rog., vii, 99"; Will., 

vil, 99 Nn 
Fitzherbert, Basil, vii, 327 , 328"; 

Constantia, vii, 327”, 328” 


Fitzherbert (coné.) 
Fran., vii, 328, 328”; Jas., vii, 
328; Will, vii, 328; Will. J., vii, 


28 

Fivcherbert-Brockholes, Thos., vii, 
328 ; Will., vii, 139 ”, 328, 328 n ; 
W. J., vii, 186, 328 ; —, vii, 15 n, 
18" 

Fitz John, Eustace, vi, 538 

Fitz Nigel, Will., vii, 238 

Fitz Reinfred, Gilb., vi, 203; vii, 
173 ”, 268%”, 296, 300, 308 n, 
325 #; Hawise (Helewise), vii, 
296 m, 308 n, 325 m; Rog. vit, 
153, 300 

Fitz Walter, Rob., Ld., vi, 405 

Fizle, Pet. le, vi, 87 ” 

Flaithel (Flathe Hill), (Shevington), 
vi, 202 ” 

Flass (Colne), vi, 523, 530 

Flat Mills (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 289 

Flaxerode (Wheatley), vii, 32 ” 

Flax Moss (Haslingden), vi, 427 

Flecher Oatley (Whittingham), vii, 


207 % 

Fleet (Fleets) (Church), vi, 402 

Fleetwood, vii, 79 ”, 231, 232, 237; 
chs., vil, 237; lighthouses, vii, 
237; Nonconf., vii, 237; Rom. 
Cath., vii, 237; sch., vii, 236 

Fleetwood, Agnes, vii, 111 » ; Anne, 
vi, 53, 106; Arth., vi, 59; 
Barbara, vi, 59”, 295; Barton, 
vil, 195”; Betty, vi, 19”; 
Bridg., vi, 164”, 295; vil, 224; 
Chas., vi, 298”; Edm., vi, 
167”; vii, 222 n, 230, 235, 236, 
236 nN, 241, 2470, 248, 249 n, 
250n, 258; Edw., vi, 56, 56%, 
59, 62; vii, 148, 224, 235, 236, 
248 n, 249, 259; Eliz., vi, 106”; 
vii, 314; Everill, vii, 230”; 
Fran., vii, 236; Henrietta M., 
vi, 106; Hen., vi, 59, 65, 322”; 
vii, 162”, 179”; Honora, vi, 
59”; H, vi, 74"; Jas., vi, 
59 ; Jane, vi, 164 n, 165 7; 
vii, 239 n, 248 n; Joan, vii, 
270; John (de), vi, 6, 53, 54%, 
55 m, 58, 59, 60, 61 m, 62, 
65", 68, 70, 71 n, 73”, 747, 
167”; Vil, 97", III, 1364, 
158”, 160m, 222”, 224, 235%, 
331”; Marg., vii, 236, 248”, 
249m", 331”; Margery, vi, 54, 
59; Marianna, vi, 274 ; Mary, vii, 
154”; Sir Paul, vii, 235, 241 ”, 
248; Paul, vii, 250 ”, 258, 259 ; 
Sir Pet. H., vii, 236, 237, 241, 
248, 249; Ralph, vi, 73”; Sir 
Rich., vi, 24”, 167”; Rich., vi, 
15%, 54, 55, 59, 71%, 72, 73, 
167", 292m", 293; Vil, 154%, 
222 N, 224, 235, 236, 244, 2452, 
249 N, 255”, 259”, 260; Sir 
Rob., vi, 72; Rob., vi, 167%; 
vu, 154”, 235”; Sam., vi, 19”, 
Ilon, 164m”; Sarah, vii, 249”; 
Thos., vi, 25”, 27, 59”, 106n, 
161, 164, 166”, 167%”, 177%, 
198-9, 224m, 292", 293, 295, 
397"; vii, 97”, I5I”, I90n, 
222, 222m, 224, 227, 2277, 
2341, 235, 235%, 236m, 240, 
241, 242, 246, 248, 250%”, 
254”, 270, 284”; Sir Will., vi, 
155, 167, 250; vii, 135, 241” ; 
Will, vi, 58, 155, 164”, 165”, 
167”, 295; vii, 222”, 224%, 
227%, 241, 247, 247 n, 248, 249, 
284; Mrs., vi, 237; —, vii, 
154”, 219; fam., vi, 52, 240, 
283, 310; vii, 279 

Fleetwood Hall (Samlesbury), vi, 
310 

7 


INDEX 


Fleetwood-Hesketh, C. H., vii, 222, 
244 

Fleming, Anne, vi, 922; Chas., vii, 
303 n; Eliz., vi, 92, tor-2, 122 2; 
Gilb., vi, 92 x; Isabel, Lady, vi, 
qin; Isabel (de la), vi, 92, 132; 
Joan, vi, 92”; Sir John (le), vi, 
71 nN, 92, 95 2, 97 7, 98 n, 105 n, 
131, 132; John (le), vi, 7on, 
I2Im; vil, 334”; Marg. vi, 
209; Reyner (le), vi, 70, 92, 
355 ”; Rich., vi, 92 » ; Sir Thos., 
vi, 70”, 95”, 209; Thos. (le), 
Vi, 92”, 97 N, 132, 432, 458n; 
Will. (ley, vi, 7on, 72”, 92, 
92”, 93”, 95%, I02, 122”; 
fam., vi, 130 

Fletcher, Geo. C., vi, 518; Hen., 
vil, 216”; Jas., vi, 108; Jane, 
vi, 108; John, vi, 163”, 4677; 
John, R., vi, 163; Jos., vi, 248; 
Mary, vi, 163 2, 467 n; Matth. F., 
vi, 119; Rev. M., vi, 119; Rob. 
C., vi, 119, 147; Rev. Will, vi, 
283; Will., vi, 208 ” ; vii, 178 

Flethycrokes (Barton), vii, 127 ” 

Flimingswell Syke (Preesall), vii, 
2577 

Flitchcrofthaw, John de, vii, 109 ”; 
Rich. de, vii, 109 ” 

Floites Syke (Trawden), vi, 552 

Flood, John, vi, 311” 

Flore, Rog., vi, 488, 490, 515, 521 

Florigg, see Foulridge 

Floyd, Mrs., vi, I10” 

Foal’s charity (Chorley), vi, 148 

Fogg, Rob., vi, 153, 160” 

Foldringis, see Faldworthings 

Folds (Ulnes Walton), vi, 108 

Folds, man., vi, 405 ” 

Folds, fam., see Foulds 

Folds House (Briercliffe), vi, 469, 
470, 521 

Foldys, fam., see Foulds 

Foldys Cross (Towneley Hall), vi, 
443, 463 : . 

Folerigg, Folerigge, Folering, see 
Foulridge 

Foles, the (Cottam), vii, 136” 

Foliot, Alice, vi, 304; Jordan, vi, 
304; Rich., vi, 304 ” 

Folly (Foliot) Hall (Balne), vi, 305 ” 

Folrigg, see Foulridge 

Fonts, vi, 545 78, 85, 127, 130, 152, 
159, 186, 297, 312, 333, 342, 354) 
399, 403, 415, 449, 495, 533, 557; 


vu, 61, 123, 145, 148 n, 244 n, 
290 

Foole (Fowle), Janet, vi, 237%; 
John, vi, 395 ”; Lionel, vi, 342 ; 
Rob., vi, 237 2; Thos., vi, 288 ” ; 
— vi, 395% 

Foot, —, vi, 411 

Ford, the (Wheelton), vi, 50 iP 

Ford, Alex., vi, 198”; A. R., vu, 
142" ; 

Fordoland (Worsthorne), vi, 477 

Forest, Ameria de, vi, 291”; Gilb 
of the, vi, 291 # ; John, vi, 395; 
Will., vi, 395 23 —, Vi, 56” 

Formby, vii, 3, 159”, 229%, 285; 
man., vil, 286 ” 

Formby, Alice (de), vii, 35”, 194” 5 
Hugh de, vil, 229”; Joan, vil, 
35; John, vii, 30”, 35%; Will. 
de, vii, 194” 

Forrors, John, vi, 355 ” . 

Forshaw, Alice, vi, 60%”; Jas., vi, 
60n; vii, 98", 107%, II7%; 
Jane, vi, 16%; Joan, V1, 60n; 
John, vi, 60”, 107 %° Marg., v1, 
16”; Thos., vi, 60”; Thurstan, 
vi, 60”; Will., vi, 52%, 58 n, 60, 
61%, 65, 66%, 107%, 108; 
fam., vi, 116 2; vii, 98 » 


369 


Forshaw field (Withnell), vi, 48 ” 

Forster, Joan de, vi, 506”; John, 
vi, 383”, 500”; Thos., vii, 77; 
see also Foster 

Fort, John, vi, 353, 505; Rich., vi, 
355", 505 ; fam., vi, 415, 513 

Forton (Cockerham), vii, 59”, 68, 
130 N, 300, 305 

Forton, Hen. de, vii, 268; Rog. 
de, vii, 268 » 

Fort, Taylor & Co., vi, 423 

Foster, Geo., vi, 387 , 513; Hen., 
vii, 285, 291 ; Jane, vi, 208 ; John, 
vi, 251”; Rob., vi, 208 x; Seth, 
vi, 199 ; Sir Thos., vi, 86 n ; Thos., 
vi, 421, 489; Will., vi, 35”; see 
also Forster 

Foster Field (Read), vi, 506 ” 

Fotherby, see Fetherby 

Foul (Chipping), vii, 29 

Foulds (Folds, Foldes, Foldys), 
Chris., vi, 445 2; Edw., vi, 445 7; 
Geoff., vi, 549, 551”; Hen. del, 
vi, 470; Jas., vi, I14, 447%, 
479, 471, 529, 537%, 539) 549 
551, 552; Jas. P., vi, 551%; 
Rev. John, vi, 274, 318; John, 
vi, 445%, 450%, 451”, 468”, 
473%, 477”, 529”; Lawr. del, 
vi, 470; Mary, vi, 530%”, 539, 
551”, 552”; Nich., vi, 529”; 
Obadiah, vi, 445%”; Piers, vi, 


549; Rich. vi, 445%, 447%, 
453”, 477%, 490; Rob., vi, 
445”, 549”; Rog., vi, 552; 


Sarah, vi, 527”; Thos., vi, 488 ; 
Will., vi, 445%, 447, 473 % 475% 
477%; —, Vl, 524% 

Foulridge, vi, 349, 356”, 456, 476; 
522, 524, 520", 530%, 534%, 
544-8, 551; ch., vi, 548; cross, 
vi, 545; ind., vi, 544; Man., Vi, 
543, 545; mill. vi, 545, 546; 
Nonconf., vi, 548; quarries, v1, 


544 . 
Foulridge, brook, vi, 525 ” 
Foulridge, Ad. de, vi, 546” 


Foulridge Dandy Shop (Foul- 
ridge), vi, 548 ; ; 
Foulridge Hall (Foulridge), vi, 


545 %, 546 : 
Fountains Abbey (Yorks), vi, 355 # 


Fourlands (Sowerby), vii, 282” _ 
Four Lane Ends (Carleton), vil, 
228 
Fowle, see Foole : 
Fowl Leach (Trawden), vi, 551 
Fowlrakes (Simonstone), vi, 499 # 
Fox (Foxe) Cornelius, vil, 253% 
275; Eliz., vil, 229 ” ; Geo., V1, 
519; vii, 104 2; Jane, Vil, 253% 5 
Jos. H., vi, 496; Rob., vil, 
304”; Thos., vii, 229”, 304%; 
Will., vi, 325 ; 
Foxclough (Trawden), vi, 536, 552 
Foxcroft, Maria, vi, 85; Rich., vi, 
85, 153 
Foxe, sve Fox " 
Fox Hall, house (Blackpool), vil, 
2 a oe 
Foxtall, ward (Blackpool), vil, 250% 
Foxhill Bank (Foxholebank), 
(Oswaldtwistle), vi, 402 2, 405; 
ch., vi, 409; Noncont., vi, 409 
Foxholebank, Will. de, v1, 407 % 
Foxhole Clough (Salesbury), vi, 253 
Foxholegreave (Tulketh), vil, 134 
Foxholehurst (Bilsborrow), V4, 


2% = 
Fosholes (Rossall), vii, 235% | 
Foxholes, the (Stonyhurst), vii, 4” 
Foxholes, Will. de, v1, 406 2 
Foxhole Slack (Colne), vi, 524” 
Foxholt Redes (Chatburn), V1, 


372 n 
47 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Foxhouses (Nether Wyrtesdale), vii, 


3047” 

Foxlane Ends Cross (Westby), vil, 
1747" 

Foxley, Joshua, vi, 198”; Sam., 
vi, 198 

Foxton, Cath. D., vii, 246 

France, John, vii, 183, 267 ”, 275, 


276; Rob., vii, 134”; Rob. 
J. B. A. W., vii, 275 ”; Rob. W., 
vii, 275”; Thos. R. W., vii, 


275”; Thos. W., vii, 275”; —, 
vl, 279”; fam., vii, 262, 263 
Franceys (Francis), Ad., vi, 301 ” ; 

vii, 48 2 ; Amery, vii, 48 » ; Hen., 
vii, 56”; John, vi, 48n, 1667; 
Margery, vii, 33 7, 166; Rich., 
vii, 33”, 48”, 52”; Rob., vu, 
48 n, 56n, 1367 
Franciscans, see Friars, Grey 
Franckesleye, see Lea, French 


Frane, —, vi, 512” 
Frankland, Sir Edw., vii, 313 
Franks, Alice, vi, 553”; Geo., 


vii, 17; Mary, vu, 17 
Fraxino de, see Ash 
Freckleton (Frecheltun), vi, 58”; 

Vii, 68, 118m, 135, 143, 144, 

Iyu m, 149, 150, 160”, 162n, 

166, 166, 167-71, 173”, 253%, 

273, 274; ch., vii, 170; crosses, 

vu, 167; ind., vil, 167 ; man., vii, 

167, 274m; Nonconf., vii, 171; 

Rom, Cath., vii, 171 
Freckleton, Ad. de, vii, 166 , 167 2, 

168, 168", 169”, 170%”, 207 Nn, 

283; Agnes de, vu, 168 n, 170n; 

Alice de, vil, 108”, 1697; 

Andr., vil, 150”; Eliz. de, vii, 

170m; Ellen (de), vii, 168%, 

170; Emma (Emmota) de, vii, 

168 n ; Geoff. de, vii, 170 ” ; Gilb. 

de, vii, 160”; Hawise de, vii, 

168; Hen., vii, 170”; Isabel 

de, vii, 173 ”; Jas. de, vii, 168 n, 

170; Joan, vii, 169; John de, 

vu, 65”, 113”, 168n, 1697”, 

170; Jordan de, vii, 167%, 

170n; Margery de, vii, 170”; 

Maud de, vi, 71”; vii, 1137, 

131 n, 168; Mich., vii, 168%, 

169; Nich. (de), vi, 71”; vii, 

108”, 170n; Osbert de, vii, 

170”; Ralph de, vi, 71”; vii, 

113”, 168, l69n, 170M, 173 Nn, 

253; Rich. de, vi, 104; vii, 167, 

167, 168 n, 169, Ibgn, 170 Nn, 

180 n, 208 n, 247, 282, 2847; 

Rob. (de), vi, 65, 166n, 108 n, 

169M, 170M, 209N, 224, 245; 

Rog. (de), vi, 104; vii, 1607, 

Ib m, 167 n, 168 n, 172 n, 207 n, 

245, 282, 284; Sara de, vii, 

108 n ; Swain de, vii, 167 n, 168; 

Waldeve de, vii, 168 x ; Will. de, 

vil, 131 7, lug n, 1730 
Freckleton Marsh, vii, 144, 1507, 

160” 

Free Christians, vi, 536 
Free Church of England, vi, 50, 

371, 409, 427 
Free Gospel Church, vi, 552; vii, 

104 
Frekelton, Frekilton, see Freckleton 
French, Anne, vii, 101”, 102”, 

120”; Edw., vil, IoIm, 102, 

1z0”; Rev. John F., vi, 334; 

Matth., vi, 55; vii, 102 ”; Thos., 

vi, 298, 299 
French Lea, see Lea, French 
Frenchwood (Fishwick), vii, 115, 

117 
Frendesforth (Hothersall), vii, 63 
Frenkyssele, Frensshele, see Lea 


French : 


Frequelton, see Freckleton 
Frerehill, see Friar Hill (Henheads) 
Frereweind (Preston), vu, 79" 
Fretlands (Newton), vii, 1b0” 
Friargate (Preston), vii, 76 
Friargate Bars (Preston), vii, 75 ” 
Friar Hill (Henheads), vi, 437, 


439" 
Fniarhills (Friarhill) (Accrington), 
Vi, 233%, 425, 425” 
Friars, Grey, vu, 73, 102 ”, 213 
Fnars’ Garden (Preston), vii, 99 
Friars Minor, see Friars, Grey 
Fnary, the (Preston), vii, 97, 102 
Fndaybank (Clitheroe), vi, 393 ” 
Friends, Society of, vi, 199, 229, 
248, 280, 350, 360, 372, 435, 440, 
453, 470, 473, 523, 536, 541, 
548, 552, 558, 560; vii, 43, 67, 
104, 148”, 171, 188, 237, 282, 
255, 299 m, 320 
Frinimdene (Hoghton), vi, 37 ” 
Friston, man. (Yorks), vi, 421 
Frith, Eliza, vi, 23 ”; Jas., vi, 23 7; 
Margaretta, vi, 23”; Mary A., 
vi, 23”; Will, vi, 10”, 148, 
192”, 541”; Will. A., vi, 23” 
Fulache (Gt. Harwood), vi, 338 
Fulborne (Fulburne), Joan de, vii, 
284; John de, vii, 284”, 332" 
Fulelacheshaw (Gt. Harwood), vi, 


3397 

Fulesyke (Cottam), vii, 132 ”, 134 

Fulewde, Fulewude, see Fulwood 

Fulford (Lea), vii, 1330” 

Fulford, Isabel, vi, 106 

Fulk, vi, 366” 

Fulledge (Burnley), vi, 441, 445 

Fuller, Rich. the, vi, 485” 

Fulshagh, brook, vi, 266” 

Fulshagh, Edm. de, vi, 194” 

Fulshaw (Barrowford), vi, 542 

Fulshaw moor, vii, 134 

Fulsnape (Goosnargh), vii, 192 ” 

Fulthorp (Fulthorpe), Sir Rog. de, 
vi, 254; vii, 41”; Sibyl de, vi, 
254; Vl, 419” 

Fulwood (Fulwode), vii, 68, 76, 77, 
79, 91, 92, 93, 94, 96, 102 nN, 
106, Io7 n, 108, 118”, 119%, 
137-8, 205, 209”; ch., vii, 138; 
man., vil, 126, 137; Nonconf., 
vu, 138; sch., vii, 138; work- 
house, vil, 97 

Fulwood, Rich. de, vi, 95 », 402”; 
Rog. de, vi, 95 », 402 

Fulwood forest, vii, 73, 137 

Fulwood moor (Preston), vii, 97 ”, 
137 

Fulwood Row (Fulwood), vii, 137 

Fulwoodshaw (Fulwood), vii, 121 

Furbirkar (Pleasington), vi, 267 

Furfelt (Hapton), vi, 511 ” 

Furness, man., vi, 233 

Furness (Furnes), Eda de, vii, 153 1; 
John de, vii, 204 2; Rog. de, vii, 
153” 

Furness Abbey, vi, 30”; vii, 1330" 

Furtherhouse (Dutton), vii, 58 

Fyfe, Cath., vii, 257; Ellen, vii, 
257; John, vii, 317, 318»; Will., 
VU, 257, 318, 319”; Mrs., vii, 
318; —, vii, 292” 

Fyld, Will., vii, 266; see also Field 

Fylde, the, vii, 68 

Fyshe, Fysshe, see Fish 

Fyswic, see Fishwick 


Gabbet, Geo., vi, 337; John, vi, 
337; Will., vi, 337 

Gadsbyites, vi, 453 

Gadshaw (Clayton-le-Dale), vi, 260 

Gadweyne (Padiham), vi, 493 


37? 


Gald Rene (Rossall), vii, 235 

Gale, Rob., vi, 80 ; Sarah, vi, 383 » 
Wulson, vi, 331, 383” 

Galgate House (Claughton), vii, 
327 

Gallard, Edw., vii, 200”; Joshua 
vii, 30 ”, 200 

Gallows Hill (Preston), vii, 77 

Galter, see Walter 

Galwayth, Thos. de, vii, 272 n 

Gamaliel, vi, 239” 

Gambleside (Gameleshevid) (Higher 
Booths), vi, 433-4 

Gamel, vi, 506m, 524m, 538n 
vu, 98 n, 223, 306” 

Gamel’s bridge (Ashton), vii, 132 » 

Gamelsgate, vi, 338, 417 

Gamelside, vi, 233” 

Gamersley (Gammersley), Ad. de, 
vi, 217”; Ellen de, vi, 217" 

Gamridding (Brockholes), vii, 112 n 

Gannow (Burnley), vi, 448”, 454 
487 

Gant, Will., vii, 157 ” 

Garbett, Geo., vi, 426 

Garde, Rob. de la, vii, 13" 

Gardiner, Alex., vi, 
Steph., vi, 160% 

Gardner, Eliz., vii, 136 » ; Rev. Jas. 
C., vil, 334; Rev. John, vii, 333; 
John, vii, 333, 335; Rich., vi, 
64, 65%”; Rich. C., vii, 305, 
333”; Rich. T., vii, 335; Thos. 
vi, 111; Will., vii, 136” 

Garecloughs (Whalley), vi, 387 ” 

Gargape (Penwortham), vi, 58 

Gargrave (Yorks), vii, 155” 

Gargrave, Cecily de, vi, 398 » ; John 
de, vi, 398 ” 

Garlick, Will., vii, 175 

Garner, John, vii, 142 

Garnett (Garnet), Capt. Chas. H., 
vii, 304; Jas., vil, 142; Rev. 
Rich., vi, 283; Rog., vii, 297; 
Will., vii, 141”, 142; see also 
Gernet 

Garstang, vii, 68, 71, 138, 141, 263, 
264”, 267, 270, 274n, 288n, 
291-335; adv., vii, 296, 31190; 
agric., vii, 315; chap., vii, 299; 
bridge, vii, 292, 293”, 297%, 

. 311; chant., vii, 295, 299; char., 
vii, 299; ch., vii, 69, 293, 311, 
312, 314%”; Cross, vii, 296, 311; 
man., vii, 291, 300, 301, 305%, 
311, 317”; mkts. and fairs, vil, 
302, 311, 312; mill, vii, 292, 
293 ”, 302 n; Nonconf., vii, 312; 
plague, vii, 292 ; Rom. Cath., vii, 
299, 312; Rom. rem., vii, 291 ; 
schs., vii, 300, 312, 315; stocks, 
vii, 311 ; sundial, vii, 296 

Garstang (Gerstan), Alice, vi, 282 ; 
Andr., vi, 35”; Anne, vi, 282; 
Ant., vii, 190 n ; Cecily, vi, 35”; 
Christiana de, vii, 328”; Edw., 
vi, 282 n; Eliz., vii, 120 n, 190; 
Ellen, vi, 35, 282; Gilb. de, 
vii, 308; Hen. de, vi, 206%, 
207”; vii, 328; Jas., vi, 35%, 
282, 285 n, 288 ; Joan de, vi, 282 ; 
John (de), vi, 35”, 62m, 282, 
288 ; Lewis, vi, 35, 282; Mar- 
gery, vi, 282; Nich. de, vu, 
328”; Paulin de, vii, 331%; 
Ralph, vi, 35 7, 55, 74, 282 ; Rich. 
de, vi, 62; Rob. de, vii, 318; 
Rog. de, vi, 62”; vii, 324"; 
Sim. de, vii, 318; Thos. (de), 
vi, 35”, 77”, 103, 206m, 282; 
Thurstan, vi, 35 ; Will. (de), vi, 
35, 282, 291”; Vil, 120”; 
fam., vil, 36” 

Garstang Churchtown, see Church- 
town 


199 " 


Garstangs (Tockholes), vi, 282 

Garston, Geo., vi, 141 ; Marg., vi, 
141 »; fam., vi, 296 

Gartside, Fran., vi, 428”, 429; 
Hen. de, vi, 267”; Hugh, vi, 
425 %, 428 , 431, 488, 491, 512 2, 
519, 520; John, vi, 394»; Lawr., 
vi, 394%; Margery, vi, 3947; 
Nich., vi, 425”, 520; Percival, 
vi, 394”; Rog., vi, 428"; —, 
vi, 394, 395 % ; 

Gaseflosland (Gt. Eccleston), vii, 


2772 

Gaseill (Yorks), vi, 258 

Gaskell (Gazegill), Kath. de, vi, 
377 n; Rob. de, vi, 377”; Will., 
vi, 377 #, 378 » 

Gastrell, bp., vi, 111, 128, 318, 426, 
453 , 486, 541 7, 558 7; vii, 40, 
44 n, 60n, 66, 149”, 158%, 165, 
205, 205 m, 218, 292, 312, 334” 

Gatacre, Rev. Arth., vii, 147 ; Thos., 
vii, 263 

Gateways, vi, 43, 386 

Gatherpenny, Margery, vi, 69”; 
Will., vi, 69 ” 

Gathurst (Shevington), vi, 199 

Gaulkthorn (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 405 

Gaulter, see Walter 

Gaunt, Hen. de, vii, 146”, 
Isabel, vii, 278%”; 
vii, 144, 278”; John of, dk. of 
Lancaster, see Lancaster, dk. of ; 
Rog., vu, 278 » 

Gaveston, Pet. de, vi, 259 

Gawthorpe, man. (Habergham 
Eaves), vi, 454, 463, 489; vil, 128 

Gawthorpe Hall(HaberghamEaves), 
vi, 464 

Gayerstang, see Garstang 

Gayescrooks (Wrightington), vi, 
174” 

Gayle Green, see Fennyfolds 

Gayrestan, Gayrestang, Gayrstang, 
see Garstang 

Gaysgillcroft (Clitheroe), vi, 364” 

Gazegill, fam., see Gaskell 

Gea, see Gey 

Gedleng, Hen., vi, 356”, 391 ”, 457; 
see also Goulding 

Gee, Edw., vi, 160, 161 

Geldherd, Sim. the, vi, 548 

Gelgrumysharagh, see Kellamergh 

Gellibrand, see Gillibrand 

Gent, Will., vi, 289 

Gentyl (Gentil), Agnes le, vii, 229 n, 
2307; Alice le, vii, 230 n ; Kath. 
le, vii, 306 ”; Nich. le, vii, 306; 
Ralph, vii, 253”; Randle (le), 
Vil, 229N, 230”, 247”, 3067; 
Thos. le, vii, 306, 306 7 ; Will. le, 
vii, 306 ”, 313” 

Geoffrey, vii, 130 n, 132 ”, 182 ; the 
arbalaster, vii, 188 ; the brewster, 
vi, 24”; the carpenter, vii, 276”; 
the chaplain, vii, 123”, 255”; 
the cook, vii, 118; dean of 
Whalley, see Whalley, Geoff., 
dean of; the parker, vi, 424; 
rector, vi, 87 ; sheriff, vii, 145 

Geoffreyfield (Lea), vii, 130 

Gerard (Girard), vi, 1, 95”; vii, 
52” 

Gerard, Eleanor, Lady, vii, 303; 
Eliz., Lady, vii, 304, 304”, 307”; 
Jane, Lady, vii, 303 ”; Lds., vi, 
172, 421; vii, 311 2; Chas., vii, 
303; Digby, vii, 304; Dutton, 
Vil, 303, 307, 308 m, 332 ”; Gilb., 
vil, 303; Thos., vii, 303, 324%, 
332” 

Gerard (Gerrard), Alice, vi, 259; 
vu, 307”; Anne, vi, 33”, 141 7, 
259, 316, 319; vii, 233%, 275, 
307, 323 ”, 331”; Sir Chas., vi, 


INDEX 


Gerard (cont.) 
154; Chas., see Macclesfield, 
earl of; Constance, vi, 1942; 
Eliz., vi, 76», 110”; vii, 160 », 
394, 307, 315; Ellen, vi, 77 n, 
259”; Evan, vii, 126, 1272; 
Frances, vi, 195; Geo. E., vi, 
190 ” ; Sir Gilb., vi, 4o, 104, 154, 
259, 316, 319, 365 n, 407 n, 492, 
539, 549”, 555m”; vii, 107 n, 
128 n, 178, 275, 303, 319 2, 323, 
325; Gilb., vi, 33”, 514; vii, 
193”, 199”, 207n, 233, 307, 
309”, 331; Humph., vi, 14127; 
Isabella, vi, 292; Jas., vi, 770; 
vul, 173; Janet, vi, 77”; Joan, 
vi, 76, 77”, 79”; Rev. John, 
vil, 7”, 8”; John, vi, 48 n, 77 n, 
194%, 237M”, 288n, 3157; vii, 
126, 127", 147, 173, 3327; 
Matilda, vi, 315”; Oliver, vi, 
77; Penelope, vi, 154; Sir 
Pet., vi, 76, 76, 79; Pet., vi, 
292 ; Radcliffe, vi, 154; Rob. J., 
vi, 172 ; Sir Thos., vi, 61 n, 75 n, 
76, 77 N, 79, 80, 81 n, 109, 110 n, 
195 ”, 221, 259, 316, 317”, 365; 
Vu, I13 2, 160 2, 307, 317, 331 2; 
Thos., vi, 79, 81, 281 ; Will., vi, 
35”, 76, 77, 79”, 80, 227n, 
259”; fam., vi, 68, 470; vii, 
305 

Gerard-Dicconson, —, vi, 174 

Gerelriding (Preston), vii, 99 » 

Geresteng, see Garstang 

German (Germain, Jarman), Alice, 
vi, 98”; Amot, vi, 98”; Hen., 
vi, 98”; Jas., vi, 180, 212”; 
Joan, vi, 98”; John, vi, 98”; 
Martha, vii, 212”; Ralph, vi, 
98”; Rich., vi, 164", 177”; 
Rich. P., vi, 206 ; Rob., vi, 98 x, 
177”; Thos., vi, 98”, 1647”; 
Will, vi, 98” 

Germon, Rev. Nich. M., vi, 518 

Germonshalgh (Wheelton), vi, 49 ” 

Gernet (Gernett), Benedict, vi, 
108, 159”, 162”, 163”; vii, 
63”, II15”, I16n, 153, 180%, 
324”; Cecily, vil, I15”, 153; 
John, vii, 1807”; Quenilda, vi, 
103”, 304”; vii, 159”, 160”, 
180 n, 200 n, 228 n, 229 n, 285 n, 
3257; Rog., vi, 103 ”, 158 n, 162, 
304”; Vil, 63”, II5n”, 159%, 
160”, 180”, 200 n, 228, 2857; 
Vivian, vii, 63  ; Will., vi, 314 2; 
vii, 115 n; see also Garnett 

Gerrard, see Gerard 

Gerstan, see Garstang 

Gervase, vii, 230” 

Gest, see Guest 

Gey (Gea, Jay), Dorothy, vi, 358 ”; 
Martha, vi, 358”; Steph., vi, 
354, 358 . 

Gezzerts (Carleton), vil, 231 ” 

Gibbefield (Goosnargh), vii, 198 ” 

Gibbonsfield (Shevington), vi, 200 ” 

Gibfield (Habergham Eaves), vi, 454 

Gibhills (Colne), vi, 534” : 

Gibland del Hall (Hapton), vi, 
509 n 

Gibson, Abra., vi, 167”; Chas., 
vii, 195; Eliz., vi, 167 2; Ellen, 
vi, 402”; John, vi, 219”; VH, 
195”, 218; M., bp., vi, 81 n, 
300; vii, 157”, 176”; Reg., 
vi, 219 ” ; Reynold, vi, 213 ; Rob., 
vi, 402 2; Will., vi, 402 ” : 

Gidlow, Joan, vi, 198; John, vi, 
198”; Ralph, vi, 198”; Rob., 
vi, 198 2 é 

Gilbert, vi, 475”, 480; vil, 232”; 
the chaplain, vii, 289 7; the clerk, 
vii, 297 2; the harper, vu, 3”; 


37! 


Gilbert (cont.) 
the miller, vi, 335; rector of 
Standish, vi, 223; the tailor, 
vii, 114 2” 

Gilbody, Rob., vi, 432 

Gilderscroft (Clitheroe), vi, 365 ” 

Gildhomefield (Lea), vii, 130 n 

Gildhouse (Preston), vii, 97 ” 

Gildouscroft (Kirkland), vii, 313 

Giles, Pet., vi, 159 

Gill, John, vii, 2”; Rich., vi, 468 ” 

Gillar (Giller), Alice, vi, 198” 
Jas. vi, 225; Ralph, vi, 198 n 

Gilleberdechay Clough (Colne), vi, 
525” 

Gillemichael (Gillomichael), 
131,177 2, 178% 

Giller, see Gillar 

Gillibrand (Gellibrand, Jollybrand), 
Agnes, vi, 213”; Alice, vi, 133; 
Anne, vi, 133 ”, 219”; Edw.,, vi, 
239; Eliz., vi, 133 n, 219 ”; Ellen, 
vi, 71 2; Fran. W., vi, 36 ”; Hen. 
H., vi, 133; Hugh, vii, 158”; 
Humph., vi, 133; Isabel, vii, 
158”; Jane, vi, 133; John, vi, 
7E MN, 130, 132, 133, 207, 219”; 
Jonathan, vi, 162”; Kath., vi, 
202 n; Marg., vi, 207; Nich., vi, 
200”; Rich., vi, 118”, 133, 
202 n; Rob., vi, 118”; Rog., vi, 
48”; Rowland, vi, 213 ”; Thos., 
vi, 132, 133, 136”, 142, 143, 
219”, 220; Will., vi, 133, 148; 
fam., vi, 252 

Gillibrand Hall (Chorley), vi, 129; 
vii, 156 ” 

Gillomichael, see Gillemichael 

Gillow, Geo., vii, 150”, 183%; 
John, vii, 174; Jos., vii, 136; 
Rich., vii, 184”; Thos., vii, 
184”; WilL, vii, 150”, 183” 

Gill ridding (Read), vi, 503 ” 

Gilpin, Rev. Jeremiah, vi, 274 

Gipps, Thos., vii, 74 7 

Girard (Larbreck), vii, 182 ” 

Girard, personal name, see Gerard 

Girlington, Eliz., vi, 48; Rich., vi, 


vii, 


47, 48 ; 

Glanville (Glanvill), Randle 
(Ranulf) de, vii, 240 ”, 333 ” 

Glass, anc., vi, 5, 54, 78, 85, 139, 
145, 158, 186, 312, 333, 342, 351, 
370, 403, 495; vii, 39, 81” 

Glassbrook (Glasbrook,  Glaze- 
brook), Edith de, vii, 331”; 
Geoff. de, vii, 331”; J., vi, 91, 
518%n 

Glave, Anne, vii, 121”; Marg., 
vii, 121 2; Thos., vii, 121 ” 

Gleave, Thos., vi, 181 

Glebe Farm (Osbaldeston), vi, 313 

Glendon, John de, vi, 291 2 

Glenfield, vi, 233 ” 

Gliderhou, see Clitheroe 

Gloucester, earl of, vi, 302 

Glover, John the, vii, 326 2; Mar- 
gery the, vii, 3267 ; 

Glynne, Sir Steph., vi, 352; Will, 
vi, 87; —, vii, 22” 

Goberthwaite (Cabus), 
183 2, 304, 305, 314, 

Goberthwaite, John de, vii, 331” 

Goberthwaite Bridge (Cabus), vii, 
270 i 

Goberthwaite Pool (Cabus), vil, 


vii, 182, 


os” ; 
Geidisbrook: (Ribchester), vil, 50” 
Godeshagh, see Goodshaw Booth 
Godfrey, sheriff, vii, 151 ”; 2460 
Godfrey, Thos., vil, 335 ; 
Godith, vii, 54”, 324; d. of Will, 
vii, 252”; w.of Ulf., vi, 68n 
Godithcroft (Adlington), vi, 218 n 
Godith meadow (Nutshaw), vi, 66 2 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Godrich, vi, 498 z 
Godrich Clough (Ribchester), vii, 


45n 

Godrichley (Ribchester), vii, 45 ” 

Godson, Edwin A. M., vu, 205; 
Rich., vii, 187 ” 

Godwin, vii, 45 ” 

Godwinridding (Clitheroe), vi, 365 ” 

Gogard, Agnes, vi, 214; Ailsi, vi, 
214n; Alice, vi, 214”; Cecily, 
vi, 214; Edith, vi, 214; Ellen, 
vi, 214; Eva (Eve), vi, 214”; 
Gena, vi, 214; Hugh, vi, 213, 
214; vii, 54”; John, vi, 2147; 

ath., vi, 213”; Margery, vi, 
214”; Maud, vi, 214”; Ralph, 
vi, 214”, 215m, 216”; Randle, 
vi, 214”; Rich., vi, 214, 214"; 
Rob., vi, 214, 214”; Rog., vi, 
214”; Will, vi, 208 n, 213, 214, 
215”; see also Charnock 

Gogardeschernok, see Heath Char- 
nock 

Goggin, see Hogg-Goggin 

Goit, the (Withnell), vi, 47 

Golborne, vii, 113, 280m; man., 
vi, 291” 

Golborne (Golbourn, Goldburn), 
Clinkard of, vi, 224; John de, 
vi, 95”, 110”; Margery, vi, 
110m; Nichola de, vi, 93”; 
Nich., vi, 110 ”; Rich., vi, 110”; 
Warine de, vi, 93 ”; Will. de, vi, 
93", 224n; —, Vi, 252” 

Goldcroft (Dinckley), vi, 337” 

Goldea, see Goldshaw Booth 

Goldeborne (Osbaldeston), vi, 324 

Goldene, see Goulding 

Golden Hill (Leyland), vi, 177”; 
Nonconf., vi, 17; sch., vi, 9m, 


I 

Goldeshagh, Goldiane, see Goldshaw 
Booth 

Goldicar, Agnes de, vi, 164”; 
Anabil de, vi, 164”; Rich. de, 
vi, 164 2; Thos. de, vi, 1647 

Golding, see Goulding 

Goldshaw, Nether, vi, 233 ”, 515 

Goldshaw, Over, vi, 233 ”, 515 

Goldshaw Booth, vi, 233%, 349, 
513, 514-8, 522; adv., vi, 517; 
char., vi, 518; ch., vi, 517, 518; 
ind., vi, 515; mills, vi, 515; 
Nonconf., vi, 518; pewter, vi, 
517; witchcraft, vi, 515 

Gonnolsmore, see Gunolfsmoors 

Goodale, Thos., vi, 505 ”, 506 

Goodday (Gooday), Agnes, vi, 
402; Barth., vii, 18; Joan, vi, 
378; John, vi, 378; vii, 18; 
Thos., vii, 18; Will., vi, 402 

Goodham Hill (Burnley), vi, 453 

Goodshaw, Edw., vi, 395; Joan 
del, vi, 511”; John, vi, 395; 
Rich., vii, 18, 58, 58 x; Rob., vii, 
58, 59”; Sim. del, vi, 511%; 
Susan, vi, 395 

Goodshaw Booth (Higher Booths), 
V1, 433-4 

Goose, John, vii, 307, 308 ; Mary, 
vii, 307 n; Thos., vil, 293 n, 324 

Goosebutts (Clitheroe), vi, 393 » 

Goose Green (Hoole), vi, 149 

Gooselache (Simonstone), vi, 497 n, 


499 n 

Goose Lane House (Chipping), vii, 
26n 

Goose well (Preston), vii, 96” 

Goosnargh (Goosnargh-with-News- 
ham), vi, 34%, 38 n, 43, 62 n, 
77, 106n, Il4m, 118", IIgn, 
127, 128, 143, I44”, 1467, 
149, 157 N, 163 n, 173 N, 190-206, 
210M, 211 M, 212 n, 226 n, 253 n, 
269, 270, 273, 274”, 288 n, 319 n, 


Goosnargh (cont.) 
321", 329"; Char., vi, 20; 
vii, 205, 267, 267”; ch., vii, 
87 n, 201 ; crosses, Vii, I91, 213"; 
mans., vi, 547; Vii, 27”, 191; 
mkts. and fairs, vii, 191; Nonconf., 
vli, 201, 205; Rom. Cath., vii, 
205; schs., vii, 205 

Goosnargh, brook, vii, 192 


Goosnargh, Ad. de, vii, 198%”; 
Alex. (de), vii, I90”, 192%, 
193”, 198, 207m, 212m, 253, 


254, 283 n, 287 n, 324; Alice 
(de), vii, 178m”, I99”, 2122, 
253 n, 283 n; Avice de, vi, 170; 
Beatrice de, vii, 321; Bern. de, 
vi, 169, 197m, 321; Chris- 
tiana de, vii, 192 »; Godith de, 
vii, 283; Hen. de, vii, 192”, 
197m, 212”; Hugh de, vii, 
198 n, 208 n, 212 n, 283 »; Isold, 
vil, 197”; Joan, vii, 253”; 
John (de), vii, 109m, 154%, 
197, 198m, 253”; Jordan de, 
vii, 331”; Marg., vii, 253; 
Margery de, vii, 192”, 197”; 
Maud (de), vii, 192 ”, 253, 283 7; 
Randle (Ranulf) de, vii, 178%, 
192 n, 193 nm, 197 nN, 198 nN, 207 2, 
208 n, 209 n, 212 n, 283”; Rich. 
de, vii, 109 ”, 197 n, 198 n, 209 n, 
212, 283; Rob. (de), vi, 169, 
170”; vii, Iogn, 197”, 198%, 
253 n, 283 n, 321 ; Thos. (de), vii, 
192 n, 197 n, 198 n, 199 n, 208 n, 
212, 253, 257", 283, 3242; 
Walt. (de), vii, 181m, 192%, 
197”, 198 Nn, 253", 284, 331”; 
Will. (de), vii, 193 ”, 197 n, 253” 

Goosnargh Hospital (Goosnargh), 
vu, 115, 205; trustees, vil, 211 

Gordon, Chas. O., vii, 203, 204; 
Pedro, vii, 13 

Gordon-Lennox, Lady, vi, 4717”; 
Lady Emily F., vi, 460; Ld. 
A. F., vi, 460 

Goredale, Old (Rawcliffe), vii, 271 

Goring, Barbara, vi, 59 n 

Gormanston, Chris., vsct., vii, 99 ”; 
Rob., vsct., vii, 99 

Gornall, Will., vii, 202 » 

Gorse Hall (Whittle-le-Woods), vi, 


32 

Gorst, John, vi, 67; Rachel, vii, 
178 ; Thos., vii, 178 

Gorsuch, Jas., vi, 110”, 2047; 
Thos., vi, 110”, 204” 

Gorton, John, vi, 77; Lawr., vi, 
271 

Gosanarche, Gosanesarwe, Gosan- 
nesareghe, see Goosnargh 

Goschecarr (Warton), vii, 171 ” 

Gosenargh, Gosenarwe, Gosenhar, 
see Goosnargh 

Gosling (Goslin), Anne, vi, 15”; 
Thos. M., vi, 518; Will., vi, 16” 

Gosnargh, sce Goosnargh 

Gosnell, Jane, vi, 19”; John, vi, 
19”, I1on, 164n 

Gospatrick, vi, 303, 304”, 312, 
355%, 509 

Goss, Agnes, vii, 255 

Got Field (Whittingham), vii, 213 

Gouldebrough, Ad. de, vii, 64” 

Goulding (Goldene, Golding), Ad., 
vi, 50 ; Eliz., vii, 225 ; Hen., vi, 
457; Rich. de, vi, 49n; Rog. 
de, vi, 49 ; see also Gedleng 

Gowe, Rob., vii, 24 

Gower, ctss., vii, 218 n 

Goysboytbutts house (Chatburn), 


V1, 373 

Gradell (Graddell), Alice, vi, 111”; 
Chris., vi, III, 111; vii, 265; 
Eliz., vi, 111, 111; Rich., vi, 


372 


Gradell (cont.) 

111”; Thos., vi, Ilt#; Will, 
vi, 81, 108, 110M, IIT, IIH, 
166 n, 300 

Gradwell, Chris., vii, 239”; Eliz, 
vii, 121”; John, vii, 161; Rob., 
bp., vii, 81, 161, 165 , 330 

Gradwell’s house (Inskip), vii, 282 » 

Grandison, Otes, vii, 145 ” 

Graneforth Hole (Trawden), vi, 551 

Grange, Ralph, vi, 55; Rob. de, 
vi, 480”; Steph. del, vi, 480; 
Will. del, vi, 480 ” 

Grange House (Singleton), vii, 187 

Granger Yard (Elswick), vii, 284 

Grant, Dorothy, vii, 282 

Grassyard (Claughton), vii, 326 

Gravelines, Eliz. Tyldesley, abbess 
of, vii, 139” 

Gray, Rev. John, vi, 128; John de, 
bp. of Norwich, vi, 320, 326; see 
also Grey 

Grayson, Geo., vii, 144; Hen., vii, 


75 
Graystock (Greystock), Adam de, 
vi, 170”; vil, 318; Amice de, 
vi, 170”; Edm. de, vi, 170n; 
vii, 318”; Joan de, vi, 38n; 
Rich. de, vi, 38”, 170n; vii, 
318; Rob. de, vi, 170 »; Thos., 
vii, 293; Will. de, vi, 38n, 
170 Nn; vii, 318” 
Grayston, Mich., vii, 200 
Graystone (Salwick), vii, 163 
Grayve, Rob. the, vii, 306 
Grayveson, Ellen, vi, 61”; Will. 
vi, 61” 
Greasewood (Chorley), vi, 141 ” 
Great Hill (Withnell), vi, 47, 49 
Great Hold (Hothersall), vii, 63 ” 
Greave (Bacup), vi, 437, 439” 
Greaves (Ashton), vii, 129, 132 
Greaves, Cecily del, vii, 1337; 
Hen. del, vii, 133”; John del, 
vii, 132”; Rich. del, vii, 132, 


133” 
Green, the (Hapton), see Padiham 
Green 
Green (Greene, Grene), Ad. (del, de 
la),vi, 510”, 511”; Agnes del, vi, 
511”; vii, 310”; Alice de la, 
vi, 375 ”; Anne, vii, 304 2; Geo., 
vi, 529; vii, 17 n, 289 ” ; Harriet 
S., vi, 529; Hen. (del, de Ia), vi, 
47", 508m, 511; Jane (Yana) 
del, vi, 485 ” ; Joan del, vi, 511”; 
John (del), vi, 147, 417, 418m, 
451, 456%, 510”; vii, 82m, 
330%”; Kath. del, vi, 47, 5111”; 
Marg,, vi, 456 ” ; Mich., vi, 456"; 
Miles, vi, 182”; Nich. del, vi, 
511m; Rich, vi, 51”, 129, 
143 %,; vii, 310; Rog. (de la), vi, 
511; Vii, 304 ”, 312; Thos. (de, del, 
de la), vi, 485, 511; vii, 297, 
311 n; Thurstan, vi, 51; Walt. 
H., vi, 416; Will. (del, de la), vi, 
49, 51, 375", 530; —, VU, 
58n 
Greenacres (Greenacre, Grenacres), 
Ad. de, vi, 559; Agnes de, vi, 
376, 559”; Alex., vi, 374%; 
Rev. Arth., vii, 147; Fran., vi, 
374; Gilb. de, vi, 559”; Hen. 
de, vi, 374, 559"; Jane de, vi, 
374”; Joan de, vi, 376, 54, 
559”; John de, vi, 366%, 374, 
376", 377, 559”; Lawr. de, vi, 
374m”, 559”; Marg. (de), vi, 
374”, 559 n ; Maud de, vi, 366”; 
Ralph, vi, 526, 554; Sir Rich. de, 
vi, 315, 379, ae Rich. Ne Pat 
67", 374, 376, 379, 519, 559» 
a 98 n, 102 n; Sir Rob. de, vi, 
559%; Rob. (de), vi, 374% 


Greenacres (cont.) 
559%; vil, 125%; Thos. de, vi, 
559”; Will. de, vi, 559 ” 
Greenalls, Thos., vii, 121 ” 
Greenbank, Lawr., vii, 241 ” ; Will., 


vii, 241 ” ; 
Greenboothstead (Hapton), vi, 


10” 
Green Bridge (Padiham), vi, 493 
Green-Emmott, Walt. E. J., vi, 529 
Greenfield (Colne), vi, 446, 446 n, 
522; coal-mines, vi, 528”; man., 
vi, 527; Rom. coins, vi, 523 
Greenfield (Habergham Eaves), vi, 


454% ’ ; 
Greenfield (Pleasington), vi, 268 
Greenfield (Greenvile, Grenevile), 

Gilb., vi, 398 ” ; Martha, vi, 264 ; 
, Rob. de, vii, 209; Thos., vi, 

264, 398”; Will., vi, 317, 397 ”, 


398 2 
Greenfields (Chorley), vi, 143, 143 ” 
Greengate, the (Altham), vi, 413 
Greengate (Colne), vi, 525” 
Greengore (Bailey), vii, 15 ”, 17 
Greengore, Little (Bailey), vii, 15 
Greengore, Mickle (Bailey), vii, 


15” 

Greengore, Ad. (de, del), vii, 17, 18 ; 
John de, vii, 18; Maud de, vii, 
16”; Thos. (de, del), vii, 16 n, 
17, 18 

Greenhalgh, man. (Bonds), vii, 318, 
319, 319 2 2 2 

Greenhalgh (Greenhalgh-with-This- 
tleton), vii, 143, 143 #, 144, 144 ”, 
146”, 150, 150”, 153, 156”, 
163”, 166”, 176, 176%, 177, 
179-81, 182”; vii, 273; man., 
vii, 179 

Greenhalgh (Greenhall, Greenhow, 
Grenawe), Agnes, vii, 1547; 
Alice, vii, 182”; Edm., vi, 
555”; Edw., vii, 320; Eliz., vi, 
555”; Geo., vil, 154”, 1807; 
Jas., vil, 154”, I80n, 278, 
320; Jane, vii, 50”; John, vi, 
Igl n, 412”; vii, 182”; Mich. 
de, vii, 331”; Ralph de, vii, 
180”; Rich., vii, 50”, 1807, 
212, 224; Rob. de, vii, 179 n, 
180; Thos. (de), vii, 50”, 154, 
180 n, 212 n ; Walt. de, vii, 180 1; 
Will. (de), vii, 138, 154 ”, 179”, 
180n, 278 n, 320, 556”; —, vii, 
65; see also Greenough 

Greenhalgh Castle (Bonds), vii, 
179 N, 279%, 292, 315, 318, 319 

Greenhalgh in the Fylde, vii, 179” 

Greenhalgh in the Holme, vii, 179” 

Greenhalgh Sykes, vii, 180 » 

Green Hall (Heapey), vi, 51” 

Greenhall, fam., see Greenhalgh 

Green Haworth (Accrington), vi, 


4250 
Greenhead (New Laund Booth), vi, 


490 

Greenhey (Billington), vi, 331 

Greenhey (Fendleton), vi, 393 ” 

Greenhills (Greenhill, Greenhull, 
Greenhulls, Greenhylles, Grenill), 
Ad. de, vii, 29”, 55”, 196n, 
197”; Agnes de, vii, 55”; Alice 
(de), vii, 30 n, 195 2, 196 n, 197%; 
Christiana de, vii, 30”, 196, 
196 # ; Isabel, vii, 35 ~ ; John de, 
Vil, 27 2, 29%, 30H, 55”, 196%N, 
197%; Marg. (de), vii, 35%, 
180%; Margery de, vii, 55”; 
Miles, vi, 332”; Phil. de, vii, 
147; Rich. de, vii, 27”, 297, 
195”, 196”; Rob., vi, 259”; 
Thos., vii, 35”; Will. de, vii, 
27", 55”, 180m, 195%”, 196, 
196”, 197” 


INDEX 


Greenhow (Downham), vi, 553 ” 
556 : 

Greenhow, fam., see Greenhalgh 

Greenhull, Greenhulls, see Green- 
hills 

Greenhurst 
2129” 

Greenhurst (Dilworth), vii, 52 

Greenhurst, Sim. de, vii, 13 

Greenlache (Church), vi, 402 n 

Greenlache (Clitheroe), vi, 
36077 

Greenlache (Dilworth), vii, 52 ” 

Greenlache (Hapton), vi, 511 ” 

Greenlache (Pendleton), vi, 395 

Greenlands (Church), vi, 402 ” 

Greenlow, —, vii, 

Green Nook (Goosnargh), vii, 206 ” 

Greenough, Ellen, vi, 119 2; see also 
Greenhalgh 

Greenolf, see Greenhalgh 

Greens (Bacup), vi, 439 n 

Greenskar pot (Layton Hawes), vii, 
249 n 

Greenslade (Accrington), vi, 425 ” 

meee Tockholes (Tockholes), vi, 
282 

Greenvile, see Greenfield 

Greenway, the (Stalmine), vii, 252 

Greenway, Rev. Chas., vi, 274 ; Jas., 
vi, 270 

Greenwood, Eliz., vi, 430; Hen., 
vi, 430; John, vi, 402 , 403 », 
407 2, 430, 456; vil, 51”, 265, 
296"; Marg., vi, 402", 4077; 
Maria (Mary), vi, 430; Ralph, 
vi, 430; Rich., vi, 403 7; Susan, 
vi, 407; Thos., vi, 403, 407, 
408; Violet M., vi, 430; Rev. 
Will., vi, 344; Will. H., vi, 430; 
—, vi, 407; fam., vi, 522 

Greet Hill, vi, 280 

Greetwood, Adam, vi, 
Matth., vi, 482 ” 

Gregge, John, vii, 291 

Gregory IX, pope, vii, 296” 

Gregory, Chas., vi, 428, 4307; 
Elia, vi, 252”; Geo., vi, 440; 
Geo. F., vi, 252”, 261; John, 
vi, 428, 440”; Mary J., vi, 261; 
Pet., vi, 55; Rich., vi, 4407; 
Rob., vi, 428, 431; Thos., vii, 
I2I n, 287; Thos. H., vi, 359 

Gregory croft (Burnley}, vi, 445” 

Gregson, Geo., vi, 237”; Hen., 
vii, 115, 136”, 213”; Jas., vii, 
198”; John, vii, 108, 2877; 
Josias, vii, 74; Rich., vii, 136”; 
Rob., vii, 136”, 213", 2877; 
Thos., vii, 44”, 63, 63”; Will. 
vi, 237” 

Grelley, Al. (de), vi, 169, 232, 291; 
Emma, vi, 169; Rob., vi, 75, 
76, 169 N, 220, 222; Thos., vi, 
76 n, 169 ”, 171 

Gremesargh, Gremeshargh, see 
Grimsargh 

Grenacres, see Greenacres 


(Comberhalgh), vii, 


360, 


4827; 


Grenawe, see Greenhalgh : 
Grendillisfield (Shevington), vi, 
201 


Grendon, man. (Staff.), vi, 294” 

Grendon, Alesia de, vi, 291 ; Allota 
(Allote, Elysote), de, vi, 2917”; 
John de, vi, 291 »; Rob. de, vi, 
291 ; Scolastica de, vi, 291 ” 

Grene, fam., see Green 

Grenehol, Greneholf, 
halgh : 

Grene Holme (Osbaldeston), vi, 319 

Grenele, see Greenhalgh 

Grenevile, see Greenfield 

Grenhole, see Greenhalgh 

Grenill, see Greenhills 

Grenole, Grenolf, see Greenhalgh 


373 


see Green- 


Grenoll (Nether Wyresdale), vii, 303 

Gressingham, Bern. de, vii, 3; Thos, 
de, vil, 3 

Grestein, see Garstang 

Gresthwaite, John de, vi, 241; 
Lawr., vi, 241 ” 

Greswall (Marsden), vi, 539 ” 

Greswell, Joana J., vi, 23; Rev. 
Rich., vi, 23 ” 

Grethill (Preston), vii, 79 ” 

Gretton, see Grotton 

Grett Wholle, see Hoole, Much 

Grey, Sir Edw., vi, 132; Eliz., vi, 
132; Hen., see Suffolk, dk. of; 
Thos., see Dorset, mass. of 
Walt. de, vii, 146; see also Gray 

Grey Bank (Brockholes), vii, 111 

Greymesargh, see Grimsargh 

Greystock, fam., see Graystock 

Greystocks (Preston), vii, 104 ” 

Greystone (Salwick), vii, 163 ” 

Greystone, Higher (Bowland), vi, 
380n 

Greystone Hill, vi, 269 

ee (Bowland), vi, 379, 

() 


3 

Griffin (Witton), vi, 263 

Griffin, vi, 470 

Griffin, Joan, vii, 175 2; Rob., vii, 
175” 

Griffin’s Head (Witton), vi, 263-4 

Griffiths (Griffith), Alice, vi, 101; 
John, vii, 43; R. M., vii, 153”; 
Will., vi, Tor 

Grigour, Alice le, vii, 281 ”; Will. 
le, vii, 281 ” 
Grimbald, vii, 332”; the mercer, 
vii, 137”; the tailor, vii, 79” 
Grimbaldston (Grimbaldeston, 
Grimbalson, Grimboldston), Emir, 
vi, 199”; Hugh, vii, 218; John, 
vii, 82, 166”; Will. vii, 149, 
150” 

Grimehills (Over Darwen), vi, 270, 


275 

Grimehills Moor, vi, 269 

Grimehouse (Burnley), vi, 444.” 

Grimesarge, see Grimsargh 

Grimeschae, Grimeschaw, see Grim- 
shaw 

Grimesherg, see Grimsargh 

Grimes Moss, vii, 165 : 

Grimesputtes (Lower Darwen), vi, 
276 

Gcimsareh (Grimisharg, Grim- 
sarche), vii, 72, 73 %, 75, 79, 80, 
83, 91 n, 108-13, 114; char., 
vii, 90; ch., vii, 88m, 113; 
cross, vii, 108; man., vi, 41”; 
vii, 108, 109 m; mill, vii, Io9 ”; 
Nonconf., vii, 113; Rom. rd., 
vii, 108 

Grimsargh, Alice de, vii, 332%; 
Gilb. de, vii, 108, 109 ”, 287, 
332; John de, vii, 107%, 
togn; Thos. de, vu, 109%, 
332; Will. de, vii, 108, 109, 
109 ” 

Grimshagh, see Grimshaw 

Grimsharg, see Grimsargh 

Grimshaw (Cliviger), v1, 479, 482 

Grimshaw (Eccleshill), vi, 279, 418 

Grimshaw, brook, vi, 278” 

Grimshaw (Grimshagh, Grimshay, 
Grymeshaw), Ad. de, vi, 271,273, 
279 #, 418, 480 ; vil, 79%; Agnes 
de, vii, 109; Alan de, vi,279 "; 
Alice, vi, 407, 418; Vil, 15; Anne, 
vi, 419; Cath., vi, 547%; Cecily 
de, vi, 280, 418; Vu, 79%, 
Dorothy, vi, 267; Eliz, vi, 
392, 407, 419, 491; Ellen, vi, 
419, 491; Felicia, vi, 391; Geoff., 
vi, 3912; Geo., vl, 491; Hen. 
(de), vi, 241”, 270, 271%, 273 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Grimshaw (cont.) 
279m, 414m, 418; Isabel, vi, 
330, 418; Jane, vii, 637; Janet 
(Jennet), vi, 419, 491; Joan, vi, 
406 n, 418; John, vi, 170 , 173%, 
279 N, 406 1, 407, 419, 447 2, VU, 
5”, 907, 98 n, 3220; Marg., vi, 
391 n, 406 7 | vii, 322"; Marian, 
vii, 193 ”; Mary, vi, 170 n, 173”, 
419; Mary A., vi, 419; Nich., 
vi, 273, 279%, ” 280, 4107, 4x, 
4II n, 419, 425”, 4917, vii, 18, 
74; Rich. (de), vi, 271, 273, 279, 
279 N, 392, 419, 423, 480, 491, 
5137, 560 2; Rob. de, vi, 273, 
279 n, 418, 475”; Rog., vi, 407; 
Susanna, vi, 419; Thos., vi, 267, 
273, 279 2, 330, 410, 418, 438 7, 
, 4942; Vii, 15, 63, Tog”; 
Wait. ee vi, ee n; Rev. Will, 
vi, 75; Will. (de), vi, 366 2, 
513”; —, vi, 398n, 406 7, 513%, 
535, 543; fam., vi, 446, 516" 

Grimshaw Green (Bispham), vi, 100 

Grimshay, seé Grimshaw 

Grindal, archbp., vi, 432 ” 

Grindlestone Edge (Colne), vi, 524” 

Grindlestone Hurst (Marsden), vi, 
536, 538° : 

Grindletonians, vi, 452 

Gristhwaite, John de, vi, 328” 

Gnizedale, brook, vii, 300 

Grizedale Cross (Barnacre), vii, 
315” 

Grizedale Fell, vii, 141, T141 n, 300 

Groby, fam., ce I 

Grosart, Alex. B., Mi, 2454 Dr =, 
vi, 248 

Grosv cnor, Rose, vi, 250” 

Grotton (Gretton), Agnes de, vi, 
457; Vil, 192”, 321 x; Rob. de, 
vi, 4575 Vil, 192”, 321” 

Grove, Giles, vi, 392 ” 

Grubbe Hall (Grindleton), vii, 15 

Grundy, John, vi, 241, 496; 
Rog., vi, 241 ” 

Grymesargh, Grymesharth, Gry- 
mesharuth, see Grimsargh 

Grymeshaw, see Grimshaw 

Grymsar, see Grimsargh 

Gualter, see Walter 

Gubalt, vi, 291 ” 

Gubberford (Cabus), vii, 304; 
bridge, vii, 304 

Gubberthwaite, Gubisthwaite, see 
Goberthwaite 

Gucschagh, Ad. de, vi, 499 ” 

Gude Marton (Westby), vii, 175 ” 

Gudlaw, Thos., vii, 190 

Guest (Gest), Janet, vi, 17 ", 143; 
Rich., vii, 193”; Thos., vi, 244° 
Thos. H., Wily 224% Will., vii, 
193” 

Guide (Lower Darwen), vi, 276; 
Rom. rem., vi, 278; sch., vi, 278 

Guide and Fishmoor reservoirs, vi, 
27% 

Guild Heys (Rufford), vi, 120 

Guilds, vii, 73, 74,95” 

Guldfield (Padiham), vi, 493 ” 

Gumples (Cliviger), vi, 486 ” 

Gunanesarg, see Goosnargh 

Gundeclyf, see Cunliffe 

Gunilda, see Quenilda 

Gunnildisford (Habergham Eaves), 
vl, 455% 

Gunolfsmoors, vi, 3, 33, 37, 38, 39, 
47, 49, 50, 587 

Gurnall, Rob., vii, 279”; Will, 
vii, 279” 

Gusanarghe, see Goosnargh 

Guthesyke (Church), vi, 402 

Gwent, Thos., vi, 7” 

Gwillym-Atherton, Henrietta M., 
vi, 106; Rob. V. A., vi, 106” 


Gybertshey (Colne), vi, 525" 

Gynes, Bald. de, vii, 302; Chris- 
tiana (de), vii, 301 m, 302, 308, 
309 n, 316”; Ingram (Ingelram, 
Ingeram) de, vii, 281m, 301 n, 
302, 308, 309 n, 316 n; Isabel de, 
vil, 302"; Mary de, vii, 302"; 
Rob. de, vii, 302; Will. de, vii, 
302; see also Coucy 


Habercham, see Habergham Eaves 
Habergham (Hambrigh), Ad. de, 
vi, 455; Alex., vi, 4567; Anne, 
vi, 4567; Barner de, vi, 4557; 
Cecily, vi, 4567; Clay, vi, 4507; 
Constance (or Christiana), vi, 
455; Ellen de, vi, 455; Ellis 
de, vi, 451”, 455, 4562; Geoff. 
de, Vi, 455, 511”; Grace, Vi, 
4507; Hen. de, vi, 455, 48170; 
Hugh, vi, 447, 456 2; Isabel, vi, 
450n; Joan, vi, 4560”; John 
(de), vi, 447, 455, 456, " 408 n, 
481 7, 508 2: Lawr., vi, 447, 
447, 456, 489m, 511, 529%, 
546 n; Mabel de, vi, 455; Mar’do 
de, vi, 475 »; Marg. (de), vi, 456, 
456; Matth. (de), vi, 455, 
481; Pet. de, vi, 455; Rich. 
(de), vi, 456, 456, 475; Rob. 
de, vi, 456”; Will. (de), vi, 455, 


456 n 

Habergham Eaves, vi, 349, 428, 
429, 441, 447, 450, 451 2, 454- 
68, 487; agric., vi, 443; chs., vi, 
468; mans., vi, 232, 455; Non- 


Habergham Farm (Habergham 
Eaves), vi, 455” 

Habergham Hall (Habergham 
Eaves), vi, 454 

Habindon, John de, vi, 241 

Habringgeham, Habringham Evez 
(Eves), see Habergham Eaves 

Hacapultree (Howick), vi, 66” 

Hacconsall, Haccumcho, see Hackin- 
sall 

Hacing, le, see Hacking 

Hackensall, Hackenstall, see Hack- 
insall 

Hackforth, M., vi, 85 ” 

Hackinbothe, ditch del, vi, 263 

Hacking (Aighton), vi, 328, 418 n, 
41g”; vii, I 

Hacking, Over (Aighton), vii, 117 ” 

Hacking (Hakkyng), Agnes del, vi, 
328; Alice del, vi, 336; Bern. 
(de, del), vi, 328, 330 7, 335, 336; 
vil, 28”; Cecily del, vi, 336; 
Christiana del, vi, 328; Hen. del, 
vi, 328; Hugh (de, del), vi, 328: 
vii, 3, 18; Joan del, vi, 418; 
John del, vi, 328, 336, 418; vii, 
33 Jordan del, vi, 318; Will. del, 
vi, 328, 336; fam., vi, 326 

Hacking boat ferry (Stonyhurst), 
vii, 20 

Hacking Hall (Billington), vi, 329 

Hackinsall, vii, 198”, 256-60; 
man., vii, 189, 258” 

Hackinsall (Hacconsall), Alan de, 
vii, 256”, 257”; Alice de, vii, 
257; Amabil de, vii, 180n, 
257"; Amery de, vii, 1777, 
257m; Christiana de, vii, 2577; 
Ellen de, vii, 177”, 257”; Eva 
de, vii, 257, 260; Geoff. (de), vii, 
99”, 100n, 116 Nn, 1337, 1807, 
189 n, 190 n, 255, 256, 257,257 2, 
260; 'Gilb. de, vii, 2547”; Hen. 
de, vii, 177”; "Hugh de, vii, 256; 
Ismania, vii, 2567, 2573 Sir 
John de, vii, 180”; John de, 
vli, 100 n, 180 n, 189 n, 256n, 


374 


Hackinsall (cont.) 

257; Marg. de, vii, 256, 2579; 
Margery de, vii, 100n; Mary de, 
vii, 189; Pet. de, vii, 254" 
256; Rich. de, vii, 189 n, 257: 
Rob. (de), vil, 100 n, 256; Rog. 
de, vii, 100 n, 189 n, 2567: Thos, 
de, vii, 133”, 189"; Will. (de), 
Vi, 432 2; Vil, 100 m, 250m, 257 

Hackinsall ‘Hall (Hackinsall), vii, 
259 

Hackyng, le, see Hacking 

Hacton, see Aighton 

Hacumesho, Hacunesho, see Hack- 
insall 

Haddle Moss (Thornton), vii, 232 

Hadocke, fam., see Haydock 

Hadwen, Rev. John, vi, 283 

Hagemund, vii, 68 n, 232 

Haggate (Briercliffe), vi, 469, 538 

Haggate House (Briercliffe), vi, 
47197” 

Haggerston, Alice, vi, 24; Anne, 
vil, 1647; Sir Carnaby, vii, 
164 n; Sir ‘Thos., vi, 24; Thos., 
vi, 28 

Hagges (Ribchester), vii, 49 

Haggsfield (Burnley), vi, 445" 

Haghebothe (Barley), see Hay 
Booth 

Haghton, see Haighton 

Hagrimai (Cabus), vii, 305” 

Hagwood Cross (Kirkland), vii, 
313” 

Hahnemann Homeeopathic Hospital 
(Liverpool), vi, 130 

Haigh, man. (Osbaldeston), vi, 320 

Haigh, Dan. H., vi, 49; Mabel de, 
vi, 228 

Haighton, vi, 21”; vii, 72, 73%, 
79, 83”, 100n, 102m, 107N, 
IIqm, II5”, I1gH, 121, 123, 
124-7, 138 n, 209 Nn, 211 n, 270; 
cross, vii, 124; man., vii, 124; 
mill, vii, 1147, 125 n; Rom. 
Cath., vii, 77” 

Haighton (Awton, Haghton, Halgh- 
ton), Alice de, vii, 18,284; Amry 
de, vii, 125”; Ellen (de), vii, 
III n, 125%, 284; Euphemia de, 
vii, 125”; Gilb. de, vii, 125”; 
Gillemichael de, vii, 124; Hen., 
vii, 126”; Joan de, vii, 1257, 
126%”; John (de), vii, 18, 107”, 
125”, 126”; Kath. de, vii, 
125”; Marg. de, vii, 1257; 
Margery de, vii, 125, 1267; 
Maud de, ‘vii, 125”, 126"; 
Paulin de, vii, 125”; Rich. (de), 
vii, 18, 125 n, 126; Rob. (de), 
vii, 54, 125”; Rog., vii, 18; 
Thos., vii, III, 1257; Walt. 
de, vii, 125 n; Will. de, vii, 107 n, 
125 n, 284”; fam., vii, 98 2; see 
also Hoghton 

Haighton Hall (Haighton), vii, 124 

co House (Eaighton), vii, 


Wamelacts, see Ayneslack 
Haislackes (Clayton-le-Moors), vi, 


ae ecaee teats (Studlehurst), 
vi, 324" 

Haking, see Hacking 

Hakinishal, see Hackinsall 

Hakkyng, see Hacking 

Hakonesho, see Hackinsall 

Halctun, see Haighton 

Haldeley (Haldelagh, Haldelegh, 
Haldeleghs, Haldeslegh, Hald- 
legh, Haldleghs), Ad. de, vi, 264, 
264; Hen. de, vi, 264; Joan 
de, vii, 3280; John de, vii, 281 0; 
Rob. ‘de, vi, 15”; vii, 139%, 
281 n, 325 2, 328M, 330 


Hale, Alice de, vi, 97, 163%, 
164”; Geo., vil, 88”; Jas., vi, 
182 n ; Maud de, vii, 120 2 ; Rich. 
de, vi, 97 ”, 163 , 164; Thos. 
de, vii, 120” 

Halecath (Barnacre), vii, 318 x, 
320, 321 

Halecroft (Kirkland), vii, 313 2 

Halfacredale (Pendleton), vi, 393 ” 

Half-hey in the Wall (Little Eccles- 
ton), vii, 183 ” 

Halgh, the (Eccleshill), vi, 279 

Halgh (Haleghs), Alex., vii, 50”; 
Eliz. de, vi, 400 ” ; Geo., vii, 50 ”; 
John, vii, 48; Nich., vii, 50 1; 
Rob., vii, 48 ” ; Will. de, vi, 400 ” 

Halghdich (Eccleshill), vi, 279 

Halgh House (Ribchester), vii, 


0” 

Halghton, see Haighton 

Halhill (Marsden), vi, 539 

Halicton, see Haighton 

Hall, The (Clitheroe), vi, 365 ” 

Hall (Goldshaw Booth), vi, 515 

Hall (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 406 

Hall (Halle), Adam del, vii, 268 n ; 
Anne, vi, 210”; Ant., vi, 210”; 
Chnis., vi, 404 ; vil, 255; Edw. M., 
vi, 128 ; Eliz., vi, 93; Frank, vi, 
210, 210”; Geo., vii, 2427; 
Gilb. del, vi, 509”; Hen. (atte, 
del), vii, 3, 17”, 157”; Isolda 
del, vii, 125”; Jas., vii, 1707”; 
Janet, vii, 170”; John del, vii, 
27”, 29n; Joppe of the (del), 
vii, 27”; Lawr. del, vii, 29”; 
Marg. (atte, del), vi, 210”; vu, 
13”, 29 m; Oliver, vi, 495; 
Rich. del, vii, 268 , 277 »; Rob. 
(atte, del), vil, 3”, 13”, 17”, 
27 n, 29 n, 277 H ; Rog., vil, 297; 
Thos. (del), vii, 136m, 170%, 
183”; Thurstan, vi, 93, 122”; 
Tim., vii, 224; Walt. del, vii, 
136”; Will. (atte, del), vii, 15 2, 
29 Nn, 59”, 125”, 311 n; see also 


ula 
Hall of the Wood (Chorley), vi, 135, 


I4l 
Hall of the Wood (Tonge), vi, 501 
Hall o’ th’ Hill (Heath Charnock), 


vi, 215 
Hallam, R. T. R. W., vi, 413 ; Will., 
vi, 413, 415; Mrs., vi, 413; —, 


vi, 413 
Hall Carr (Newchurch-in-Rossen- 
dale), vi, 438 2 
Hall Cross (Freckleton), vii, 167 
Halleheved, see Hollowhead 
Halleturner (Longton), vi, 70 ” 
Hallhead (Little Harwood), vi, 249 
Hallhead (Wilpshire), see Hollow- 
head 
Hall Heys (Towneley), vi, 459 ” 
Hall Hill (Colne), vi, 527 ” 
Hallholme Bank (Colne), vi, 526 ” 
Hallhursts, the (Kirkland), vii, 


313” 

Halliday, Jas., vi, 515”; Jane, vi, 
547”; John, vi, 393”, 394, 
475, 476M, 491, 514, 515%, 
547”; Will., vi, 477” 

Halliwell, Denis, vi, 178 ; Rev. Hen., 
vi, 443; John, vi, 169”, 176%, 
177; Lawr., vi, 161, 176%”, 
432”; Nich., vi, 174”, 1767; 
Oliver, vi, 169”; Rob., vi, 
176”; Rev. Will., vi, 443 ; Will., 
vl, 176,177”; fam., vi, 283 ” 

Halliwell Fold (Tockholes), vi, 283 ” 

Halliwell House (Chorley), vi, 136 

Hallown, see Hullown 

Hallstead (Hall Stude) (Marton), 
vii, 240” 

Hallstead, fam., see Halstead 


INDEX 


Hallsteads (Nether Wyresdale), vii, 
302” 

Hallsteads (Worsthorne), vi, 476 » 

Hallstudes, fam., see Halstead 

Hallstudgreen (Bretherton), vi, 
104 n 

Halsall, Anne, vii, 128, 163, 163”; 
Bridg., vii, 163 »; Sir Cuth., vii, 
128, 163 2; Cuth,, vii, 163 ; Eliz., 
vi, 256, 335”; Hen., vii, 127, 
163”, 167, 229”; Isabel, vii, 
229; Jas., vi, 171 n, 204, 223 n, 
256, 335”; Jane, vi, 321; John, 
vi, 204”; Kath. vi, 1717; 
Maud, vi, 322 ; Otes de, vi, 149; 
Rich., vii, 163 2 ; Rob., vi, 553 ”; 
Sir Thos., vi, 321, 322 ; Thos., vi, 
I7I n, 204” 

Halshaw, Hen., vi, 160 

Halsnead, John de, vi, 7 

Halstead, High (Briercliffe), vi, 


470 0, 474 
Halstead (Hallstead, Hallstudes, 
Halsteads, Halsted), Ad. de, vi, 
429, 476”; Agnes (de), vi, 
377”, 429”, 476n; Alice, vi, 
475"; Amelia, vi, 476; Amery, 
vl, 476”; Anne, vi, 4767; 
Banastre (Banister), vi, 445”, 
476; Rev. Chas., vi, 476”; 
Chas., vi, 413, 476”; Dorothy, 
vi, 267; Edw., vii, 17; Eliza, 
vi, 476; Eliz., vi, 470 ”, 476, 477, 
540 ”; Ellen, vi, 471 ~; Ellen E., 
vi, 476 ; Ellis de, vi, 474”, 476 2; 
Geo., vi, 447, 447 ”, 456, 489, 493, 
494”; Rev. Hen., vi, 453; Hen., 
vi, 445”, 476; Hugh, vi, 447, 
447%, 456, 459”, 468 n, 5137; 
Isabel, vi, 387%, 413, 471%, 
476%”; vii, 17; Jane H. A, vi, 
476”; Janet, vi, 387”; Joan 
(de), vi, 395”, 476; John (de), 
vi, 267, 377%, 447 % 453%, 454, 
470 2, 471, 475 , 470, 478, 481 n, 
539, 540, 540”; vii, 17, 17”; 
Lawr., vi, 476, 478; Marg., vi, 
445 2; Mary, vi, 476; Nich., vi, 
476, 494”; Oliver, vi, 444%, 
474%, 476, 478; Pet., vi, 475%, 
470”; Rich. (de), vi, 456”, 471, 
475 %, 476 n, 490; Rob., vi, 454, 
477, 478; Rog. de, vi, 474%, 
4757”, 476; Will. (Gulielmus) 
(de), vi, 387%, 395, 397%, 425, 
445%, 452, 470, 473, 474, 476; 
476 2, 477%, 478, 545% 
Halsworth, Thos., vi, 217 S 
Halton, Ad. de, vii, 30”; Jas., vii, 
30; John, vii, 30”; Marg., vu, 
30”; Miles, vii, 30”; Will. de, 
vii, 30” 
Halvedland (Cuerden), vi, 26” 
Halworth, Rob., vi, 118 ” 
Halyfield (Wiswell), vi, 397 ” 
Ham (Cliviger), vi, 486 ” 
Hambledon Hill, see Hameldon 
Hambleton, vii, 143, 144, 146”, 
149, 150, 166”, 173”, 188-90, 
248”, 253”, 257”; Char., vil, 
20”; ch., vil, 190; Man., Vil, 3, 
188 ; Nonconf., vii, 190 
Hambleton, Agnes de, vii, 189”; 
Alex. de, vii, 189”; Alice de, 
vii, 189 n, 190”, 254, 257%; 
Cecily de, vii, 133%; Gilb. de, 
vii, 254”; Hen. de, vii, 190%”, 
254 n, 257 n; Hugh de, vil, 170”, 
2547; John de, vii, 189 2, 190 % ; 
Maud de, vii, 189”; Nich. de, 
vii, 170”; Sim. de, vii, 189”, 
190 n, 257 ”; Thos. de, vil, 133 %, 
189 n, 256”; Will. de, vil, 252 %, 
254”, 257”; see also Hameldon 
Hambleton hookins, vii, 188 


375 


Hambrigh, see Habergham 

Hamby, Eliz., vi, 153 2 

Hameldon (Hamelton), Grace, vii, 
333; Will, vii, 333; Rev. Thos., 
vi, 416 

Hameldon Hill (Black and Great 
jee V1, 230, 409, 423, 473, 

Hamelin, vii, 306 

Hamelin’s land (Winkley), vii, 13 2 

Hamelton, Hameltune, see Ham- 
bleton and Hameldon 

Hamerton (Hammerton), Alice (de) 
Vi, 222, 331; vii, 5; Anne, vi, 
227m”, Chisenhall, vi, 2277; 
Jas., vi, 227, 229; John, vi, 
227”; Lawr., vii, 5”; Maud, 
vii, 5”; Orm de, vi, 371 ”; Phil 
G., vi, 477; Steph. de, vi, 222 n, 
226-7, 331; vii, 2; —, vi, 547; 
fam., vi, 446 

Hamilton, dchsses. of, vi, 322” 
Eliz., vii, 304; dks. of, vii, 70” 
70, 97, 129, 290, 310, 318; Alex., 
vu, 304”; Arch., vii, 304”; 
Douglas, vii, 304”; Jas., vii, 
304; Jas. G., vii, 304”; fam., 
vii, 305 

Hammerton, see Hamerton 

Hammond (Hamond), Ellen, vi, 
134; Giles, vi, 392 », 540; Dr. 
Hen., vi, 387; John, vi, 387, 
546”; Mary, vi, 546”; Rob., 
V1, 134 %, 530 

Hamon, vii, 113 

Hamond, see Hammond 

Hampton, Margery de, vi, 304; 
vii, 162 ”; Rob. de, vi, 304; vii, 
162” 

Hamston Cliff, vi, 521 2 

Hanacres (Cuerden), vi, 28 ” 

Hanclogh (Clayton-le-Moors), vi, 
418” 

Hancock, Alison, vi, 500”; Eliz., 
vi, 489”; vii, 15; Ellen, vi, 
513”, 550”; Grace, vi, 4252”; 
Isabel, vi, 20”, 513”, 556%; 
Leonard, vi, 513”; Marg., vi, 
456”; Nich., vi, 394”, 444%, 
456 n, 493, 494 Nn, 513 n, 517, 
554”, 556”; Rich., vi, 513”; 
vii, 15; Will., vi, 20 ”, 489, 494 ”, 
513 2, 556”; Mrs., vi, 513% 

Handbridge (Habergham Eaves), 
spring, vi, 455 dels 

Handlo, Marg., vi, 321; Sir Rich., 
vi, 321 

Hanedings of the Shortbottom 
(Cuerden), vi, 24 ” . 

Hanhey (Wrightington), vi, 174 ” 

Hankinson, Alice, vii, 165 »; Edm., 
vii, 166, 167 2 ; Edw., vii, 144”; 
Ellen, vii, 170 ” ; John, vii, 170 2, 
231 2, 239n; Jos., Vi, 166 nN; 
Marg., vii, 166”; Mary, vil, 
150”; Rob., vii, 98”, 166%, 
167%”; Thos., vii, 136”, 170%, 


245” : 
Hannel Cross (Downham), vi, 552 
Hanneshagh, Hanneshaw, see Han- 

shaw 
Hansfield, see Henfield 
Hanshaw (Hanneshagh, Hanne- 

shaw, Hanshagh), John de, vi, 

291 n, 295”; Rich. de, vi, 295 ” 
Hanshaw Hall (Walton), vi, 295 
Hanson (Haunson), Alice, vi, 529; 

Eliz., vi, 552; Isabel, vi, 546%; 

John, vi, 529; Rich. de, vi, 33 %, 

34; Thos., vi, 171%; Will., vi, 

529, 531%, 542, 549; —, Vi, 

513”, 524”; fam., vi, 499 ” 
Hansoncliffe, see Chamber-in-Fendle 
Hanson’s tenement (Briercliffe), vi, 


469 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Happay, Ad. de, vi, 510”; Rog. 
de, vi, 510” 
Hapton, vil, 307, 349, 356%, 357, 


396, 410", 447M, 492, 493, 
507-12; ch., vi, 512; ind. vi, 
507; man., Vi, 232, 458, 459, 
507; mills, vi, 507”, 508n; 
Nonconf., vi, 512; quarries, vi, 


507; Rom. Cath., vi, 512 
Hapton Castle (Hapton), vi, 508 
Hapton Clough (Hapton), vi, 510” 
Hapton Tower (Hapton), vi, 508 
Haracks, see Horrocks 
Harapebore (Howick), vi, 66 
Harbottle (Harebotell), Agnes, vii, 

233; Jane, vi, 352 m; Will., vu, 

233" 


Harcourt, Will. (de), vii, 176%, 
1777" : 

Hardhill (Clitheroe), vi, 365%”, 
3667 


Hardhorn(Hardhorn-with-Newton), 
vii, 184, 219, 222 n, 238-9; char., 
vii, 225 ; mkt., vii, 238 ; Nonconf., 
vil, 239 

Harding, Mrs. C. P., vi, 380 

Hardman, Edw., vii, 1747”; 
vu, 165”; John, vii, 
Marg., vu, 102” 

Hardwick (Herdwick), Chas., 

1; Thos., vil, 265 

Hardy, Rich., vii, 334 

Hare (Hayr), Ad. le, vi, 526; Agnes 
oh vi, 520; Hen., vi, 545; John, 

, 303”; Rich. (le), vi, 366, 
ye 

Harebotcll, see Harbottle 

Harecarr (Stalmine), vii, 252” 

Harecarr furlong (Stalmine), vii, 
252" 

Hareshaw (Downham), vi, 556” 

Haresnape, Jas., vi, 102, 123” 

Haresnapes (Croston), vl, 9On 

Haresrays field (Salesbury), vi, 253 

Harestane (Stalmine), vii, 252” 

Hare stones (Colne), vi, 524 ” 

Harestones (Salwick), vii, 163 ” 

Harewas (Dutton), vii, 57 ” 

Harewell, Alice, vi, 401, 420” 

Harewode, Harewude, see Harwood 


Jas., 
1027; 


vii, 


Harger, Bern., vi, 452; Hen., vi, 
489; Nich., vi, 445 
Hargher Clough (Habergham 


Eaves), vi, 448”, 454 
Hargrave, Anne, vi, 1u7 mn; Jas. A., 
vi, 168; John, vi, 167"; L. 
vi, I11; Lewis en V1;,. (167° 5 
Mania E., vi, 167 n-168n; Rev. 
—, Vii, 66"; see also Hargreaves 
Hargreave (Padiham), vi, 494 
Hargreave Hey (Padiham), vi, 493 
Hargreaves, Ad. de, vi, 469 7, 480; 
Agnes, vi, 425, 519”, 545”; 
Charlotte A., vi, 445, 484; Chris., 
vi, 371, 425, 439; Edw., vi, 
499n; Eleanor M., vi, 445: 
Geo., vi, 229, 432, 434, 438, 452, 
518; vii, 196”; Hen., vi, 263, 
4347, 4997, 516”; Hugh, vi, 
494”, 495, 496"; Rev. Jas., vi, 
438; Jas., vi, 238, 241, 242, 
359 495, 427, 435, 499, 493, 
4947, 515%, 519, 522, 529, 530, 
535, 544, 551; Jane, vi, 434%; 
Jenet, vi, 516; Rev. John, 35 
445, 454; John, vi, 217, 425, 
431, 434”, 437, 438, 444, 453, 
458, 480, 484. 515, 516, 517 2, 
521, 526, 530, 530”, 538, 540, 
542%, 543, 545%, 547, 547%, 
549, 551”; Lawr., vi, 4687, 
499 n, ees 540, 542; Lettice, 


vi, 4677; , V1, 454; Nancy, 
vi, 244; Micke <i, "468 7, 5137; 
Rev. Rich., vi, 344; Rich., vi, 


Hargreaves (cont.) 
343, 434, 526, 540, 541”, 545%, 
547, 547”; Rob. vi, 468%, 
524M, 526m, 529, 530, 530 a 
545”, 546m, 551; Kob. H., 
547; Will. (de), vi, 458m, "539, 
540, 542%; —, VI, 280 n, 431%, 
499, 513, 524M", 543; See also 
Har; e 

Hargreaves Fold (Higher Booths), 
Vi, 434% 

Hargreaves House (Barrowford), 
V1, 5-42 : 

Harison, see Harrison 

Harlesyke (Briercliffe), vi, 469 

Harley Head (Newchurch), vi, 


438 

Harlow (Foulridge), vi, 547” 

Harper, Ad. (the), vi, 506 7, 546 7; 
vu, 152m”; Agnes, Vi, 545%, 
546m”; Alice (the), vi, 500”; 
Austin the, vi, 198; Ellis the, 
vi, 485, 506; Geoff. the, vi, 
546; Geo., vii, 50”; Gilb. the, 
vii, 32; Hen. the, vii, 2007; 
John (the, le), vi, 79, 417, 506”, 
5457, 5450; vii, 50%, 1587; 
Luke the, vi, 506 ; Margery, vi 
5451; Maud (the), vi, 506 n: 
vu, 152 2; Rich. (the), vi, 546” ; 
vii, 152”; Rob., vi, 8; Syreda, 
vi, 546”; Will. the, vi, 506” 

Harpers, Lower (Old Laund Booth), 
vi, 521 

Harrelegh (Aighton), vii, 15 

Harries, Evan, vii, 43; see also 
Harris and Heriz 

Harrington, Alice, vi, 195; Anne, 
vi, 200”; Eliz., vi, 200 n, 418 ; 
Isabel, Lady, vii, 227”; Isabel, 
vi, 104, 316; vil, 99”, 114”; 
Sir Jas., vi, 104”, 132, 195, 
213m, 215m”, 227M, 315, 337; 
Vil, 107”, II4, II5”, 116%”, 
169 n, 199 7, 3207, Jas., vi; OF, 
316, 321; vul, 99m”; Jane, vi, 
310; Joan, vi, 315, 316”; Sir 
John (de), vi, 136 ”, 199 n, 213 7, 
316; vii, 15, 306; John (de), 
Vi, 2”, 131, 132, 213, 418; vil, 
3,15"; Kath. (de), vi, 131, 132, 
130M, 214m; Vili, 3, 15, 269; 
Mary. (de), vi, 194”, 200%”, 
213M, 331”; vii, 114; ‘Matilda, 
vi, 3167; Sir Nich. (de), vi, 
135”, 200, 202”, 213”, 2157, 
217; vil, 4; Nich. (de), vi, 199”; 
vii, 126”; Sir Rich., vi, 3167, 
337; Sir Rob., vi, 316, 379”; 
Rob., vii, 185 2; Sir Thos. (de), 
Vi, 91 m, 200, 255”; Vii, 114; 
Thos. (de), vi, 194”, 199%, 
213”, 217, 491; vii, 227; Sir 
Will. (de), vi, 132 », 194 n, 200 n, 
201M, 213%, 254, 331”; Will. 
(de), vi, 194”, 225”, 2630; — 
vii, 207 ”; fam., vii, 98 2 

Harrington House (Mellor), vi, 
2637 

Harris, Chris., vi, 379, 380; vii, 
247, 126 n, 135 n, 211 ; Dorothy, 
vi, 350; Edm. R., vii, 70 n, 80, 
91; Jane, vii, 126, 211; Mar- 
gery, vil, 135 ”; Mary, vi, 380n; 
Rev. Rob., vii, 80 ; Rob., vi, 153, 
378 1; vii, 103 n;5 Will., Vi, 442; 
vu, 216 2; see also Harries and 
Heriz 

Harris Institute (Preston), vii, 80 2, 
89 n, 96 

Harris Library (Preston), vii, 80, 96 

Harris Orphanage (Fulwood), vii 
80 n, 89 

Harrison (Harison), Ad., vii, 4”; 
Alice, vii, 124; Allan, vi, 322, 


376 


? 


Harrison (cont.) 
376; Andr., vii, 287"; Ann, vii, 
221; Ant., Vu, 304”; Cuth. , Vii, 
148 7, 165, 187, 187 n, 283 n, 
284 n, 335; Edw., vii, 26 n, 121, 
196n; Elias, Vi, Sagi Eliz., vii, 
lg”; Ellen, vil, Toon, 282; 
vu, 283 n, 2870; Hen., vi, 32s 
vu, 4”; Hennetta, vi, 444; 
Jas., vi, 82; vii, 132m, 216n, 
287, 332"; Jane, vil, 58n; 
John, vi, 74, 370, 376, 394, 
531”; vil, 82m, 132m, 136, 
136m, 216m, 257", 291; Jobn 
D., vii, 128; Jos., vi, 307; vii, 
165; Marg., vii, 304%; Mary, 
vi, 438; Mary S., vi, 323m; 
Rich., vii, 58 n, 13, 182, 198 n, 
204, 221, 224, 253”; Rev. Sey: 
mour F., vi, 299; Strethill, Vi, 
494; Thos. , Vi, 100 , 118, 40 n: 
vii, 114”, "2872; Thos. D., vi, 
282 ; Thos. M., vii, 67; Wil, vi, 
237m"; vii, 150 ”, 206 n, 304n; 
Col., vii, 76; —, vii, 255m 

Harrock (Wrightington), vi, 169, 


173 
apa Hall (Wrightington), vi, 


174 

Harcoek Hill, vi, 68 n, 169 

Harrop, —, vi, 372 

peers Bank (Ribchester), vii, 
58n 

Harryse Aker (Clitheroe), vi, 366 

Harston Lee (Harstonlegh) | (Little 
Harwood), vi, 251 

Hart, Rev. Dudley, vi, 334 

Hart Hill (Trawden), vi, 552 

Hartholf, vii, 271 » 

Hartley, Alice, vi, 367, 528n, 
536; Bern., vi, 542, 549, 552; 
Chris., vi, ‘StS Nn, 539M, 542”, 
544, 548 , 549 2; Eliz., vi, 473 0, 

546 ”, 549, 551; Ellen, vi, '528 0; 
Ellis, vi, 549”; Geoft., vi, 549; 
Geo., Vl, 517”, 533, 540, 551 n; 
Grace, vi, 549”; Hen., vi, 546", 
549”; Hester, vi, 367; Hugh, 
vi, 549; Isabel, vi, 513 ”, 546"; 
Jas., vi, 471 ”, 519, 528 n, 5420, 
543, 546”, 547, 549; John, vi, 
408 n, 513”, 517, 520, 528, 530, 
535, 539%, 541", 543, 549; 
Lawr., vi, 538 ”, 542 ”, 543, 544; 
Marg., vi, 367, 537”; Nich., 
vi, 542”, 549”, 552; Pet., vi, 
549, 549 ”; Piers, vi, 549; Rich., 
vi, 452, 539, 549”; Rev. Rob., 

» 452; Rob., vi, 518 2, 528 1, 
539%, 547, 548; 549; Rob. H., 
vi, 367”; Rog., vi, 519, 547, 

548”, 549; Thos., vi, 548%, 
549; Wilkinson, vi, 543; Rev. 
Will., vi, 319; Will., vi, 367%, 
468 n, 519m, 540, 546m, 549%, 
551; Will. H., vi, 515, 522; Sir 
W. P., vi, 530; —, vi, 524, 
549”; vii, 149 ; 

Hartwood Green (Chorley), vi, 129 

Hartwoodhey (Chorley), vi, 140 

Harvey (Hervey), vii, 92", 273; 
the falconer, vii, 306 

Harvey (Hervey), John, vi, 
283; Rob., vi, 204 

Harwod (Cuerdale), vi, 302 " 

Harwood, brook, vi, 249 

Harwood, man., vi, 303 

Harwood, Great, vi, 235, 337-44) 
376n, 383 ", 417, "4318, 419, 420, 
426, 504”; adv., vi, 343; char., 
vi, 344; ch., vi, 342; man., 
338; mkts. and fair, vi, 338, 339: 
mill, vi, 338, 339%, 340, 418; 
Nonconf., vi, 344; Rom .'Cath., 


vi, 344 


187, 


Harwood, Little, vi, 235, 249-51; 
ch., vi, 251; man., vi, 249; 
Nonconf., vi, 251 

Harwood, Edm., vi, 277”; Edw., 
vi, 276, 277; Eleanor, vi, 27”; 
Eliz., vi, 278, 391”, 4977; 
John, vi, 27 ”, 260, 285 n, 391 n; 
Joan, vi, 497 ” ; Mich., vi, 497”; 
Rich., vi, 27”, 277”; Rob., vi, 
282, 288 ; Rog., vi, 278; Thos., 
vi, 497"; Will. (de), vi, 260, 
338”; fam., vi, 342” 

Harwood Fold (Clayton-le-Dale), 
vi, 257) 260 

Harwood Hall, see Little Harwood 
Hall 

Harwood Ridge, vi, 337 

Harwoods Holme (Gt. Harwood), 


vi, 338 
Haselene Holth (Salesbury), vi, 253 
Haselhurst Greve (Eccleshill), vi, 


279” 
Haselhurstridding (Chipping), vii, 
29n 
Haselingden, see Haslingden 
Hasilineshaw (Gt. Harwood), vi, 


339” : 

Hasington, Margery, vi, 429 ; Thos., 
vi, 429 = 

Haslam, —, vil, 97 ” 

Haslewood, Rev. Boulby T., vii, 
40, 43; Rev. Will. M., vi, 283, 


344 
Haslingden, vi, 233", 234, 349, 
356”, 427-32, 497”; adv., vi, 
432; chap., vi, 432; ch., vi, 432; 
crosses, vi, 427; ind., vi, 427; 
man., vi, 232, 233 ”, 361 n, 428; 
mkts. and fairs, vi, 431, 523”; 
mill, vi, 428, 428 n, 431; pk., vi, 
431; quarries, vi, 427 
Haslingden, Rob. de, vi, 428 ; Rog., 
vi, 88 ; Wion de, vi, 428 n 
Haslingden Grane (Haslingden), vi, 


427 

Haslingden Hills, vi, 423 

Haslinghead, Rog., vii, 28 

Hasteley, Lora, vi, 216”; Rich., 
vi, 216” 

Hasthorp, Rob. de, vii, 301 ” 

Hastings, Sir Hugh, vi, 305”; 
Maud de, vii, 285 » 

Hatch, Jas., vii, 138”; John, vii, 
138 

Hatchacre (Standish), vi, 193 ” 

Hatgill, Ad., vi, 556%; John, vi, 
556” 

Hatherald, Hatherholt, see Haver- 
holt 

Hathornthwaite (Hathornethwaite, 
Hawthornthwaite, Haythorn- 
thwaite), Ellen, vii, 272; John, 
vii, 272; Mary, vii, 65”, 279”; 
Will, vii, 65”, 272, 2797; 
fam., vi, 380 ” 

Hatton, Edw., vi, 191 ” 

Haudley Hall (Blackburn), vi, 245 

Hauekechae, Hauekesshae, Hauke- 
schaw, see Hawkshaw 

Haugh Head (Reedley), vi, 490 

Haugh Hill (Brindle), vi, 75 ” 

Haugh Row (Reedley), vi, 490 

Haughton, see Hoghton 

Haukeshae ruding (Mellor), vi, 263 

Haukeshagh, see Hawkeshaw 

Haulgh (Reedley), vi, 490 

Haultes House (Coppull), vi, 228 x 

Haunson, see Hanson 

Hauschagh, see Hawkeshaw 

Hautrey (Alta Ripa, Autrey, Dau- 

trey, Hautrive), Sir Godf. de, vi, 

511 2; Godf. de, vi, 507”; John 

de, vi, 304 ”, 488 n, 507”, 511; 

vii, 277; Marg. de, vi, 508; 

Maud de, vi, 507, 511; Rob., 


7 


INDEX 


Hautrey (cont.) 
vi, 508 m; Sir Thos. de, vi, 262 ; 
Thos. de, vi, 507, 508, 511 

Havedargh (Catterall), vii, 324 

Haverhill, Will. de, vii, 84 

Haverholt (Colne), vi, 526 n, 5277” 

Havile, Will. de, vii, 330” 

Haw, see How 

Haward, vii, 172 n 

Haward, Alice, vi, 122 m; Chas., vi, 
122”; Ellen, vi, 122 n; Rob., vi, 
122”; see also Award, Hayward 
and Heywood 

Hawarden, Ad., vi, 195 ; Bryan, vi, 
133”; Eliz., vi, 195; John, vi, 
133 

Hawath, see Howath 

Haw Booth, see Hay Booth 

Hawe, vi, 59 

Hawes, the (Layton), see Layton 
Hawes . 

Hawes, Anne, vii, 334 ”; Rob., vii, 
334; Susan, vii, 333”; Will. 
vu, 334 

Hawett (Hawet), Mary, vi, 1777; 
Nich., vi, 162 n; Thos., vi, 177”; 
Will, vi, 177 », 180 n 

Hawise (Helewise), vi, 377”; vii, 
46n, 168 n, 318; w. of Josce, 
vii, 41 2; w. of Rob., vii, 191”; 
w. of Thos., vii, 27 7 

Hawkecha, see Hawkshaw 

Hawkesbury, Rich., vi, 19 ”, 55 ” 

Hawkesey (Accrington), vi, 425 ” 

Hawkeshaw (Haukeshagh, Haus- 
chagh, Hawkeshey), Hen. de, vi, 
262; Rich., vi, 259”; Thos., vi, 
259n; Will. de, vi, 216” 

Hawkesworth (Hawksworth), Will., 
vi, 526”; vii, 52” 

Hawkins, Hen. B., vii, 218 

Hawks, brook (Wrightington), vi, 
1757 

Hawkshaw (Mellor), vi, 262, 263 

Hawkshaw, brook, vi, 263 

Hawkshead (Habergham Eaves), 
vi, 455 2 

Hawkshead, fam., vi, 158 

Hawksnest Clough (Habergham 
Eaves), vi, 457 

Hawksworth, see Hawkesworth 

Haworth, man., vi, 406; vii, 29, 


Haydock (cont.) 


309 ” ; Aloysia, vii, 135 2; Ama- 
bel de, vi, 295; Anne, vi, 444, 
475”; Bradley, vii, 4on; Bridg., 
vu, 135”; Cath. (Kath.), vi, 
T91n, 198m; vii, 135”; Cuth., 
vu, 135%”; Dorothy, vii, 1357; 
Edm. (de), vi, 159”; vii, 133 n, 
134 m, 135; Eleanor, vi, 444”; 
vu, 134; Eliz., vii, 135; Ellen, 
VI, 513M, 5560”; vii, 135”, 
306; Evan (Ewan), vi, 51, 
77% 444, 444%, 447, 4751; 
vu, 135, 135”; Fran., vi, 77”; 
Geo., vii, 75”, 135, 135”; 
Geo. L., vii, 136; Gilb. (de), vi, 
200”, 201, 234, 290, 295, 
444”, 475”, 488; vii, 135, 
135”, 1367, 306n; Giles, vi, 
444”; Helen de, vii, 240n; 
Hen. de, vi, 131”, 159, 2911”; 
vu, 41”, 84, 107n, Ion, 
133%, 134, 134%, 135, 136; 
228 n, 240 n, 297 n, 309 n; Hugh 
(de), vi, 188%, 198n, 200n, 
209 N, 223 N, 225 n, 291 n, 295; 
vu, 133”; Isabel, vii, 1357”; 
Jas., vi, 51”, 143”; vii, 1367; 
Joan (de), vi, 444”, 475; vii, 
107, 133m”, 248%; John (de), 
vi, 67%, 167, I98n, 224%, 
228, 442”, 444”, 516; Vii, 
107 %, 133, 134”, 135”, 248n, 
291 ; Marg., vi, 228 » ; vii, 134”; 
Margery de, vi, 51”, 159”; 
Mary, vi, 444”; vii, 1357; 
Matth. de, vi, 290, 291”, 295; 
Maud de, vi, 188 ”, 193 7; Nich., 
vi, 50; Rich. (de), vi, 51 , 143, 
143 , 217 n, 282 ; vii, 134 ”, 135, 
135”; Rob. de, vi, 188, 206”, 
209, 220%”, 223%; vii, I30n, 
133”, 135%; Rog. (de), vi, 51, 
143”, 198%, 224, 228”; Sim., 
VI, SIM, 419%, 444, 447, 4472, 
470, 471, 474, 475, 476, 477%, 
478 n, 493, 513%, 550N; Vil, 5; 
Thos., vi, 50; vii, 136; Vane, 
vi, 209; Will., vi, 50%, 51%, 
88, 100 n, 189, 198 n, 228 n, 381; 
vii, 135, 135%”, 155”, 2877; 
—, vi, 192”; fam., vi, 263%, 
470; Vii, 234 2, 291 


29n 
Haworth, Ad. de, vi, 407, 438%”; 


Alex., vi, 438; Alice, vi, 553”; 
Chas., vi, 436, leg Denis, vi, 

34n, 430Nn; m., Vi, 277%, 
br n; vii, 124”; Edw., vi, 288, 
436; Rev. Geo., vi, 435; Geo., 
vi, 388, 424 , 434, 436”; Giles, 
vi, 277”, 278”; Hen., vi, 416, 
424 1, 434, 496; Hugh, vi, 434”; 
Jas., vi, 99 7, 434, 438”; Jane, 
vi, 133; Rev. John, vi, 435; 
John, vi, 259”, 260, 260%, 
407 2, 436”, 447, 468”; Jona- 
than, vi, 277”; Lawr., V1, 237, 
277", 278; Nich., vi, 407%; 
Ottiwell, vi, 436; Pet., vi, 277, 
277N, 278 nN, 4387; Ralph, vi, 
277, 434; Reynold, vi, 434; 
Rich., vi, 277%, 387, 425%; 
Theoph., vi, 150”; Thos., vi, 
73”, 133, 167, 251, 371; Mrs., 
vi, 413, 538; fam., vi, 284” 


Haye, see Hey 
Hayholm (Bispham), vii, 242 ” 
Hayholme (Little Carleton), vii, 


229” _ 
Hayhurst (Dutton), vii, 55”, 57%, 


n 
Heyhurst: Alice de, vii, 58 2 ; Avice 
(Amice) de, vii, 16 , 58 » ; Cecily 
de, vii, 17 n ; Emota de, vii, 57% ; 
Hen., vii, 18, 58”; Jenet, vil, 
58”; John, vi, 332; vii, 16”, 
18, 58, 58”; Lawr., vii, 58%; 
Margery de, vii, 57 ”, 58 ” ; Mary, 
vii, 135 ”; Oliver, vii, 58”; Otes 
de, vii, 58”; Percival, vii, 58 ” ; 
Rich. de, vii, io ms Rob., vi, 
vii, 57 2; Rog. de, vil, 17 %, 
ee Tho. de, vii, 58 n; Will. 
de, vii, 58; fam., vii, 49” 
Hayke, John, vi, 54 # 
Panay wood (Whittingham) 
vii, 209 ” ; ; 
Hayleys (Hayleighs), Alice de, vi, 


Haworthules (Wiswell), vi, 397 
Hawtrey, see Hautrey 

Hay, fam., see Hey ; 
Haybonk (Pleasington), vi, 266 
Hay Booth (Barley), vi, 233 ”, 518, 


19 ; 
Heydook (Hadocke), Agnes de, v1, 
67”; Alice (de), vi, 77%, 282 ; 
vii, 107”, 133, 134%, 240%; 
Aline de, vii, 107”, 133, 134%, 


377 


402 2; Nich. de, vi, 508 2 ; Rob. 
de, vi, 402 »; Rog. de, vi, 402 2; 
Thos., vi, 425 #; Will., vi, 425” 


Hayneslache (Colne), vi, 524 ” 
Hayr, see Hare ‘ 
Hayrewasbank (Dutton), vii, 55” 
Hayridding (Habergham Eaves), vi, 


55% é 
Haan (Hapton), vi, 511% 
48 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Havthornathwaite, see  Hathorn- 
thwaite 

Hayton, Jonathan, vil, 245 

Hayward, Thos., vu, 298; see also 
Haward and Heywood 

Haz:lhead (Bleasdale), vii, 141 7, 
142, 1420" 

Hazelhurst Fells, vii, 141 

Hazle Moor, vi, 252 

Head, Ad. del, vi, 225 »; John del, 
v1, 2257 

Headfort, Lady, vii, 307; Emily, 
mchnss. of, vii, 307; masses. 
of, vii, 307 n, 318 

Headless cross (Anderton), vi, 220 

Head o’ th’ Town (Altham), vi, 411 

Heald (Worsthorne), vi, 474” 

Heald, Anne, vi, 17; Will, vi, 


299 

Heald Moor (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Heald’s charity (Chorley), vi, 148 

Healey (Chorley), vi, 2, 19, 129, 
140, 467 

Healey (Heley), Ad. de, vi, 253; 
Cecily, vu, 492; Dowe de, vi, 
467; Gilb. de, vi, 252, 253; 
Hen. de, vi, 480, 455%; Hugh 
de, vi, 253; Jas., vi, 519; John 
de, vi, 253; Margery de, vi, 253; 
Rich. de, vi, 485"; Will. de, va, 
243 np vu, fo" 

Healey Cliff (Hf-ath Charnock), vi, 
2168” 

Healey Nab, va, 129 

Ifeap. Agnes, vi, 438"; Ellen, vi, 
43in; Jas., vi, 430"; John, vi, 
438, 438”; Rich., vi, 439; Rob., 
Vi, 4303 —, Vi, 431”, 471" 

I{-apa (Kirkham), vii, 149 

I{vap Barn (Bacup), vi, 440 

Heapey, vi, 3, 37, 50-2, 58n; 
chap., vi, 5, 51; ch., vi, 51; 
man., Vi, 39, 50 

Heapey, Orm (Ranulf) de, vi, 50; 
Tet. de, vi, 514; Rich. de, vi, 
51”; Rob. de, vi, 51.2 

Ileardbert, vi, 349 

Heath, Rob., vi, 371; see also Heth 

Heath Charnock, vi, 58x”, 104%, 
1O2, 187 m; 273-1375. ‘char, Wi, 
19I m, 1y2; man.,, vi, 213 

ffeath Charnock, fam., see Charnock 
and Gogard 

Heatley, Hugh, vi, 237": Jas., vi, 
aie 7S we Pet., xa, 36% Wall, vi, 
77,78; vil, 1397 

Heaton (in Lonsdale), man., vi, 37, 
39, 326, 3275 vu, 155 

TTvaton (Hetun, Hetton, Hoton), 
Alice de, vi, 175: vii, 1547; 
Anilla de, vii, tog n, 154, 316; 
Anne, vu, 211m; Augustin 
(Augustine) de, vu, 108, 153, 
150, 181; Christiana de, vil, 
154; Denise de, vii, 154”; 
Edm. de, vii, 159; Hen., vi, 
400 n; vil, S82; Tsold, vi, 360; 
Joan, vi, 217m; John de, vi, 
175, 223; Kath. de, vi, 22-7; 
vu, 320”; Rob., vi, 217"; Rog. 
de, v.i, 108, 109, 152 ”, 153, 154, 
1560, 181 m, 234, 235": Salrna 
de, vii, 154, 234; Thos., vi, 
220; vil, 297; Will. (de), vi, 
220, 227 Mm, 250 n, 438; vii, 108 n, 
109, 109 #, 154, 234m, 316" 

Heavanson, Thos., vi, 298 

Hebden Bridge (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Heber, Jane, vi, 560; John, vii, 
423 Reg., vli, 42", 3142”; Thos., 
Vi, Soon 

Heblethwaite, John, vii, 245 

Hebrew Hall (Burn: y), vi, 445M 

Heeham, man. (Claughton), vii, 
330 


Hecham (Hegham), Alice de, vu, 
330”; John de, vii, 330”; 
Ralph de, vii, 330”; Rog. de, 
vii, 330”; see also Higham 

Hechernok, see Heath Charnock 

Hecknest (Burnley), vi, 447 ” 

Hedersford, Amery de, vi, 555”; 
Will. de, vi, 555 7 

Hediholes (Ediholes, Edyefholes), 
Ad. de, vi, 249, 251; Avice de, 
Vi, 251 

Hedley, Rev. Matth., vi, 334 

Hege, the (Pleasington), vi, 207” 

Heggedemornclitf (Leyland), vi, 58 

Heggengrene (Marsden), vi, 539 

Hegham, see Hecham and Higham 

Heghchernok, see Heath Charnock 

Hehefield (Alston), vii, 63 

Heigham, fam., see Hecham and 
Higham 

Heigham Farm (Claughton), vi, 


330 

Heights (Goldshaw Booth), vi, 515 

Heights (Withnell), wi, 47 

Heir, Ad. le, vi, 474.” 

Heir’s House (Colne), vi, 523. 525, 
526 

Helde, Thurstan, vi. 9 

Hele-Phipps, Maury, vu, 65 #; T. H., 
vii, 65 ” 

Helewise, see Hawise 

H-ley (Salesbury), vi, 252 

Heley, fam., see Healcy 

Helforth Gate (Yate) (New Laund), 


vi, 492 

Helorth Holme (New Laund), vi, 
qg2n 

HE lurst (Chipping), vii, 29 

If lly Platt (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Helme, man. (Chipping), vil, 31 

Helme (Read), vi, 500 7 

Hielme (Helmes;, Ad., vil, 108 1; 
alice, vi, 399 ; vii, 31”; Edw., 
Vi, 26, 24; Geo., vii, 1961, 
197 n; Germain, vii, 30 2; Grace, 
vil, 29”; Hen., vil, 123, 197; 
Isabel (de), vii, 25, 312; Jas., 
Vu, 30m”, 31; Joan, vii, 317; 
John, vil, 204; Lawr. de, vii, 
gin; Leo, vii, 31, 139”, 197 2, 


213", 231m; Nich., vii, 147; 
Ralph de, vu, 31a; Kob., vii, 
196m, 1y7, tuz7n; Rog, vii, 


197 #; Thos. (de), vii, 28 », 30”, 
BLN, 130m, 1g0H, 197”, 201; 
Will. de, vii, 30 2, 31, 34 2, 1307, 
196”; see also Iolmes 

Helmer (Goosnargh), vii, 199 n 

Helmeridge, see Elmridur 

Helmes, see Helme and Holmes 

Hfemingburgh, John de, vi, 488 

Henderson, John, vi, 534, 535; J. 
vi, 535 

Hendon (Marsden), vi, 536 

Hendwr (Hendouyr) (Wales), vi 
262 

Heneage, Thos., vii, 114 1 

Hene-tebreck (Rossall), vii, 235 ” 

Henfield (Clayton-le-Moors), vi, 411, 


’ 


417 

Henfield (Colne), vi, 470, 
5282 

Henfield moor, vi, 413 

Henger Haw (Chorley), vi, ryon 

Henheads (Henhades), vi, 2307, 
233%, 349, 431, 437, 439” 

Henn, Rev. Hen., vi, 452 

Henncheedes, see Henhcads 

Henncthorn, Henn thyrn, see Hen- 
thorn 

Henrison (Henreson, Henryson), 
Cecily, vi, 692; Geo., vii, lor n; 
Grace, vii, lor #; Hen., vi, 697; 
John, vi, 49 2; Lawr., vii, 163 7; 
Ralph, vi, 697; Rich., vi, 49"; 


378 


5257, 


Henrison (cont.) 
Rob., vi, 69; Thos., vi, 69 n, 
298; vil, 253 nN, 300n 

Henry I, vit, 54, 240 

Henry II, vil, 129, 333." 

Henry III, vi, 471; vii, 188, 249, 
333 a 

Henry IV., vii, 263 

Henry VI, vi, 110 n, 361 

Henry VII, vii, 157 

Henry, vi, 400 n, 474, 475, 538m, 
548; Vil, 45, 105”, 109 n; abbot, 
vi, 480; bailiff, vi, 367"; b. 
of Kuz. dean of Whalley, vi, 
356m; (H.), the chaplain, vi, 
400 NM, 402 MN, 403M; VU, 2/3, 
204; the clerk, vi, 297, 411m, 
412, 443, 451”; vii, 305; the 
cookson, vi, 26m; the harper, 
vu, 200”; the miller, vi, 134”; 
parson, Vi, 79 ”, 239, 240, 253”, 
258", 398m; vii, 282, 297; 
prior of Norton, vii, 238”; the 
sumpter, vii, 227; the turner, 
vi, 208” 

Henry, Chas., vii, 13 

Henryfield (Claughton), vii, 330 ™ 

Henryson, see Henrison 

Henthorn, vi, 349, 356m, 388; 
man., Vi, 232, 390 

Henthorn, Ad. de, vi, 390; Agnes 
de, vi, 390; Alice de, vi, 390; 
Cecily de, vi, 390”; Hen. (de), 
vi, 3892, 390; John (de), wi, 
359 2, 390; Jordan de, vi, 390; 
Ixath. de, vi, 390 ” ; Margery de, 
vi, 390; Rich. de, vi, 390; Rob. 
de, vi, 377” 

Henthorn Ecs (Little Mitton), vi, 
391 n 

ITepay, see Heapey 

Ifepewell (Alston), vii, 65 ” 

Hepgreave (Preston), vii, 79, 101 ” 

Hephale (Hepwall, Hepwell), Hen. 
de, vi, 134; John de, vu, 3; 
Marg. (Margery) de, vi, 131, 276, 
397 m; vii, 3; Rich. de, vii, 
3”; Rob. (de), vi, 112”, 117, 
131, 150”, 245”, 276, 397%; 
vil, 2, 3; 4 n 

Herberlaw (Hapton), vi, 510” 

Herbert, vii, 134”, 169”; 
clerk, vii, 84 ”, 130” 

Herbertson, Cecily, vi, 134 n; Will, 
vi, 134” 

Herd House, see Hird House 

Herdwick, see Hardwick 

Hereford, John Booth, archd. of, 
vii, 258 

Hereford ridding (Herfordriding) 
(Penwortham), vi, 58” 

Hereward, abbot of Cockersand, 
vii, 180 n, 260 

Hericy, Hen. de, vii, 125” 

Heritage, Hugh, vii, 329; John, 
vii, 329; Margery, vil, 329” 

Heriz (Herries, Herriss, Herrys), 
Ad. de, vi, 555”; Agnes, vi, 
377; Cecily de, vi, 559”; Vil, 
125”; Edw., vi, 189; Eliz., vi, 
377; Geoff., vii, 278n; Hen. 
(de, le), vi, 364”, 552, 555; 
vii, 125; Isabel de, vi, 364%; 
John (de, le), vi, 364”, 559”; 
Kath., vi, 377”; Mabel, vii, 
278n; Marg., vi, 377 #; Margery 
de, vii, 278; Rich., vii, 278"; 
Rob., vi, 377 7; Sim. (de, le), vi, 
3604n, 558; Will. (de, le), vi, 
343, 394 1, 374, 377; fam., VI, 
373, 375; see also Harr.es and 
Harris . 

Herldonsoe (Claughton), vil, 327” 

Hermitage, the (Gnmsargh), vu, 
113 


the 


Hermitage, the (Mellor), vi, 263 

Hermit’s Ridding, see Armetriding 

Hermitstead, see Armitstead 

Hernby, see Hornby 

Herneshead (Winmarleigh), vii, 
306 

Herreson, Will., vi, 11 » 

Herries, Herriss, Herrys, see Heriz 

Herunterode (Cligvier), vi, 485 

Hervey, see Harvey 

Hes, Rich. del, vii, 582; Rob., 
del, vii, 58 

Hesceteley (Winkley), vii, 13 ” 

Heschath, see Hesketh 

Heselingedon, see Haslingden 

Hesemor (Salesbury), vi, 253 

Hesemore (Clayton-le-Dale), vi, 
258 

Hesemore (Wilpshire), vi, 335 # 

Hesillache (Gt. Harwood), vi, 339 " 

Heskath, Heskayth, fam., see 
Hesketh 

Hesketh (Hesketh - with - Beccon- 
sall), vi, 1, 81, I1I-14; vii, 171, 
181 m; man., vi, I12 

Hesketh (Eskehagh, Heskath, Hes- 
kayth, Heskeyth), Ad. de, vi, 
qim, 113m, 121, 347”; Alice 
(de), vi, 28 m, 70 n, 98 n, 121, 122, 
127”, 340, 398; vii, 5”, 667, 
126 n, 180, 181 x, 190”, 260n, 
332 ”, 333, 333»; Amiria de, vi, 
34n; Anne, vi, 40”; vii, 159”, 
190”, 196”, 198; Barth., vi, 
67, 73", 82, 92, 107 HN, 127, 
174”, 201”, 285”; vil, II3 7”, 
160 n, 185, 195”, 196”, 108, 
227”, 272”; Barth. G., vii, 
115”; Blanche, vi, 173”; Bold 
F., vii, 221, 224, 242”; Chas., 
vi, 117”; vii, 224, 245; Con- 
stantia, vii, 327”; Cuth., vi, 
126; vii, 195, 196m”, 205; C., 
vii, 224; Dulcia, vi, 122”; 
Edw., vi, 343 ; Edw. T., vii, 221; 
Eliz., vi, 93”, 95”, 122M”; vii, 
163”, 307”; Fleetwood, vii, 
221, 243”; Frances, vii, 224; 
Fran., vii, 221 ; Gabriel, vi, 73 , 
77m, 107n, 122”, 285n; vii, 
14m, 30m, II13”, I70n, 185, 
195m”, 196n, 205, 227”, 329Nn; 
Geoff., vi, 122”, 126, 241”; 
Geo., vi, 60”, 65, 67%”, 73, 
93”, 122, 123”, 365”; Vii, 
98, 113”, 152”, 158n, 161 n, 
167”, 170n, 173”, 185, 227%, 
287 n, 324; Gilb. de, vi, 112 n, 
121m; Grace, vi, 122m”, 126, 
456 ; Hen. (de), vi, 113 ”, 121 n, 
126, 153”; Holcroft, vi, 120; 
Hugh (de), vi, 67”, 93”, 121%, 
122 n, 123 n, 126, 127m, 504N; Vil, 
180n, 181 n, 190n, 260%n, 333, 
333”; Jas., vi, 128; vii, 327; 
Jane, vi, 123 ”, 347; Jennet, vi, 
128; Sir John (de), vi, 957, 
98 ”, 121, 339, 347”; John (de), 
vi, 108, 113”, 126, 233%, 339, 
340; Jos., vii, 327, 328; Juli- 
ana, vii, 195”; Kath. (de), vi, 
121, 123”; Lucy, vi, 340; Marg. 
(de), vi, 73m, 121, 122”, 126; 
vii, 187, 236, 249 ” ; Margery, vi, 
122, 126; Mary, vi, 108, 123, 
125; vii, 186”, 327%”, 333”; 
Maud (Matilda), de, vi, 70, 71, 
95”, 120, I2I, I2I1m, 122%, 
339; Nich. (de), vi, 112 , 121, 
126, 133 ”, 340; Sir Pet., vii, 221 ; 
Pet., vii, 224 ; Rich. (de), vi, 33 », 
34m”, 667, 67”, II2n, 113”, 
122 n, 123”, 126, 127%”, 201%”; 
vii, 83, 1637”, I90n, 208%, 
273; Sir Rob., vi, 17”, 222, 


INDEX 


Hesketh (cont.) 
63, 95, 108 n, YIIM, 116 nN, 
117, 122, 123”, 120, 202 n, 
229”, 456; Rob. (de), vi, 60 n, 
70H, 72, 72", 730, 82, 93n, 
95”, 96, 99n, I12 n, I3n, 
II4, 116, 120, 121, 121 m, 022, 
— n, oe 123m”, 126, 127n, 
73%, I80n, 340, 3 6 
307; Vil, 83, 126 hie ie - 
167 ”, 185, 190 n, 208 n, 213 n, 
397%, 333"; Rog., vii, 196 n, 
205, 230, 249, 273, 3332, 
334%, 335 2% ; Sibyl de, vi, 121 7; 
Sophia, vi, 127; Steph. de, vi, 
Il2n; Susan, vi, 126 ; Sir Thos., 
vl, 22”, 28n, gon, 67n, 92 
73", 89n, 92, 93”, 96n, 972, 
TO4, 106 #, TIT H, 112, 113, 117 n, 
I18, 121, 122, 125, 126, 127, 128n, 
I5I Mn, Ibo, 201», 202, 340, 
341, 398; vil, 5”, bo, 126 n, 
196 n, 332 n; Thos, (de), vi, 16 n, 
17”, 22, LIN, 05 n, 67, 70x, 
27H, 728, 73, 742, 77M, Ba, 
89 n, 92, 93”, 95", 96, 104 n, 
TION, TI2m, 117 Hn, 118, 121, 
122, 123, 123 #, 126, 127 , 128, 
132, I42, 166”, 173”, 176n, 
201 N, 236%, 300, 337, 339, 
343, 365 n, 398, 408», 420; vii, 
65”, 74, 83m, 144, 154", 173 2, 
181m, 185, 185, 186, 187, 
190”, 196M, 237”, 321 nN, 327, 
334”; Sir Thos. G. F., vi, 72, 
97, I14, 123, 123”; Sir Thos. 
H., vi, 123 2; Sir T., vi, 116”; 
Sir T. D., vi, 72, 90, 93, 97, 114, 
123”, 126, 340; Ursula, vii, 
333”; Sir Will. (de), vi, 95, 
97 ”, 98 n, 116 n, 121, 127; Will. 
(de), vi, 17m", 70, 90%, 92n, 
II2”, I13”, 120-1, 126, 290, 
339, 347, 418, 495; vii, 170%, 
173”, 185, 185m, 186 n, 327%, 
329; Mrs., vii, 224; fam., vi, 
48, 69 n, 178, 338; vii, 102, 107, 


1337 

Hesketh Bank (Hesketh), vi, 111, 
II2 

Hesketh End, man. (Chipping), 
vli, 30 

Heskeyt, Heskeyth, see Hesketh 

Heskin, vi, 155, 166-9; char., vi, 
90”, 161; man., vi, 166; vii, 
235%”; sch., vi, 169 

Heskin, Ad. de, vi, 7 n, 33 ”, 166"; 
Cecily de, vi, 166”; Emma de, 
vi, 225”; Joan de, vi, 33”; 
John (de), vi, 7”, 23, 1707”, 
225; Margery de, vi, 33%; 
Nich., vi, 166; Reynold de, vi, 
166”; Rich. de, vi, 166”; Rob. 
de, vi, 33”, 166, 166m, I70n, 
177", 203”, 225%”; Thos., vi, 
166; Thurstan, vi, 166, 172%, 
191m; Warine de, vi, 177” 

Heskin Green, vi, 166 

Heskin Hall (Heskin), vi, 166, 167 

Hesmenough, John, vi, 260 

Hesmondhalgh (Hesmonhalgh), 
Ellis, vi, 259 2; John, vi, 260 2 ; 
Rich., vi, 260” 

Hesmundehalgh 
53” . 

Hesselindene, see Haslingden 

Hest Chernoke, see Heath Charnock 

Hestholm, Joan, vii, 288”; John, 
vii, 288 n . 

Hesting (Habergham Eaves), vi, 
4551 a ; i 

Heth, Agnes, vii, 233; Will., vi, 
233; see also Heath 

Hethchernock, Hethevchernoc, seé 
Heath Charnock 


379 


vii, 


(Dilworth), 


Hetom, Gilb. de, vii, 331 2; Thos. 
vii, 331 ” : 

Heton, Hetton, see Heaton 

Heulefield (Bispham), vi, 101 n 

Hevesclough (Whittingham), vii 
209 n , 

Hewn Ashlar (Old Laund Booth), 
vi, 522 

Hewode, see Ewood 


Hewson, Edm., see Dicconson 
Edm. : 

Hexham, Will. de, vi, 159 

Hey, vi, 544 


Hey (Hay, Haye), Alice del, vi, 
335”; Gilb., vi, 273; Hen., vii, 
299 ; Hugh del, vi, 200 n; Isabel 
del, vi, 200”; Jas, vi, 99n; 
Jer., vi, 557; John (de, de la, 
del), vi, 291 n, 328 2, 494, 5100; 
Lawyr., vi, 272 2, 416; Rich. (de, 
de la), vi, 436, 438, 494, 
510m; vil, 273; Rob. (del) 
V1, 335%} Vil, 220; —, vi, 252 

Hey acres (Gt. Harwood), vi, 339 n 

Heye, le (Mellor), vi, 263 

Heyfield (Threlfall), vii, 192 » 

Heyhan, vii, 296 

Heyhead (Marsden), vi, 541 » 

Heyhouses (Lytham), vii, 
214; sch., vii, 219 

Heyhouses (Whalley), vi, 230n, 
349, 361, 489”, 493, 513-14; 
ch., vi, 514 ; cross. vi, 513 ; man., 
vi, 514; ‘Wellsprings’ inn, vi, 
513 

Heyhurst, see Hayhurst 

Heyland, Alice de, vi, 58”; Will. 
de, vi, 58” 

Heyley (Whittingham), vii, 207 n 

Heyroyd (Colne), vi, 523, 528 

Heys, Nether (Colne), vi, 528 

Heys, Isabel, vi, 150; Thos., vi, 
150” 

Heysandforth (Burnley), 
47° 

Heyslacks (Trawden), vi, 552 

Heywood, John, vi, 419; Mary A., 
vi, 419; Rebecca, vi, 419; see 
also Haward and Hayward 

Heyworth, Lawr., vi, 438; see also 
Haworth 

Hic Bibi, well (Standish), vi, 192 

Hiche, vi, 488” 

Hichetleys (Dutton), vii, 58 

Hichhaugh (Dutton), vii, 55 2 

Hichough (Ribchester), vii, 43 ” 

Hichson(Hicheson), John, vi, 475”; 
Rich., vi, 475 ”, 477”, 489 

Hickeling (Hikeling), Rob., vi, 10 7, 
29” 

Hicks, Sir Baptist, vii, 34; Bap- 
tist, vii, 34 

Higen, see Hitchin and Hitchon 

Higgen Clough (Wheatley Carr 
Booth), vi, 520 

Higgenson, see Higginson 

Higgin, Hen., vi, 538%, 539%; 
Isabel, vi, 539”; Jas., vi, 519”; 
John, vi, 468", 521, 539%, 540; 
Lawr., vi, 539” 

Higginbothan, Wiill., vi, 261 

Higginson (Higgenson), Eliz., vii, 
245”; Janet, vii, 183 2; Rich., 
vii, 244; Rob., vi, 77”; vii, 
183”; Rog., vii, 136%; Thos., 
vi, 518 

Higgison, John, vii, 50 

High, Thos., vi, 237 ” 

Highacre (Dutton), vii, 55” 

Higham, vi, 349, 488, 512-13, 522 ; 
vii, 279; ch., vi, 513; ind., vi, 
512; man., vi, 512; Nonconf., 
vi, 513; Rom. Cath., vi, 513 

Higham, Lower, Higham, Nether, 
see Higham Close 


’ 


213, 


vi, 443, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Higham, Over, vi, 513 ” 

Highsm, Rich., vi, 325; 
Hecham 

Higham Booth (Goldshaw Booth), 
vi, 233%, 512, 515 

Higham Close (Higham), vi, 4887, 
512, 513% 

Higher Arbour (Thornley), vn, 32 

Highercroft House (Lower Darwen), 
vi, 27 


7. 
Higher Cross (Higher Booths), vi, 


see also 


434 
Higher Firs (Altham), vi, 411 
Higherford (Barrowford), vi, 541 
Higher House (Briercliffe), vi, 471 
Higher House cross (Freckleton), 
vil, 167” 
Higher Ridihalgh (Briercliffe), vi, 


469 

Highfalong (Carleton), vii, 231” 

Highfield (Croston), vi, 91 

Highfield (Dilworth), vii, 52 

Highfield (Duxbury), vi, 211” 

Highfield (Haighton), vii, 125 ” 

Highfield (Sowerby), vii, 281 

Highfield, John, vu, ror n 

Highgate (Warton), vii, 171 

High Riley, vi, 233 ” 

Highson, John, vi, 475” 

Hightenhull, see Ightenhill 

High Ulley, vi, 233” 

High Way (Dilworth), vii, 52 ” 

Hikeling, see Hickeling 

Ifiles, Nich. de, vii, 198 2 ; Rich. de, 
vil, 198» 

Hill, the (Briercliffe), vi, 471 ” 

Hill, the, man. (Goosnargh), vii, 195 

Hill, the, man. (Heath Charnock), 
Ni 2d 

Hill, the, (Tockholes), vi, 282 

Hill, Sir Edw., vii, 197; Grace, 
vii, 197%; John, vii, 18”; Rob., 
vi, 496; vii, 265, 265; Will., 
vu, 47 n 

Hillam, man. (Yorks), vi, 421 

Hillcroft (Bretherton), vi, 103” 

Hill End (Briercliffe), vi, 471 

Hillfield (Croston), vi, 95 

Hill House (Chaigley), vii, 18 

Hill House (Woodplumpton), vii 
14” 

Hilhley (Ribchester), vii, 45 7 

Hillley, Agnes, vi, 48; Cecily 
de, vii, 48; John de, vii, 46, 
48; Rob. de, vii, 48; Will. 
de, vii, 45” 

Hillock Val (Huncoat), vi, 409 

Hilton, Evan, vi, 17”; Hugh, vi, 
26n; Isabel de, vii, 301 n; Jas., 
vi, 505, 507; John, vi, 17 n, 36, 
50, 77; Marg. (de), vi, 26; 
vu, 301; Maud de, vii, 3011; 
Rich., vi, 270; Sir Rob. de, vii, 
301; Rob., vi, 28”; Will., vi, 
77; see also Hulton 

Hilton's Brow (Brindle), vi, 77 2 

Hinde, Nath., vii, 224; Sam., vi, 
189 n; Sir Will., vi, 558 

Hindeburne water, see Hyndbum 

Hindhill (Clayton-le-Moors), vi 
417" 

Hindle, Agnes, vi, 499 7; Alex., vi, 
407; Chris., vi, 277”; vii, 39; 
Hugh, vi, 494”; John, vi, 403, 
499; John F., vi, 261; Maj. 
John W., vi, 277; Lawr., vi, 
408; Mary J., vi, 261; Mary 
J. R., vi, 252; Mich., vi, 403; 
Molly, vi, 454; Ottwell, vi, 407 ; 
Thos., a4, 403; Will, vi, 403; 
Will. F., vi, 261; —, vi, 4137; 

wai also Hindley 
ndley, man. (Walton), vi, 291 « 

Hindley, Ad. (de), oe 
328"; Chris., vii, 42; Ellen de, 


d 


Hindley (cont.) 
vi, 71”; Hen., vi, 489%; Hugh 
dv, vi, 71, 221"; John de, vii, 
328; Margery de, vii, 328m” ; 
Nich., vi, 416”; Rich. de, vi, 
291; Rob. de, vi, 71%, 221m, 
291m; fam., vi, 347; see also 
Hindle 

Hinks, —, vii, 51 

Hinton, Honora, vi, 59” 

Hippings (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 409 

Hippings Cross (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 


405 

Hird (Hirde), Marg., vu, 29"; 
Rich., vii, 292; Thos., vi, 518 ; 
—, vl, 372” 

Hird House (Briercliffe), vi, 469, 


469 n . 

Hirdmonscroft (Osbaldeston), vi, 
320” 

Hirstewod, Hirstwode, see Hurst- 
wood 

Hitchcock, John, vi, 375” 

Hitchin (Higen, Hitchen), John, vi, 
540”, 534; Rev. Rich., vi, 440, 
451”; Rich., vi, 450”; see also 
Hitchon 

Hitchmough, Rich., vii, 116 » 

Hitchon (Higen), Geo., vi, 471”; 
John, vi, 477”; see also Hitchen 

Hitm’, Will, vi, 367 

Hoarheads (Trawden), vi, 552 ” 

Hoarstones (Goldshaw Booth), vi, 
515, 516 

Hobbedoghtre, Ellen, vi, 302 ” 

Hobbes, Will., vi, 292, 293 

Hobkin, vi, 480 

Hobson, Thos., vi, 538 ” 

Hob stones (Colne), vi, 523, 520 

Hocking Hall (Billington), vi, 325 

Hocton, see Hoghton 

Hocwik, see Howick 

Hoddeake, Ad. de, vi, 264; Joan 
de, vi, 2647” 

Hodder, riv., vi, 230, 231, 247; 
vii, I, 32; bridge, vii, 1 

Hodderford ridding (Stonyhurst), 
vi, 47” 

Hodder House (Stonyhurst), vii, 12 

Hodder Place (Stonyhurst), vii, 7 ” 

Hoddesden, see Hoddlesden 

Hoddlesden, vi, 233m, 270, 273, 
278, 424; ch., vi, 275; ind., vi, 
270 

Hoddlesden, brook, vi, 235, 278 

Hoddlesden, forest, vi, 232 

Hoddlesden Heys (Over Darwen), 
vi, 280” 

Hoddlesden Moss, vi, 235, 269 

Hodds Moss, vi, 380 

Hodereshale, see Hothersall 

Hodgehouse (Billington), vi, 332 

Hodges, John, vi, 107” 

Hodgkinson (Hodgekinson, Hod- 
kinson, Hogkinson), Anne, vii, 
103”; Chas., vii, 1o2”; Edw., 
vii, 141 2; Hen., vii, 98 n, 102; 
Jas., vii, 74, 98 7 ; Jane, vii, 312 ; 

ohn, vi, 107”; vii, 136”; 
Luke, vii, 102”; Mabel, vii, 
190”; Marg., vii, 304”; Mary, 
vi, 161”; Rich., vii, 98 n, 304” ; 
Thos., vii, 89 n, 151”; Will., vi, 
113; Vil, 74”, 76n, 98n, 227 

Hodgson (Hogeson, Hogson), Ad., 


vii, 160”; Agnes, vii, 48n; 
Anne, vii, 132 n; Edm., vi, 1147; 
Edw., vii, 329”; Eliz., vii, 


toon; Ellen, vii, 234; Far- 
rand, vi, 51; Hen., vi, 413”; 
vii, 248; Hugh, vii, 124; Inett, 
vil, 22”; Jas., vi, 153”, 279; 
Jane, vii, 248; John, vi, 20, 
369%; vii, Toon, 225, 234n, 
248", 284”; Marg., vi, 20%, 


380 


Hodgson (cont.) 
248n; Mary, vi, 249"; Rich., 
vil, 234”, 248m, 284"; Rob., 
vi, 3”, 20m, 22m, 4470; Vii, 
234", 248; Rog., vu, 160m: 
Thos., vi, 22", 46n; vii, 160 n, 
284n, 329m; Wil, vi, 148; vii, 
175m, 234", 248m; see also 
Hodson 

Hodgson’s Farm (Chorley), vi, 148 

Hodkinson, see Hodgkinson 

Hodlesden, see Hoddlesden 

Hodleston, see Huddleston 

Hodson, Jas., vi, 224; Jas. A., vi, 
211; John, vi, 211, 225; Rich., 
vi, 9; Will, vi, 109”; see also 
Hodgson 

Hogeson, see Hodgson and Hodson 

Hogg-Goggin, Jas. F., vi, 128 

Hogh, see Hough 

Hoghton, vi, 3, 6m, 36-47, 58; 
vii, 27; chant., vii, 49 ; ch., vi, 
46; man., vi, 37; Nonconf., vi, 


46, 47 

Hoghton(Awton, Haughton, Hough- 
ton), Sir Ad, (de), vi, 29 n, 38, 47, 
93”, 104”, 151”, 170M, 174n, 
254, 266, 284; vii, 27, 29n, 
30m, 46n, 50m, 53, 632, 
66 n, Iogn, 114M, 131 n, 133m, 
168 n, 169, 193, 196”, 207n, 
212 n, 281 n, 318 n, 324 n, 3311; 
Ad. de, vi, 37, 38, 46m, 49n, 
7On, 77, 169n, 170Nn, 174M, 
199 N, 205”, 254, 259, 269; vii, 
17”, 27M, 52, 62, 03m, b4n, 
65, 66n, 98n, 109, 1147, 
130”, 132 n, 134 Nn, 162 Nn, 192 n, 
193”, 196", 207, 207n, 212 nH, 
318 n, 321 n, 323”; Agnes (de), 
vi, 37 2, 38”, 77 M, 393 , 394%, 
396, 560; vii, 27 n, 30n, 527, 
65”, 98", I12n, 193 Nn, 275; 
Sir Alex., vi, 22, 33, 282, 
306”; vii, 33”, 88n, 1127, 
196, 198”; Alex. (le), vi, 39, 
40, 142, 205, 282, 293, 394%, 
396; vii, 27”, 43”, 62n, 88n, 
98, 131 n, 137”, 204, 208n; 
Alice (de), vi, 38”, 39 n, 109”, 
263 ”, 269, 394”; Vil, 17, 193”; 
Amery de, vii, 63”; Anne, vi, 
39, 40, 205, 282, 294, 5470; 
vii, 19, 131, 134”, 213”; Arth., 
vi, gon, 87, 204; Avice de, 
vii, 133”; Bridg., vii, 213”; 
Brun de, vi, 37"; Cecil de, vi, 
41; Cecily de, vi, 38; Sir 
Chas. (de), vi, 41, 43, 44, 46 
290, 297; vii, 86; Chris., vii, 
47; Cordelia, vi, 297; Maj., 
Gen. Dan., vi, 41, 297 ; Diana de- 
vi, 38”; Dorothy, vi, 40; vu, 
230n; Edw., vi, gon, 58; 
Eliz., vi, 39 n, 40, 206 n, 210, 
393 2; vii, 62 n, 88 n; Ellen (de), 
vi, 39, 39”, 96, 528n; vil, 19, 
62 n, 88, 229 n; Evan, vil, 174%, 
229, 229 n, 230”, 282; Franc. 
de, vii, 53, 62 n, 109, 230 ” ; Geoff. 
de, vi, 38, 47, 170; Geo., Vi, 
4On, 494%, 527, 528m, 534%, 
535”, 539”; Sir Gilb., vi, 4°, 
236, 250, 293”, 296, 297, 31% 
463; vii, 121, 134m, 130M, 
1397, 208”; Gilb., vi, 49%, 
282; vii, 127, 193; Grace, 
vi, 527”; Sir Hen. (de), vi, 39 
41, 43, 46, 229, 254, 268, 290, 
297, 299, 380, 393, 407, 49°: 
vii, 27”, 35”, 48", 52, 57% 
62 n, 66 n, 82, 83 2, 87, 104, 109, 
116, 123, 131 n, 209 n; Hen. (de), 
vi, 37 %, 38, 39%, 49, 51. 58%, 
254 9-5 m, 263 n, 282, 298, 310. 


Hoghton (cont.) z, 
312, 393 %, 394, 547%, VU, 27”, 
35m”, 44m”, 88, 126", 131%, 
208”; Sir Hen. B., vi, 41, 297; 
vii, 82; Sir Hen. P., vi, 25”, 41, 
297; vii, 81, 82, 87, Iogn; 
Isabel, vi, 329, 429 ”; Vil, 135”; 
Sir Jas. (de), vi, 41, 43, 270, 
293; Jas. de, vi, 38; Jane, vi, 
40 N, 123 NM, 293, 349, 347, 374%, 
Joan (de), vi, 38”, 39”, 254, 
393, 4°07, 527%, 528”, 5397, 
555”; vii, 229”; John (de), 
vi, 38”, 48, 204, 205, 200, 
269, 329, 366m", 374%, 377%, 
379, 393, 394 %, 396, 493, 494%, 
527”, 500”; Vil, 18, I92”; 
Kath (Cath.), vi, gon, 205%, 
329", 377%, 393%, 394%, VU, 
27m, 65, 323"; Lawr., vii, 
213”; Leonard, vi, go; vii, 
213; Marg. (de), vi, 39”, 4on, 
202 N, 205%, 305, 306, 393%, 
394 2; Vil, 17, 88 n, 230, 239”; 
Margery de, vii, 27”; Mary, 
Lady, vi, 297 ; Mary, vi, 44, 205 n, 
310, 394, 421; vii, 82; Maud, vi, 
394 2; Miles, vi, 393 ”; Nich., vi, 
416, 426 ; Sir Phil., vi, 290 ; Phil., 
vi, 41; Radcliffe, vi, 48, 294; 
Ralph, vii, 88”, 126”, 324”; 
Sir Rich. (de), vi, 29, 30%, 
33, 39, 40, 41, 46m, 47m, 48, 
49, 123 n, 126, 166 n, 170 nN, 205, 
206 n, 208, 210, 259m, 269, 
282n, 285, 285”, 293, 293%, 
295, 300, 305, 310, 327%, 347, 
379; vii, 27%, 35”, 43, 44%, 
53”, 57%, 63, 63”, 65, 65%, 
73”, 74, 82, 83, 86, 88, 947, 
957”, 98n, I09N, 113%, I14N, 
116, 126”, 127m, 130, 131%, 
134”, 135 n, 136n, 158%, 167 7, 
187m, 194, 195”, 196”, 197, 
1987, 199”, 200, 201%, 207%, 
208, 210, 213", 275m”, 278, 
281 n, 323", 332”; Rich. (de, 
le), vi, 97”, 22", 34”, 37%, 38, 
4on, 40, 47”, 48N, 50, 93%, 
142, 166”, I170n, I9g2n, 199%, 
205, 206, 206”, 207”, 236%, 
254, 255, 255”, 256, 268, 269, 
279, 282, 293, 300”, 313, 379%, 
380 2, 393, 555%; Vil, 19, 27 7, 
28n, 30, 31, 62, 64n, 867, 
88x, 90”, IOgN, I12MH, II14%, 
125”, 130M, 133”, 192%, 193, 
193”, 194m, 198, 199, 207%, 
208 n, 209”, 210”, 230, 239%, 
259 n, 298 n, 308 n, 318 nN, 323.2; 
Sir Rob., vi, 200”; Rob. (de), 
vi, 38", 379%, 394m, 546”, 
vil, 17”, 74; Rog., vi, 393%, 
396; Rowland, vi, 40#; Sarah, 
vi, 293”; Sibyl de, vi, 38, 50, 
254; vii, 130; Siward de, vi, 
38n; Steynull de, vi, 37%”; 
Susannah (Susanna), vi, 25, 149; 
vii, 82, 131 »; Thos. (de), vi, 7, 
32, 38, 39 ”, 40, 41, 43, 44, 49%, 
77", 17ON, 205, 207N, 268, 
285, 377 #, 379 M, 394, 396, 427; 
vii, 28, 30, 44”, 52, 62%, 
83, 87n, 90, I13", II64n, 
126m, 131, 131%, 133%”, 134%, 
137", 194m, 198 nN, 200 n, 206%, 
239”, 323”, 332”; Sir Will. 
(de), vi, 39; vii, 17, 193 2; Will. 
(de), vi, 22, 39, 96m, I09%, 
182, 202", 205, 205%, 206, 
207 2, 306 m, 393”, 394%, 493-4, 
546; vii, 27, 35”, 48 n, 62 n, 
75, 113, 120, 126m, 135 ”, 193 n, 
265, 267; Mrs., vi, 396; —, vi, 
379; vii, 148%; fam., vi, 3, 252, 


INDEX 


Hoghton (cont.) 
283, 283m; vii, 55”; see also 
Haighton 

Hoghton Bottoms (Hoghton), vi, 36 

Hoghtonfield (Altham), vi, 413 7 

Hoghton lees (Hoghton riding), 
(Wrightington), vi, 175 ” 

Hoghton tenement (Chipping), vii, 
27 

Hoghton Tower (Hoghton), vi, 
36-7, 40-7, 500, 503 

Hoghwyk, see Howick 

Hogkinson, see Hodgkinson 

Hogson, see Hodgson and Hodson 

Hohum (Hutton), vi, 68 

Hokefield (Hothersall), vii, 63 1 

Hokenhevedd, see Oakenhead Wood 

Holand, see Holland 

Holear (Ulnes Walton), vi, 
233" 

Holcar, fam., see Holker 

Holcath, see Halecath 

Holcliff Field (Downham), vi, 556 ” 

Holcroft (Myerscough), vii, 140 2 

Holcroft, Ad. de, vi, 194”; Alice, 
vi, 122”; Anne, vii, 3077; 
Ellen, vii, 212”; Sir John, vi, 
122 n, 278; vii, 307”; Marg. de, 
vi, 194”; Milicent, vi, 278; R., 
vii, 212”; Sir Thos., vi, 328; 
vii, 215; Thos., vi, 122”, 328, 
331%; vil, 97”, I170n, 1747, 
215”, 216”, 231”; fam., vii, 
218 

Hold-back (Charnock Richard), vi, 
2057” 

Holden (Extwistle), vi, 472 

Holden (Haslingden), vi, 427, 428; 
man., Vi, 497 7 

Holden, Broad 
427, 430, 498 n 

Holden, Goodshaw (Haslingden), 


108 


? 


(Haslingden), vi, 


vi, 431 
Holden (Houlden), Abra., vi, 425; 
Ad. (de), vi, 248, 273, 408, 409 n, 
428, 429, 430, 455, 456”, 511%, 
524, 538; vii, 15; Agnes, vi, 
391 ”, 429 ; Alice de, vi, 408, 429, 
430, 497 ”, 553 ”; Andr., vi, 274, 
280 n, 430”, 431; Cecily de, vii, 
15; Chas., vi, 429”; Chris. (de), 
vi, 429, 430; Douce, vi, 429”; 
Eliz. (de), vi, 39%”, 391”, 429, 
430, 436”; vii, 15; Ellen de, 
vi, 429n: Emma de, vi, 429%, 
450”; Evan, vi, 246%, 268, 
391 2; Frances, vi, 430%; Fran., 
vi, 265; Geoff. de, vii, 15; Geo., 
vi, 272 , 273, 280%; vil, 14%, 
334; Gilb. (de), vi, 279, 404%, 
405”, 409, 429, 439, 431%, 
432”; Grace, vi, 429; Hawise 
de, vi, 429”; Dr. Hen., vil, 14”, 
Rev. Hen., vii, 2; Hen. (de), vi, 
265, 428 ”, 429 ; Vil, 13, 15, 15; 
Isabel (de), vi, 429%, 497%; 
vii, 15; Jas., vi, 366", 391%; 
Jane, vii, 15; Joan, vi, 429%, 
497”; John (de), vi, 274, 280 n, 
4082, 429, 430%, 432m, 450%, 
497”; vii, 14, 15, 18, 3275 
Kath. de. vi, 430”, 497%; V4, 
152”; Lawr., vi, 425; Lettice, 
vi, 429; Marg. (de), vi, 429, 
430”; vii, 13, 15%; Margery 
(de), vi, 159%, 429, 497%) VU, 
326; Mary, vi, 430%; vii, 15s 
327; Maud de, vil, 15; Nich. 
(de), vi, 159”, 406%, 429, oe 
982, 499%, 524%, ; 
Oliver, vi, 428 2; Ralph (Randle), 
(de), vi, 30%, 43, 271, 408, ce 
28n, 429, 429 ®, 430, 431, 4975 
“ii, ee, 18: Rich. (de), vi, 
265, 283, 429; vii, 14, 15, 15% 


381 


Holden (cont.) 
18, 18 , 19; Rob. (de), vi, 279 », 
280, 280 n, 380, 406 n, 408, 419 n, 
428, 429, 430, 431, 437, 455, 497, 
498 n, 499”, 511 2, 553; vii, 
15 7; Sibyl, vi, 366 », 391, 4297; 
Thos. (de), vi, 246 2, 265, 267 n, 
280n, 328n, 366n, 391, 408, 
429, 430, 430%, 431, 432, 497, 
498 n ; vii, 15, 15 2, 213 n, 3267; 
Will. (de), vi, 274, 280, 285 n, 
304; vii, 15, 15”; Col, vi, 
471”, 491; Mrs., —, vii, 14; 
—, vii, 188; fam., vi, 288, 446 

Holden Fold (Over Darwen), vi, 275, 


279” 

Holden Hall (Haslingden), vi, 430 

Holdsworth, Gilb., vi, 4832; see 
also Hollsworth 

Holdsyke (Worsthorne), vi, 477 ” 

Hole, par., see Hoole 

Hole, the (Barrowford), vi, 541 

Holebrook (Tarnacre), vii, 271 7 

Hole Clough (Cliviger), vi, 480 

Holecloughbanks (Cliviger), vi 
480 n 

Holecroft (Bilsborrow), vii, 331 ” 

Hole House (Cliviger), vi, 479, 482 

Holerodes, Rob. del, vi, 485”; 
Steph. del, vi, 485 2 

Holes, see Hoole 

Holesyke Head (Trawden), vi, 552 

Holewet Lane (Billington), vi, 328 

Holgate, Ellen E., vi, 476; John, 
vi, 545%, 547; Rich., vi, 4757; 
Will., vi, 519 

Holker (Whalley), vi, 382 ” 

Holker (Holcar), Alice, vi, 407 7; 
Isabel, vi, 506”; vii, 1637; 
Joan, vi, 483”; John, vi, 483%, 
486, 506, 507; vil, 163 2; Kath., 
vi, 506; Marg., vi, 506; Nich., 
vi, 506; Pet., vi, 506”; Ralph 
(Randle), vi, 506”, 507; Rich., 
vi, 506; Will., vi, 506 

Holland (Holand), Ad. de, vi, 18, 
21 2, 1087; vil, 201 2; Alan de, 
vi, 271; vii, 105; Alex. le F. de, 
vi, 201 2; Alice de, vi, 408, 429; 
Amery (de), vi, 97%”, Io1n; 
Cecily de, vi, 201 n; Edw. (de), 
vii, 329%; Eleanor, vii, 31”; 
Eliz. de, vi, 304; F. J., vii, 82”; 
Grimbald de, vi, 19”; Hen. de, 
vii, 105; Jas., vi, 180%; Joan 
de, vi, 19, 267%”; vii, 3297; 
John de, vi, 201”; Marg. de, vi, 
131, 276, 397; vii, 2; Margery 
de, vi, 19”, 26%; vii, 162%, 
175”, 215”; Maria, vii, 89 0; 
Mary, vii, 190; Matth. de, vi, 
18", 97”, IOI Nn, 400n, Maud 
(Matilda) de, vi, 39%, 101%, 
262 ; Sir Rich. de, vii, 3 #; Rich. 
(de), vi, 18”, 1807; vii, 175”, 
329 n; Sir Rob. (de), vi, 19, 92 %, 
IOI #, 140, 201 #, 271, 327, 397, 
428; Rob. de, vi, 12”, 18, 19, 
39n, 977, IOI %, 108 n, 131, 
178 n, 201%, 208, 224”, 261 n, 
262 n, 271, 276, 304; vii, 62m, 
162", 201, 215”, 300%; Sim. 
de, vi, 221”, 331, 331%; Thos. 
(de), vi, 17% 271, 504%; Sir 
Thurstan de, vii, 100”; Thur- 
stan de, vi, 201 #, 304, 428%; 
vii, 84, 96”, 329% Sir Will. de, 
vi, 267”; Will. (de), vi, ID”, 

18, 19, 64m, 65%, 108 7, 


) 


17 ”, 
201, 254%, 2617, 281, 327, 
327%, 4293 Vil, 130%, 139%, 


329 n; Mrs., vil, 105 

Holleth, vii, 291, 293, 300, 304, 
305 ; crosses, Vil, 305; man., vii, 
395 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Hollin (Newchurch), vi, 440 
Hollinbooths, vi, 232” 
Hollin cross (Habergham Eaves), 


Vi, 455 
Hollinghead, fam., see Hollinshead 
Hollin Greave (Briercliffe), vi, 454, 
467, 469, 471.1 ; 
Hollingreave (Colne), v1, 534" 
Hollingreave (Pleasington), vi, 265 
Hollingworth (Hollinworth), John 
Vil, 201; J. Gi, Vi; 220 
Hollin Hall (Trawden), vi, 548 
Hollinhead, fam., see Hollinshead 
Hollins (Accrington), vi, 423, 425", 
446 
Hollins (Penwortham), vi, 61” 
Hollins, Hugh, vi, 219”; Jas., vi, 
219”; John, vi, 58”; Marg., vi, 


219” 

Hollinshead (Tockholes), vi, 281 ; 
well, vi, 282 

Hollinshead (Hollinghead, Hollin- 
head), Allanson, vi, 51; Jas., vu, 
121m; John, vi, 143, 145, 251, 
253: Will, vii, 1307 

Hollinshead Hall (feckholes), vi, 
281, 281 n, 282 

Hollinworth, see Hollingworth 

Hollowforth (Goosnargh), vii, 159 ”, 
200 2; man., vil, 201; mill, vu, 
201 

Hollowhead (Wilpshire), vi, 335 

Hfollsworth, Thos., vi, 192 3 see 
also Holdsworth 

Holm (Hackinsall), vii, 256 

Holme (Bilsborrow), vil, 331 

Holme (Brockholes), vii, 111 ” 

Holme, Le (Clayton-le-Dale), vi, 258 

Holme (Cliviger), vi, 359”, 4577, 
479; chap., vi, 45%; man., vi, 482 

Hotme, Old (Ightenhill Park), vi, 
497 

Holme, the (Norbreck), vii, 247 ” 

Holme, the (Penwortham), vi, 56 

Holmecarr (Lytham), vii, 215 ” 

Holmecroft, vi, 233 ” 

Holme Cultram, abbot of, vi, 290 

Holmeley (Hoghton), vi, 39” 

Holmes (Barton), vii, 127 ” 

Holmes, the (Greenhalgh), vii, 180 

Holmes (Tarleton), vi, 109 n, 115 

Holmes, North (Tarleton), vi, 110” 

Holmes, the (Thornton), vii, 232 

Holmes, man. (Yorks), vii, 155 

Holmes (Helmes, Holme), Ad. de, vi, 
116 n, 125 ”; Chris., vi, 88; Eliz., 
vi, 2703 Giles, 84,273); Hen., var, 
ISt mn, 270; Jas. vil, 30m; Rev. 
John, vi, 239m, 264; John, vi, 
242, 432, 432", 490; Martha, vi, 
264: Randl-, vii, 93 2; Rich. de, 
Vi, 116m; vii, 125”; Rich. le 
B. de, vi, 116m; Rob. (de, del), 
vi, 480, 482; Rog. de, vi, 
482"; Rev. Thos., vi, 283; 
Thos., vii, 255; Will. de, vi, 1167; 
see also Helme 

Holmesnape (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 
290 

Holmes Wood (Rufford), vi, 119 

Holmes Wood Hall (Tarleton), vi, 
116 

Holough, Holouth, see Holleth 

Holrenhead (Briercliffe), vi, 473” 

Holrenhead, Ad. de, vi, 470; Agnes 
de, vi, 473 »; Hen. de, vi, 473 n, 
476%; Hugh fde, del), vi, 470, 
473"; Rich. de, vi, 473; Rob. 
de, vi, 473", 477; Thos. (de, 
del), vi, 470, 473 2; Will. de, vi, 


473" 
Holroyds ‘Holrodes) (Cliviger), vi, 
481 1, 553" 
Holt (Bnercliffe), +i, 469 
Hult, hill (Briercliffe), wi, 471 - 


Holt (Rishton), vi, 345, 346; chap., 
V1, 347 d 

Holt, Ad. del, vi, 499; Agnes de, 
Vi, gOL vi, go2n > Alex., Vi, 15>, 
359, 392; vil, 322; Alice de, vi, 
505”; vii, 182”; Dorothy, vi, 
390n; Edm., vi, 228”; Edw., 
Mi, TS7, 202, 229, 389" 7 “vin 
3220; Eliz., vi, 389%; Fran., 
vi, 438; vii, 60”; Geo., vi, 
434, 439; Hen. de, vi, 5057; 
Jas., vi, 187, 489 ; Jane, vi, 192"; 
John (del), vi, 434, 438, 503, 
505, 506; Kath. de, vi, 505; 
Lawr., <1, 430; Mare: de, vi, 
506”; Maud del, vi, 409"; 
Oliver, v1, 434”; Rich., ¥1, 228°; 
Rob. (de), vi, 205 ”, 219 n, 228 n, 
352, 389, 392, 40I nN, yo2 Nn; 
vii, 187m, 322; Sir Thos., vi, 
390n; Thos. (de), vi, 505 2; vii, 
gn, 58, 59, 60m, 182, 238; 
Thos. P., vi, 456; Will. (de), vi, 
389 n, 438, 438, 505"; Vil, 
3220 2 NMR Pig Wy, 450° 5 NG 
199", 456; vil, 50”; fam., vi, 
420; Vi, 519” 

Holt House (Colne), vi, 526, 546” 

Holt House (Coppull), vi, 228 ” 

Holuith, see Holleth 

Holynhed, see Hollinshead 

Holvnsnape (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 
2g0 

Homelsco (Kirkland), vii, 314” 

Homrode (Cliviger), vi, 485 ” 

Honford, Hen. de, vi, 260, 261, 
262; Rich. de, vi, 260; Will. de, 
Vi, 201 

Honganridding (Clitheroe), vi, 365 ” 

Honkotes, see Huncoat 

Honne, John, vi, 475” 

Honnolands (Simonstone), vi, 499 ” 

Hood House, see Hudhouse 

Hoole (Little Hoole, Much Hoole), 
vi, 1, 81, 56 n, 88», 149-54; vii, 
BN, 179, 273 3 adv, V1, 1525 
char., v1, 153; ch., vi, 151 ; mans., 
Vi, 33m, 108, 149, 154; Nonconf., 
V1, 153, 1545 sch., vi, 153 

Hoole, Awnes de, vi, 154 2; Amery 
de, vi, 72.2, 153; Anne, vi, 2377; 
Augustine de, vi, 154; Beatrice 
de, vi, 150; Eliz., vii, 284m; 
Hen. de, vi, 150”; John de, vi, 
20m, JIM, 1OIN, 151m, 1543 
vil, 159»; Lettice de, vi, 1507; 
Mary de, vii, 189; Maud de, 
vt, Iorn; Mich. de, vi, 717, 
72; Ralph de, vi, 150”; Rich. 
de, vi, 24, 151”, 154, 170”; 
Rob. de, vi, 26”, 154”; Sim. 
de, vi, 72; Walt. de, vi, 103, 
108 n, 150, 154”; Will. de, vi, 
Tim, 151", 170 Nn; see also Hull 

Houl-ter, hill, vi, 303 

Hooton, see Hutton 

Hope, Chas. S., vii, 245; Vitalis 
de, vii, 2 

Hopersfield (Goosnargh), vii, 199 ” 

Hoppay, Agnes, vi, 475”, 4761; 
Alice, vi, 475; Joan, vi, 475”; 
John, vi, 477; Pet., vi, 475”; 
Rich., vi, 474 2; Rob., vi, 474”, 
4757 

Hopwood, Alice de, vi, 264 n, 326.n, 
328; Eliz., vi, 416; Ellen de, 
vi, 429m; John, vi, 426; vii, 
17”, John T., vi, 239”; Will. 
de, vi, 264 ”, 325 n, 328 n 

Horcockgreves (Hutton), vi, 68” 

Haveteotals Hordischale, see Hother- 
sa. 

Hordorn, see Hardhorn 

Horelaw, hill, vi, 454 

Horelowe (Gt. Harwood), vi, 339 + 


382 


Hore-stone (Wilpshire), vi, 335 
Hore stones (Colne), vi, 527 » 
Horgref Hey, see Hargreave Hey 
Hornby, fee, see Montbegon 
Hornby (Hernby), Alice (de), vii, 
158", 254; Dorothy, vu, 221; 
Edm., vil, 259, 333, 335; Edm.G., 
vii, 333%; Edm. G. S., vii, 333; 
Edw., vii, 334”; Rev. Geoff, 
Vi, 221, 333; Geoff., vu, 259, 
335, 344"; Geo, vi, 199n; 
Rev. Hugh, vil, 203, 264; Hugh, 
vil, 158 n, 166 n, 175 n, 185, 187, 
260; Hugh H., vii, 158"; Hugh 
P.,. vil, 204.7 Jas, va, 15%: Jas. 
J. Vl, 55, 74; Jane, vi, 58H: 
John (de), vii, 167 , 187, 265 n, 
316 n; Jos., vu, 156, 158, 1580, 
167, 184, 264 ”, 200; Marg. (de), 
vil, 158, 158, 166n, 265 n, 208, 
Marg. A., vii, 158”; 
Marg. S., vii, 239”; Margery 
de, vii, 277; Mary A., vii, 
158»; Rev. Phipps J., vii, 266; 
Rich., vii, 158; Rev. Rob., vi, 
299; Rob. de, vii, 158", 265 mn, 
268, 277, 310; Thos. de, vit, 
147; Rev. Will, vii, 206, 207"; 
Will. (de), vii, 41, 53”, 217, 
254”, 265, 277, 281 n, 306m; 
Sir Will. H., vii, 239, 247"; 
Will. H., vii, 239; fam., vi, 246 
Horncastle, Martha, vi, 161 
Horncliff, Agnes de, vi, 131, 207», 
276, 397; Vil, 3, 15; Sir Rob. de, 
vii, 15; Rob. de, vi, 131, 207”, 
276, 397; vii, 3, 15" 
Hornet, Kath., vi, 174”; Will. vi, 
174” 
Horpultre (Howick), vi, 66 
Horridge, Jas., vi, 272" 
Horrobin, Rich., vi, 387 
Horrockfields (Winkley), vii, 14 
Horrockford (Winkley), vii, 13 7 
Horrocks (Winkley), vii, 13 ” 
Horrocks, Jer., vi, 102, 103 , 149, 
152, 153”; Rev. John, vi, 533; 
John, vi, 51”, 57, 518%, 535; 
vii, 78”; Pet., vi, 57; Sam., vii, 
74, 105; see also Horrox 
Horrocksford (Clitheroe), vi, 360, 
306 
Horrox, Jas. H., vi, 518; Rev. 
Will., vi, 440; see also Horrocks 
Horsecarr (Bispham), vi, 1o1 
Horsegate (Dutton), vii, 54” 
Horsehey (Little Pendleton), vi, 


393” 

Horseheys (Chorley), vi, 135 

Horseman’s Hill (Little Carleton), 
vii, 228 

Horseriddington (Claughton), vii, 
328%" 

Horsewell (Clayton-le-Moors), vi, 


417” 
Horsfal (Balderston), vi, 313 
Horsfall, Edw., vii, 270, 319"; 

Ellen, vii, 270 n, 319n 
Horsford, Cecily de, vi, 66”; Rob. 

de, vi, 66n 
Horskar, fam., see Hoskar 
Horstan (Whittle), vi, 34" 
Horteshole (Clitheroe), vi, 366" 
Horwich, Cecily de, vu, 136"; 

Edm. de, vii, 136" 

Hoskar (Horskar), Jas., vii, 165”: 

Rob., vii, 165 2; Will., vii, 144 
Hoskyns, Rev. Edwyn, vi, 452 
Hospitallers, vi, 11, 12, 19, 22, 27, 

28, 32, 36, 51, 99, 72", 73, 95% 

96, 103”, 104m, 105m, 107, 

110M, III, 112, 131, 136, 140, 

154, 173, 175, 176, 180, 180%, 

181, 198, 202, 204, 216, 251, 

408, 525; vil, 13, 16, 27, 29, 29m, 


Hospitallers (cont.) 

34, 35) 50%, 51, 53, 53%, 54, 58, 
59”, 61m, 81”, 97, 98m, 994, 
108, 113, 121, 132, 132%, 134, 
136, 153, 167, 167 ”, 170, 170m, 
174, 179 #, 180 n, 81, 191, 193 n, 
194, 194”, I96n, 199 nH, 209 n, 
212, 213, 271, 271, 272, 281, 
284, 285, 318, 329 n, 330 n, 332; 
Rob. de Manneby, prior of, vii, 
13, 153%; Thos. Weston, prior 
of, vi, 112 

Hotham, Sir John de, vii, 301; 
Maud de, vii, 301 ” 

Hothersall, vi, 230, 380; vii, 36, 
37, 38 %, 43 2, 52, 55”, 50, 59%, 
61-67, 68, 126"; ch., vii, 66; 
man., vii, 63, 279"; Nonconf., 
vii, 67; Rom. Cath., vii, 67 

Hothersall (Hothersill, Huddersall), 
Ad. de, vii, 29”, 63", 64, 647, 
66, 169”; Agnes de, vii, 63 2; 
Alan de, vii, 63 ~; Alice de, vii, 
65”; Amery de, vil, 63 »; Anne, 
vii, 63", 64, 64", 65, 259”; 
Avice de, vii, 65 2; Bern. de, vii, 
64n; Bridg., vu, 135”; Edusa 
de, vii, 64”; Ellen, vil, 647; 
Emma de, vii, 63”; Geo., vii, 
64, 64”; Gerard de, vii, 63”; 
Gilb., vii, 64; Godith de, vii, 
63; Grace, vil, 64; Hugh de, 
vii, 63, 65”; Isabel de, vii, 
64”, 65”; Joan de, vii, 647; 
John (de), vii, 63m, 64, 64%, 
65”, 66n, 169, 209"; Kath. 
(de), vii, 64”, 115”; Margery 
de, vii, 27 ”, 65, 65; Maud de, 
vii, 64”; Nich. de, vii, 667; 
Rich. (de), vii, 63”, 64, o4n, 
65”, 209”, 259”; Rob. de, vi, 
87 n ; vii, 63, 63 7, 64, 64 n, 65 7, 
II5, 169”; Rog. de, vii, 63%, 
64”, 65; Steph. de, vii, 63 n, 
64n, 65”; Swain de, vil, 54%, 
63, 63”; Thos. (de), vi, 236; 
Vil, 27”, 29”, 36, 63, 64, 64%, 
65”, 66”; Ughtred, vil, 34%, 
64”, 66, 125”; Will. (de), vi, 
402 n; vii, 63 n, 64", 65” 

Hothersall Hall (Hothersall), vii, 
61, 65 

Hothwaite, Hen. de, vii, 177%”; 
Will. de, vii, 177” 

Hoton, see Heaton and Hutton 

Hough (Dutton), vii, 57 ” 

Hough (Goosnargh), vii, 205 

Hough (Hogh), Alice de, vi, 50”; 
Ellen de, vi, 50”; John, vi, 90”; 
Rich., vi, 50”; Thos., vi, 92”; 
Will, vii, 190 

Houghton, fam., see Hoghton 

Houghton House Farm (Preston), 
vii, 90 ” 

Houghwellfall (Dutton), vii, 58 

Houkberch (Norbreck), vii, 247 

Houlden, see Holden 

Hourrode (Cliviger), vi, 485 ” 

Housesteads (Freckleton), vii, 
168 n, 170” 

Hovenefurlong (Bretherton), vi, 
104 7” 

How (Longton), vi, 72 1 

How (Haw, Howe), Ad. del, vi, 
72”; Agnes del, vi, 72”; Alice 
del, vi, 72 ~; Amery (del, de la), 
vi, 71”, 72”; Hen. (del, de la), 
vi, 71”, 72”; Isabel del, vi, 
105”; Janet, vii, 181”; John 
(del, de la) vi, 71”, 72; vii, 
181”; Rich., vii, 181”; Will. 
del, vi, 105 7; vii, 181 7 

Howard, Chas. B., vii, 190; Edw., 
vii, 254”; Eliz., vi, 196; Sir 
Fran., vi, 1962; Rev. John, vi, 


INDEX 


Howard (cont.) 

435; John, vii, 78; Philippa, 
vi, 197” 

Howath (Barnacrv), vi, 387; vii, 
193 M, 315, 319, 319 n, 321, 329 n, 
3307 

Howath, Alan de, vii, 227; Cecily 
de, vil, 227 »; Christiana de, vil, 
227", 316", 323m; Gilb. de, 
vu, 227m", 297; Joan de, vii, 
227; Maud de, vii, 227 2; Will. 
de, vii, 328 n; see also Howorth 

Howath Bridge (Howath), vii, 313%” 

Howbeck, see Oubeck 

Howe, earls, vi, 366, 368, 387 n, 
404m, 415; Rich, vi, 3832; 
R. W. P., vi, 371, 404.2, 558” 

Howell, Helen M. M, vi, 419; 
Will., vi, 267 1; Mrs., vi, 341 

Howick, vi, 52, 58, 65-7; char., vi, 
56 ; cross, vi, 65 ; man., vi, 59, 65 

Howick, Sir Ad. de, vii, 2812; 
Ad. de, vi, 66 », 70 n, 71 n, 737; 
Alan de, vi, 66; Alice de, vi, 
63 n, 06 n, 71 n, 73m; Amery de, 
vi, 7In; Avice de, vii, 133”; 
Beatrice de, vi, 66”; Cecily de, 
vii, 227”; Ellen de, vi, 66, 
7in, 73”; Hen. (de), vi, 14, 
57”, OI n, 63 n, 66 Nn, 71 n, 732; 
Hugh de, vi, 66”; Joan de, vi, 
63”, 64, 71”; John de, vi, 66, 
66n, 71m; vii, 288”; Kath., 
vi, 66 x; Marg. de, vi, 61 n, 637; 
Maud de, vii, 79m; Orm de, vi, 
66; Ralph, vi, 667”; Rich. de, 
vi, 62 n, 65, 66, 71 n, 72 n; Rob. 
de, vi, 66”; Rog. de, vi, 66, 
66 »; Sabina de, vi, 66 ; Sim. de, 
vi, 66; vii, 288”; Thos. de, vi, 
73"; vi, 79n; Walt. de, vi, 
jon; Warine de, vi, 66”; Will. 
de, vi, 66, 73” 

Howick Hall (House) (Howick), vi, 
67 ; vil, 77” 

Howorth, Rev. Hen., vi, 435 ; John, 
vi, 521; Thos., vi, 167; seé also 
Howath 

Howson, fam., vi, 380” 

Hoylacks (Trawden), see Heyslacks 

Hoyle (Trawden), vi, 548 

Hoyle, Hen., vi, 251; John, vi, 
251; Will., vi, 437 

Hoyton, see Hoghton 

Hubbersty, Rich., vi, 325; Rob., 
vi, 310, 325; —, Vil, 305 ” 

Hubert, vi, 69” 

Huck, vi, 314”; vii, 117, 166%, 
232, 254” 

Hucnhull, see Ightenhill Park 

Huctrede’s Greave (Salesbury), vi, 


2 

Huddefeld (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 290 

Huddersall, see Hothersall 

Huddeson, see Hudson 

Hudd Lee (Aighton), vii, I 

Huddleston (Hodleston, Huddleton, 
Hudleston), Sir Ad. de, vi, 326, 
326 n, 327, 327”, 328, 339; Vil, 
73; Ad. de, vi, 258, 384; vil, 
55”, 57”; Alice, vi, 327%; 
Andr., vi, 64”; Ant., vi, 63; 
Dorothy, vi, 11 ”, 13 ”, 39, 31%, 
63, 64”, 113”; Sir Edm., vi, 
31”, 63, 64”, 88; Edm., vi, 
Irm, 113”; Ellen, vi, 134”; 
Hen., vi, 11”, 31%, 63”, 04%, 
86 n, 134”; Isabella de, vi, 327; 
Joan (de), vi, 327; Vil, 169; 
Rev. John, vi, 64; John de, vi, 
258, 327; vii, 321”; Jos., Vi, 
64; Kath. de, vi, 259”; Miles, 
vi, 327; Sir Rich. de, vi, 327”; 
Rich. (de), vi, 64”, 254, 258, 
327; vii, 283”, Rob. de, vi, 


383 


Huddleston aad 
258; Sibyl de, vi, 254, 2580; 
Will., vi, 812 ee 169 ; Col., vi, 
290; —, vii, 283; fam., vii, 54” 

Huddreshal, see Hothersall a 

Hudefield (Whalley), vi, 379” 

Hudereshale, Hudcrishale, Huder- 
sale, see Hothersall 

Hudhouse (Habergham Eaves), vi, 
454, 407 

Hudlesden (Newchurch-in-Rossen- 
dale), vi, 438” 

Hudleston, see Huddleston 

Hudley (Haslingden), vi, 431 

Hudrake (Haslingden), vi, 427 

Hudson (Huddeson), Alex., vii, 
117; Chris., vii, 18”, 181m, 
288  ; Ellen, vi, 134”; Hen, vi, 
134”; John, vii, 267, 318%”; 
Marg., vii, 234”; Mary, vii, 
135”; Rich., vii, 288”; Rob., 
vii, 135 ", 267”; Walt., vii, 26; 
Will, (de), vii, 181 n, 234 ” 

Huenathurst (Goosnargh), vii, 192 » 

Hufflen Hall (Habergham Eaves) 

Hugh, vi, 314; vii, 283 2; abbot of 
Kirkstall, vi, 480”; abbot of 
St. Werburgh’s, vi, 120”; 
archbp. of Damascus, vi, 127; 
cantor of York, vii, 217”; 
chaplain, vi, 366, 369”; vii, 
276”; the clerk, vii, 58%; the 
northman, vii, 308; rector of 
Standish, vi, 188 

Hughes, Rev. Chas., vi, 283 

Hughlocpighel (Billington), vi, 328 

Hughson, —, vii, 149 

Hugyn, vi, 374” 

Hugyn, John, vi, 521 

Huitt, John, vi, 530 

Hulcockson, Ad., vi, 225”; Alice, 
vi, 97”, 225%”; Eliz., vi, 97”; 
Hen., vi, 97; John, vi, 225”; 
Margery, vi, 216”; Rob. H., vi, 
2167 

Hulcroft (Standen), vi, 356”, 395 

Hulcrofts (Simonstone), vi, 499 ” 

Hulkar (Tockholes), vi, 281 

Hull, Ad. de, vi, 214”; vii, 56”; 
Alice, vii, 231 2; Chris., vii, 204 ; 
Rev. C., vii, 202”; Edw., vii, 
187”; Eliz. vii, 187, 267; 
Ellen, vii, 234”; Geo., vii, 
223, 229”; Rev. John, vi, 
299; John, vii, 220, 224, 231”, 
2347”, 245; Matth., vii, 242”; 
Rich., vi, 151”, 187”, 2317, 
234”; Rob., vii, 234”, 2427; 
Thos., vii, 234”; Will, vii, 
187”, 231”; Will. W., vi, 245; 
see also Hoole 

Hulliley, see Hilliley 

Hullown, the (Colne), vi, 524 

Hullown beck, vi, 529 

Hulseholes (Church), vi, 402 ” 

Hulton, Little, vii, 157 

Hulton, Ad. de, vi, 253; Agnes 
de, vi, 200m, 245; Alice de, 
vi, 201”; Almarica de, vi, 
200 n; Anne, vi, 500”; Beatrice 
de, vi, 245; Chris., vii, 114; 
Dav. de, vi, 245; Daykin de, vi, 
262; Dionisia de, vi, 253, 256; 
Edw., vi, 77”; Ellen de, vi, 
200n; Eva de, vi, 200”; Hen. 
(de), vi, 200", 272; John, vi, 
50”, 241, 245%; vu, 241 ny, 
248n, 2847; Jordan de, vi, 
200; Kath., vi, 77 2; Lucy, vi, 
163”; Marg., vil, 114, 280n ; 
Margery de, vi, 200”; Maud de, 
vi, 200; Ralph, vi, 77”; Rich. 
de, vi, 200”, 240%, 245, 246”, 
488 n; Rob. (de), vi, 73 %, 200%, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Hulton (covt.) 
zo1n; Koy. de, vi, 200; Thos. 
de, vi, 200 7, 253, 254; Will. (de), 
VI, 163”, 245, 253, 500”; Vil, 
131, 242, 280n; Wul. A., vi, 
57; see also Hilton 

Humblescough (Kirkland), vu, 313 

Humbur (Westby), vii, 175 7 

Hummer, Rob., vu, 113” 

Humphrey, monk, vii, 240 

Humphrey’s Spa (Kirkham), vii, 
151 

Huncoat, vi, 260, 349, 356 m, 409-11, 
426, 510”, 511 #; ch., vi, 411; 
ind., vi, 409; Man., vi, 232, 409, 
424; Nonconf., vi, 411 

Huncoat (Huncoats, Huncotes, 
Huntcoat), Alice de, vi, 51190; 
Ingelram de, vi, 24”; John de, 
vi, 410, 418m, 511, 511 2; Rich. 
de, vi, 511; Thos. de, vi, 418” 

Huncoat Hall (Huncoat), vi, 410-11 

Hundersfield, vi, 428 

Hundred End (Hesketh), vi, 112; 
vii, 80 

Hunecotes, see Huncoat 

Hungrehul (Pleasington), vi, 266 

Hunnecotes, Hunnicoat, see Hun- 
coat 

Hunt (Hunte), Agnes, vii, 1007 ; 
Hen., vi, 153”; vii, 78”; John 
le, vi, 474", 476"; vii, Ioon, 
127; Rich. le, vi, 474 »; Thos., 
vu, 224"; Thurstan, vii, 75 


Iuntcoat, Huntcote, Huntcotes, 
see Huncoat 
IIunteleye (Untley), Ad. de, vi, 


2u2n; Rich. de, vi, 202 n 

Hunter, Jas., vii, 23; John, vii, 
124, 312, 335; Rob., vii, 298; 
Rev. Thos., vi, 318; Thos., vii, 
298, 334 

Hunterholme (Higham), vi, 487, 
512, 513” 

Hunter Law (Colne), vi, 525 

Huntersti (Claughton), vii, 330 

Huntersty (Cuerden), vi, 24 n, 27” 

Huntingdon (Dutton), vii, 54, 57 7, 
597 

Huntingdon, brook, vii, 54” 

Huntingdon, ctss. of, vii, 103, 104 

Huntingdon, Ad. de, vi, 262; 
Beatnx de, vii, 58”; Hugh de, 
vii, 59”; Joan, vii, 59”; John 
de, vii, 55, 59; Rob. de, vii, 
58; Rog. de, vii, 58; Will. 
de, vi, 262, 262 

Huntington, Will. B., vi, 275 

Huntlow, Will. de, vi, 87, 146 

Huntroyde (Huntrode, Huntroid) 
(Simonstone), vi, 497, 499-503 ; 
pk., vi, 500; sundial, vi, 503 

Huntroyde, brook, vi, 497 

Huntroyde House (Simonstone), 
V1, 501-3 

Hupronchelm, Godith de, vii 
193”; Rog. de, vii, 193” 

Hurd (Hurdes, Hurdus), Eliz., vi, 
180n; Geo. vi, 18”, I79n, 
521; Pet., vi, 99m; Thos., vi 
99 n, 486; Will., vi, 371 

Hurel, Alex., vi, 120 2, 339, 339”; 
Marg., vi, 120 n, 339, 339” 

Hurleston (Hurleton), Alice de, vi, 
58 n; Eliz., vi, 73; Gilb, de, 
v1, 73”; Humph., vi, 730; 
Maud de, vi, 73; Rich. (de), 
vi, 58”, 73”; Thos., vi, 73” 

Hurtociord, see Horrocksford 

Hurst (Aighton), vii, 17 ” 

Hurst (Dilworth), vii, 52 

Hurst (Goosnargh), vii, 192 n 

Hurst, Ad. de (del), vii, 48n, 65n; 
Agnes de, vii, 657; Edw., vii, 
156 2; John, vi, 520”; vii, 34; 


Hurst (cont.) 
Marg., vii, 156 ; Rich. (de, del), 
vi, 40, 48n, 65", 75; Rog. 
de, vu, 45; fam., vii, 49” 

Hurst Green (Aighton), vi, 96; vii, 
I, 19, 20 

Hurstrange, Award, vi, 253 ” 

Hurstwood, vi, 349, 459, 458, 459, 
473-8; man., vi, 477 

Hurstwood, brook, vi, 474 

Hurstwood, Ad. de, vi, 469%, 
474, 475m; Gilb. de, vi, 477"; 
John de, vi, 475”; Will, vi, 
475”, 478 ; 

Hurstwood Hall (Hurstwood), vi, 


478 
Husband, Rich., vii, 59” 
Hussey, John, vii, 265; Will. L., 


vii, 148 

Hutchenhey (Goosnargh), vii, 
199” 

Hutchinson, John, vi, 541; —, vi, 
370N 


Huttemon, vi, 290 

Hutton, vi, 52, 53%, 55”, 66n, 
67-9; vii, 108; chap., vi, 69; 
char., vi, 56; fishery, vi, 72”; 
man., vi, 67; mill, vi, 68; sch., 
vi, 56, 67 ; 

Hutton, Abel de, vi, 69 2; Ad. de, 
vi, 69, 98”; Antigonia de, vi, 
67; Cecily (de), vi, 67”; vii, 
153; Chas. W. N., vi, 190; Ellis 
de, vi, 53”, 67, 68n, 69; vii, 
153m, 179n, 180, 180n, 18190; 
Emma de, vi, 69”; Gilb. de, vi, 
g8n; Iseult de, vi, 67”; Sir 
John de, vi, 98”; John de, vi, 
o7, 154”; Margery de, vi, 
67"; Mary, vi, 64”; Maud de, 
vii, 134”; Ravenkil de, vi, 
154”; Rich. de, vi, 67”; Rob. 
de, vi, 53 ”, 67 n, 72 n; vii, 153 7, 
179”; Rog. de, vi, 68n, 69”; 
Vli, 153, 179, 180, 181 ; Sapientia 
de, vi, 67, 69; Thos. de, vii, 
134”; Will (de), vi, 98”; vii, 
24ONn 

Hutton Grange (Hutton), vi, 68” 

Hutton Moss (Hutton), vi, 68 ” 

Huuerbeleisick (Dutton), vii, 54” 

Huyton, man., vi, 294 

Huyton, Emma de, vii, 34 »; Hugh, 
vi, 160; Matth. de, vii, 113”; 
Maud de, vii, 113”; Nich., vi, 
73 n; Will. (de), vi, 99  ; vii, 34.” 

Hwelleage, Hweallaege, see Whal- 
ley 

Hwldismont (Freckleton), vii, 170 ” 

Hwytingham, see Whittingham 

Hyanson, Ralph, vi, 407" 

Hychum (Staynall), vii, 252 

Hyde, Alex. de, vii, 109, 193”; 
Cecily de, vii, 33 2; Gilb. de, vii, 
212%”; John de, vii, 193 n; Nich. 
de, vii, 193 n ; Rob. de, vii, 33”; 
Rog., vii, 110; Thos., vi, 372, 
533; vu, 110”; Will, vii, 197”; 
—, Vil, 251 % 

eee Park (Fulwood), vii, 137, 
13 

Hyefurlong (Gt. Harwood), vi, 340 

Hyett, Jas., vi, 85, 86”; Will., vi, 
86n 

Hyles, the (Brockholes), vii, 110 ” 

Hyndburn, brook, vi, 338, 344, 347, 
399, 401 ”, 417 

Hyndburnshaw (Gt. Harwood), vi 
3397 

Hyndebranceis (Read), vi, 506” 

Hyndman, Miss, vii, 103 

Hyngilka (Winmarleigh), vii, 306 » 

Hypper, vi, 475 ” 

Hysokecroft — (Ribbleton), 
Ilon 


z 


vii, 


384 


Ichtenhill, see Ightenhill Park 

Ickornshaw (Icornshaw) (Yorks 
vi, 524", 525 

Icornhurst (Accrington), vi, 425 

Idesforth (Ribchester), vii, 50 

Iggesyke (Longton), vi, 73 

Ightenhill Park (Ightenhill), vi, 
230%, 349, 441, 443, 448, 450, 
454, 463, 487-9, 491, 524", 537, 
543”; vii, 306  ; chap., vi, 489; 
coal mines, vi, 547; vii, 487; 
man., vi, 232, 233”, 361 m, 468, 
469, 470, 487, 493, 513”, 516; 
man. house, vi, 488, 489; mills, 
vi, 489; pk., vi, 488, 489, 512 n; 
quarry, vii, 487 

Ignaging (dance), vii, 220 

Ikin, Thos. B., vi, 141 

Ilkeston, Kath. de, vi, 281"; Nich. 
de, vi, 281” 

Illingworth, Rich., vi, 554 

Image House (Chorley), vi, 129 

Imps, the (Impes) (Church), vi, 
400 2, 402” 

Imps, Little (Whalley), vi, 381 

Ince, Alice de, vi, 95”, 116%; 
Chris., vi, 21 ; Frances S., vi, 21; 
Gilb. de, vi, 95”, 116”; Hugh 
de, vi, 200”, 201; Mary de, 
vi, 194; Maud de, vi, 200; 
Rich. de, vi, 200; Thos., vii, 
114M 

Independents, vi, 147, 248, 288, 
319, 344, 350, 436, 453”, 473; 
vii, 103 

Ineskyp, see Inskip 

Ing (Barrowford), vi, 542 

Ing (Trawden), vi, 552 ” 

Ingeland (Chorley), vi, 140» 

Ingesyke (Longton), vi, 70” 

Ingham, Alice, vi, 468”; Edw., 
vi, 436; Janet, vi, 456; John, 
vi, 325, 445%, 447, 4517, 468 n, 
489; Marg., vi, 456”; Reg., vi, 
436; Reynold, vi, 430; Rich, vi, 
251, 445”, 468%; Rob. vi, 
445%, 447, 447", 4517, 453, 
408; Thos., vi, 229; Will. vi, 
404”, 445%; vii, 42, 204; fam., 
vi, 499 2 

Inghamites, vi, 521, 535, 552 

Ingilby (Ingleby), John, vi, 446; 
Kath., vi, 446; Marg., vi, 446; 
Thos., vii, 65” 

Inglefield, vi, 233” 

Ingleridding (Preston), vii, 79” 

Inglesle, fam., see Lea 

Inglewhite (Goosnargh), vii, 191; 
man., vii, 199 

Inglewhite Green (Goosnargh), vii, 
IQI, 206” 

Inglisle, man., see Lea, English 

Inglisle, fam., see Lea 

Ingol, vii, 72, 79, 80, Ioon, 119 Nn, 
129, 133 , 134, 135, 309; char., 
vii, 91; Holy well, vii, 129; 
man., vii, 134 

Ingol (Ingoll), Alan de, vii, 130%; 
Aldred de, vii, 134; Avice de, 
vii, 134; Gamel de, vil, 134; 
Gilb. de, vii, 134; John de, vi, 
227”; vii, 292 ; Margery de, vu, 
130”; Walt. de, vii, 134; Will. 
de, vil, 134 7 

Ingolhead (Broughton), vil, 117, 
120, 121” 

Ingolhead, Cecily de, vii, 120%; 
Christiana de, vii, 136; Edm. 
de, vii, 120”; Helen de, vii, 
120; Joan de, vii, 120 #; Rich., 
vii, 120; Thos. de, vu, 120%, 
136”; Will. de, vii, 136” - 

Ingolhead Hall (Broughton), vu, 
120” a 

Ingolriding (Preston), vil, 99 


Ingool, see Ingol ; 
Ingram, Anne, vi, 493; Fllen, vi, 


93 

Tagrani stub (Whithalgh), vi, 288 

Ingrave Farm (Eccleston), vi, 164” 

Ings (Colne), vi, 453 

Ings beck, vi, 372, 552, 558 

Ings End (Twiston), vi, 558 

Inscip, Insckyp, see Inskip 

Inscriptions, vi, 495”, 531”, 533; 
vii, 82 m, 112, 295; 16th cent., vi, 
185, 353, 354; 17th cent., vii, 
221, 2219” 

Inskip (Inskip with Sowerby), vii, 
129, 163”, 229M, 200, 201 nN, 
264 , 274%, 277, 279-82, 321 0; 
chap., vii, 282; char., vu, 267 ; 
ch., vii, 282; man., vi, 76”; 
vii, 277 ", 279; mill, vii, 281”; 
Nonconf., vii, 282; Rom. Cath., 
vii, 282 

Inskip, Ad. de, vii, 268m, 271, 
281m; Agnes de, vil, 2717; 
Alan de, vii, 281; Alice de, 
vii, 190 2; John, vii, 86”; Rich. 
de, vii, 190”, 203%, 271, 
281n; Rob. de, vii, 190”; 
Thos. de, vii, 271, 281”; Will. 
de, vii, 271 » ; —, vi, 299 

Inskip Hall (Inskip), vii, 280 

Inskyp, see Inskip 

Intack, the (Clayton), vi, Ion 

Intakes (Alston and Hothersall), 
vii, 64” 

Ton, Will., vi, 114, 128 

Iperbolt, see Parbold 

Ipre, Sir Ralph de, vii, 321 2 

Ireland, Rob., dk. of, see Oxford, 
Rob., earl of 

Ireland, Ad. de, vi, 265; Clemency, 


vii, 127”; Ellen, vi, 1067; 
Geo., vil, 164”; Sir John de, 
vi, 181”; John de, vi, 265, 


556”; Marg., vii, 164”; Rich. 
de, vi, 109”; vii, 271”; Thos. 
de, vi, 121 »; Will. (de), vi, 263 ; 
vii, 127”, 271” 

Iron manufacture, vi, 278, 280, 
338, 442 5 vil, 27, 92 

Ironstone mines, vi, 423, 425; Vu, 
141 

Irvingites, vi, 248; vil, 104 

Irwell (Newchurch-in-Rossendale), 
V1, 439% 

Isabella, princess, vii, 303 

Isabella, queen, vi, 57%, 58%, 
233, 264 ”, 265, 273, 302%, 327, 
361 n; vii, 16, 41, 47, 55”, 168, 
173; 325” 

Iseult (Isolda), d. of Rob., vii, 192, 
324; w., of Rob., vii, 32” 

Isherwood (Cliviger), vi, 483 

Isherwood, Anne, vii, 14”; Ant., 
vii, 14”; John, vi, 285; Marg., 
vi, 285; Rob., vi, 387; Will. 
vi, 468 n 

Isolda, see Iseult 

Ivette, vii, 98 

Ivornsligh (Foulridge), vi, 547” 

Ivye pool, see Evyn 


Jack Green (Brindle), vi, 75 

Jackhey (Cliviger), vi, 481 ” 

Jack Place (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 407 

Jackson, Barth., vii, 282, 299; 
Brian, vii, 282 ” ; Chas., vii, 58 1; 
Christabel, vi, 402 »; Chris., vi, 
407 2, 411, 432 2, 475 2, 478, 490, 
5333; vii, 190; Ellen, vii, 213 7; 
E. H., vi, 370; Geoff., vi, 27”; 
Geo., vi, 432; Gilb., vi, 28; 
Gilb. T., vi, 27”; Hen., vi, 
447; Hen. W., vi, 229; Jas., 


7 


INDEX 


Jackson (cont.) 

vi, 402 2; Jane, vi, 261 n; Janct, 
vil, 27”, 411; Joan, vi, 277; 
John, vi, 27 n, 237 n, 201 n, 206, 
298", 411, 468, 490; vii, 
258 n; Jonathan, vii, 319 n, 320; 
Lettice, vi, 407”, 439; Mary, 
vi, 490; Matth., vi, 411; Pet., 
vi, 520; vii, 291; Kich., vi, 3», 
27m, 28, 28n, 478; vii, 103 n, 
320; Rob., vi, 478; Thos., vi, 
27”, 447; vii, 81; Thos. M., vi, 
541; —, Vl, 524”; fam., vi, 
26 n>} see also Jacson 

Jackson Hey (Ribbleton), vii, 108 

Jackson’s Ridge (Irawden), vi, 548 

Jacobite rising, vii, 77, 203 

ce ae John, vi, 55; Kinton, vi, 

o 

Jacson, Chas. R., vii, 128; Geo., 
vii, 128; see also Jackson 

James I, vi, 36, 40, 45; vii, 75, 139, 
1657” 

James, the tailor, vii, 169 n 

James, Edw. G., vi, 147 

Jameson, Rev. —, vi, 312” 

Jankin, vi, 299 ” 

Jarman, see German 

Jarvis Field (Habergham Eaves), 
vi, 456” 

Jauden House 
50” 

Jay, see Gey 

Jebb, Ant., vi, 109 

Jefirey Hill (Thornley), vii, 34 

Jeffreys, Will., vi, 206 

Jellicoe, Eliz. J., vi, 387”; S., vi, 
3877 

Jenkin, John, vi, 555” 

Jenkinson (Jenkynson), Anne, vii, 
78n; Eliz., vii, 78”; Ellen, vil, 
306 n ; Grace, vii, 78; Jas., vii, 
44”; John, vii, 78, 299-300; 
Ralph, vi, 66”; Rob., vil, 44%, 
269; Thos., vii, 306”; Will, 
vi, 273 2, 277"; vil, 447” 

Jenny, Hen., vii, 255, 265 

Jeppe Knave Grave (Wiswell), vi, 
396 

Jepson, Eliz., vii, 139”, 1417; 
Thos., vii, 139 ” 

Jervois, Sampson T. H., vi, 558 

Jews, vi, 249; Vil, 36, 251 

Joan, queen of Scotland, vii, 41 ” 

Joan, w. of Gilb., vii, 114”; w. of 
John, vii, 168; w. of Rich., vi, 
34 n; w. of Will., vi, 72 7 

Johanruyding (Walton), vi, 298 ” 

John, king, vi, 29 », 48, 158 n, 282, 
338; vu, 63, 69, 83”, 108, 129, 
132, 145 #, 153, 159, 187, 1877, 
189 n, 214 2, 229 N, 239%, 240, 
256, 260, 285, 333 x 

John, vi, 475, 480, 548; Vil, 
116 n, 168 n, 272”; b.of Geoff., 
dean of Whalley, vi, 356”; the 
chapman, vii, 281”; the clerk, 
vi, 295, 305 %, 367%, 451%; VU, 
89; constable of Chester, v1, 
291; the cook, vi, 71%; the 
curate, vi, 299; the ferryman, 
vi, 61, 117; the folder, vi, 
444; the hermit, vi, 299; the 
judge, vi, 150m”, I51%, the 
miller, vi, 70”; the milner, vi, 
11 ”; the porter, vi, 2147; priest 
of Blackburn, vi, 239%”; priest 
of Douglas, vi, 1807; priest of 
Poulton, vii, 223; priest of 
Whalley, vi, 357”; the salwaller 
(sauner), vii, 1607, 2160 N,; the 
spenser, vii, 131%; the tailor, vi, 
977; vii, 292; the ward, vi, 39” 

Johnson, Alex., vii, 264%, 2653 
Allen, vii, 264”; Anne, vu, 


385 


(Ribchester), vii, 


Johnson (cont.) 

264; Rev. Arth. F., vi, 344; 
Eliz., vii, 264; Hen., vi, 371; 
vil, 74, 179; Junet, vi, 35”, 
John, vi, 19 ”, 22, 66 , 74, 181, 
189, 191; Jos., vii, 13; Julalia, 
vil, 264”; Lawr., vi, 205 ”; vil, 
53”, 130"; Marg., vi, 516, 537; 
Mary, vii, 264 ” ; Ralph, vi, 66 n; 
Rich., vi, 229”, 373”; vii, 
264; Kob., vi, 160; Thos., 
vi, 191, 204”; vii, 18, 35, 42; 
Tryphosa, vi, 19m, I10n, 1647; 
Will, vi, 35”, 358; vii, 136%, 
263”, 204; W., vii, 265; Rev. 
—, vi, 333”; fam., vii, 102, 
102 n, 133” 

Johnstone, Jas. A. M., vi, 496 

Joiner stones (Trawden), vi, 552 

Jollice, Rob., vii, 250”; Thos., vii. 
216, 250n 

Jollicrofts (Adlington), vi, 218 7 

Jollie (Jolly), Edw., vii, 225; Maj. 
Jas., vi, 16”; Jes., vi, 4167; 
John, vii, 267; Thos., vi, 381, 
382 n, 394, 396, 416, 423, 496, 505 

Jollybrand, see Gillibrand 

Jolly Mill (Standish), vi, 183 

Jones, Alice, vii, 107 2; Hugh, vii, 
1o7n; Jane, vii, 58”, 107”: 
John, vi, 153 2; John B., vii, 25 ; 
Mary, vii, 149”; Sam., vi, 153 ; 
Thos., vii, 58 2, 107 

Jonesson, John, vii, 62”; Will, 
vii, 62” 

Jordan, vi, 548; vii, 158”; the 
carpenter, vi, 506%; the clerk, 
vii, 57 ” 

Jordan houstead (Church), vi, 401 ” 

Jordansworth (Heath Charnock), 
vi, 215” 

Jordanwell Syke (Colne), vi, 525” 

Josce, clerk, vii, 41 7, 46” 

Josiana, d. of Rob. dean of Whal 
ley, vi, 355” 

Joule, W., vii, 56 

Joy, John, vii, 187 

Judfield (Colne), vi, 527 . 

Judison, Ad., vi, 272; John, vi, 272 

Juet, Ad. vi, 180”; Hen., vi, 
180 Z 

Jugeler Ridding (Preston), vii, 97 # 

Juger sylvere, vii, 34.” 

Jumbles (Mitton), vil, 14 : 

Jump, Hugh, vi, 111; John, vi, 
113; Rob., vi, 111; Will., vi, 113 

Juste, Ad., vi, 474”; Rob., vi, 

n 
eon Rob., vi, 123”; Will, 
archbp. of Canterbury, vi, 240, 
357) 404 %, 432 2, 450% 


Kagildegrene, see Padiham Green 
Kagildesyke (Hapton), vi, 5117 
Kailscrooks (Wrightington), vi, 


bie % . . 
Kaleyards (Charnock Richard), vi, 
206 ” : 
Kar, the (Salesbury), vi, 253 
Karkesti (Ribchester), vil, 57 
Karleton, Karlton, see Carleton 
Karr, see Carr i 
Katelaw Syke (Lea), vil, 130% 
Katerhalle, see Catterall 
Kate’s Pad, see Dane’s Pad 
Kaun, see Colne : 
Kay, John, vi, 88; Rev. Rog., vi, 
426; Rev. Thos., vi, 451; —) 
vi, 310, 425% 
Kays, Hen., v1, 87 oe 
Kay-Shuttleworth, Janet, vi, 4043 
Sir J. PP. VL 464, 495; Sir 
Ughtred J., vi, 280, 464; see also 
Shuttleworth 
49 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Kearsley, Jas., vii, 156"; Marg., 


vil, 156" 
Keating, Rev. J., vii, 7" 
Kechyn, fam., see Kitchen 
Keck, Ant. J., vi, 106”; Eliz., vi, 
106"; Geo. A. L., vi, 106n; 
Hen. L. P., vi, 106"; —, V1, 151 
Keckwich, Ad. de, vi, 190 n 
Keelin, vi, 428 ; 
Keighley, man. (Yorks), vii, 280" 
Keighley Green (Burnley), vi, 448 n, 


453 ; : fe 
Kekilpenny (Kigelpeni), Alice, vu, 
79n; Hen., vi, 253; Ralph, vii, 


79n 

Kelbrick (Barmacre), vu, 315 

Keldwellbreck (Stalmine), vii, 252 ” 

Kelegrymesarch, Kelfgrimeshereg, 
Kelgremargh, Kelgrimesarth, 
Kelgrimisarde, see Kellamergh 

Kelgrimoles (Kelgrimoll)} (Layton), 
vii, 215”, 216m, 249m; anc. 
cemetery, Vii, 214” 

Kilke (Haslingden), vi, 430 

Kelkemath, Godith de, vu, 160”; 
Will. de, vii, 160" 

Kellamergh, vi, 58”; vi, 143, 144, 
150, 157, 159-61, 166m, 172M, 
173", 201 n, 285; man., vu, 159 

Kellamergh (Kellermargh), Ad. de, 
vii, 160; Beatrice de, vii, 
160m; Clarice de, vii, 160”; 
Eda de, vii, 160; Gilb. de, vii, 
1von; Hen. de, vii, 1607; 
John de, vii, 160; Jordan de, 
vil, 160m, 161”; Marg. de, vii, 


1von; Rich. de, vii, 160”; 
Rob. de, vii, 160 n; Rog. de, vii, 
1yom; Sim. de, vu, 160”; 


Siward de, vii, 160n; Will. de, 
Vii, Ison 

Kelet, Over (Bolton-le-Sands), vii, 
270" 

Kellet (Kellett), Marg., vi, 5”; 
Mary, vu, 1172; Rich., vil, 117; 
Rob., vii, 289%”; Thos., vii, 
108 n 

Kell-t House (Walton), vi, 296 

Kelley, Edw., vi, 299 

Kellor House (Habergham Eaves), 
vi, 454 

Kelsimshargt, see Kellamergh 

Keltontrer, vi, 270oNn 

Kemisdoles (Church), vi, 402 

Kemp (Kempe), Lawr., vil, 148 1, 


204 

Kemple End (Longridge Fell), 
vii, 2" 

Kenandesaker (Kirkland), vii, 313 ” 

Kendal (Westmld.), vii, 182, 2L9 n, 
270, 270 N, 300, 301 

Kendal heys (Ribchester), vii, 49 

Kendall (Kendal), Chas. E., vi, 80; 
John, vi, 373"; vii, 1387; 
Mabel de, vi, 225”; Maud de, 
vii, 208 m; Rich. (de), vi, 3697; 
vil, 108m, 230; Rob. de, vii, 
51m; Rog. de, vi, 225”; Thos. 
(de), vu, 107”, 205”; Will, vi, 
558; —, V1, 372 0 

Kenhegh (Trawden), vi, 552” - 

Kenlis, Ld., see Bective, earl of 

Kennedy, Berry, vii, 78" 

Kennett, Cuth., vi, 450 

Kenningfield (Ribchester), vii, 58” 

Kenolmarsh (Kenwolmersh), Will., 
vu, 223”; W., vi, 87 

Kenwrick, vi, 498 

Kenyon, Ad. de, vi, 291”; Alan 
de, vi, 406; Alice de, vi, 406; 
Chris., vi, 425; Edw., vi, 425; 
Ellen de, vi, 221, 330; Geo., vi, 
425”; Janet, vi, 425; Joan, 
vil, 140m; Rev. John, vi, 452; 
John, vi, 4257; Jordan de, vi, 


Kenyon (cont.) 
330; Marg., vi, 425”; Matth., 
vl, 140, 142, 221; Ralph, vi, 
425m; Rog., vi, 357, 407%, 
425, 426, 523"; Vil, 36; 
Thos., i, £25; Will, va, 4253 
vii, 124; Mrs., vi, 425 

Keppel, Bert. W. A., vii, 311; 
Gol. Edw. G. W., vil, 311-2; 
Dr. Fred., vii, 311 »; Fred., vii, 
3110; Fred: Wo; wu, 3157; 
Louisa, vii, 3112; Rev. Will. 
A.W., vii, 311 2; Col. Will. H.A., 
vii, 311 ” 

Kerby, Jas. T., vii, 204, 205; see 
also Kirkby 

Keriall Lane (Marsden), vi, 525” 

Kershaw (Kirshaw), Abel, vi, 1677; 
Agnes, vi, 438m”; Alex., vi, 85, 
97, 100, III, 167, 206; Alex, 
N., vi, 17; Alice, vi, 438 ; Chris., 
vi, 4382; Edm., vi, 167, 167; 
Edm. N., vi, 111, 158, 167, 178; 
Eliz., vi, 167; Gilb., vi, 438; 
Jas., vi, 167, 273, 280n, 440; 
Rev. J. C., vi, 297, 299; John, 
vi, 438, 439, 441; Mary, vi, 167 2; 
Sibyl, vi, 167” 

Keteue’s Hurst (Salesbury), vi, 
2530 

Ketelsworth (Marton), vii, 240” 

Ketlis croft (Eccleshill), vi, 279 ” 

Kettel, vi, 69” 

Kettlesholmewathwra 
vii, 241” 

Keuerdale, see Cuerdale 

Keurden (Chorley), see Cuerden 

Keurden, fam., see Kuerden 

Key, Thos., vi, 299; Will, vi, 23 

Keyhouse (Croston), vi, 95” 

Iuibbil, Ad., vi, 374”; Hugh, vi, 
374"; Ralph, vi, 3747; Rich., 
vi, 374”; Rob., vi, 374 7 

Kiddrow (Hab-rgham Eaves), vi, 


(Marton), 


454 

Kidplagh (Wor>thorne), vi, 477 ” 

Kidroe, see Kiddrow 

Ikidsnape (Goosnargh), vii, 73, 191 ; 
man., vii, 198 

Kidsnape, Jordan de, vii, 198 » 

Kigelpeni, see Kekilpenny 

Kighley, Alice de, vi, 553 7; Anne, 
vii, 280; Cecily, vii, 2807; 
Chris., vil, 280”; Clemency de, 
vil, 275, 280; Constance, vii, 
280n; Eliz., vi, 22, 28”; vii, 
10g n, 139, 198 n, 280”; Ellen 
de, vil, 62 n, 277 n, 280; Emma 
de, vi, 366”; Geo., vii, 288”; 
Sir Gilb. de, vii, 62, 278n, 
280n; Gilb. de, vi, 509”; vii, 
269 n, 277 n, 280; Sir Hen. (de), 
vi, 28 n, 372 n; vii, 274”, 277 N, 
273 n, 280, 281 n; Hen. (de), vi, 
122”; vil, 198 n, 277 ”, 279-80, 


329, 332”; Hugh (de), vii, 
139”, 195, 280; Isabel, vii, 
280n; Jas., vii, 195, 195%”, 


280n; Joan de, vi, 477”, 509; 
vii, 280; Sir John, vii, 2807; 
John (de), vi, 134, 509”; vii, 
195, 213”, 280, 329”; Kath. 
(de), vii, 280, 280; Marg. de, 
vii, 269”, 280; Mary, vii, 
280; Nich. de, vi, 477”, 509; 
vii, 280 »; Ralph, vii, 280 ; Sir 
Rich. (de), vi, 509”; vii, 261, 
277, 280; Rich. de, vi, 134; vii, 
274”; Rob. (de), vii, 195”, 
280”; Roland, vi, 122; Thos. 
de, vii, 280 n ; Will. de, vi, 366 7, 
5092; —, vii, 193; fam., vii, 
183 n, 282 

Kildare, John Clayton, dean of, 
vii, 138” 

386 


Kilgreen (Cuerden), vi, 24 

Kilgrimol, Kilgrimoles, see Kel. 
grimoles 

Kilgrimosse (Lytham), vii, 216 » 

Killheys (Longton), vi, 56" 

Killinsough (Kullanshagh, Killawne- 
shauge), vil, 137, 137", 1389" 

Kilmorey (Kilnemurrie), Ld., vii 
318; Rich., v-ct., vu, 272 a: 
Rob., vsct., vii, 272", 303; 
Eleanor, vsctss., vii, 272 m, 303 

Kilnbutts (Church), vi, 402 » 

Kilncarr (Wheelton), vi, 37 1, 49 n 

Kilncroft (Burnley), vi, 445 

Kilncroftfield (Tarmacre), vii, 271 n 

Kilnehalgh (Whittingham), vii, 
209 n 

Kilnemurrie, see Kilmorey 

Kilne Well Syke (Wymondhouses), 
Vi, 394" 

Kilnstead (Tarnacre), vii, 271 

Kilnyard (Kirkham), vii, 151 

Kilworth, Rich., vii, 34 

Kindesley, Kath., vi, 140; Will. 
vi, 140” 

Kinersyke (Garstang), vii, 311 

King, Jas., vi, 361, 371, 558; John, 
vi, 362”, 3747; vii, 25; Rich., 
vii, 107; Sam., vii, 63»; Thos., 
vi, 558 ; Walker, bp. of Rochester, 
vi, 361; Will, vi, 3742; — 
alderman, vii, 283 

Kingley (Chorley), vi, 140 

Kingley, fam., see Kingsley 

Kingsley (Chorley), vi, 129 

Kingsley (Kingley), Christiana, vi, 
140%”; Isabel, vi, 140”; Rich. 
de, vi, 140”; Rob., vi, 140; 
Thos., vi, 140; Will. (de), vi, 
14on 

Kingston, Rich., vi, 87 

Kinsacre (Kirkland), vii, 314 

Kippax (Yorks), vii, 41” 

Kippax, John, vi, 404 ”, 432, 440 n, 
538, 540, 549; Rev. Rich., vi, 
452; Rich., vi, 451, 468n, 496, 
540; Rev. Will., vi, 344; Will, 


V1, 343 

Kirby, see Kirkby 

Kirden (Chorley), see Cuerden 

Kirk, Ad. del, vi, 26; Avice del, 
vi, 26; Edw., vii, 191; John 
del, vi, 79; Thos. de, vii, 192 n; 
—, vii, 193 ” 

Kirkam, see Kirkham 

Kirkandreas, bar. of, vi, 304” 

Kirkby, man., vii, 285 

Kirkby, South (Yorks), vi, 513 ” 

Kirkby (Kirby), Ad. de, vi, 170%”; 
Agnes de, vi, 170”; Alex. de, 
vi, 170”, 171m; Alice de, vi, 
170”; Clemence, vii, 270; Edw., 
vu, 271”, 299; Eleanor de, vii, 
309; Eliz., vii, 270; Ellen (de), 
vii, 268, 269, 270n; Geo., vi, 
67”; vil, 30”, 174, 181%, 
200”, 254, 265, 270, 329”, 
332; Gilb. de, vi, 170”; Hen., 
vi, 174; vii, 263; Isabel, vii, 
270; Joan, vii, 269, 270; John 
(de), vi, 169, 170 n, 171 n; vil, 
147, 226 n, 268, 269 n, 270, 274 ”, 
280 n, 309; Kath. de, vi, 170”; 
Marg. (de), vii, 274m, 277"; 
Margery de, vi, 154; vil, 240n, 
274; Pet. de, vii, 268; Sir Rich., 
vi, 154, 170”; Vil, 269 m, 274; 
Rich. (de), vi, 169”, 170; vu, 
175”, 268, 277; Rob. (de), vi, 
171, 174; Rog. (de), vi, 170%, 
171”, 175m", 176n, 177", 179; 
vii, 268, 269, 277”; Roland 
(Rowland), vi, 171”, 229”, 
Thos., vi, 173 ”; vii, 175 ”, 261 1, 
270, 271; Will. (de), vi, 61%, 


Kirkby (cont.) 
118 n, 170%, 171 ”; Vii, 30”, 70, 
181”, 234”, 240”, 266, 270, 
271 n, 322 n, 329”; fam., vi, 73; 
see also Kerby 

Kirkby Lonsdale (Westmld.), ch., 
vii, 253 7 

Kirkclough (Colne), vi, 524” 

Kirkclough Head (Trawden), vi, 


52 0 

Kirkcroft (Tarnacre), vii, 271 

Kirkdale (W. Derby), vi, 58” 

Kirkeham, Kirkeheim, see Kirkham 

Kirkelund, see Kirkland 

Kirkflat (Rawcliffe), vii, 271 ” 

Kirkfurlong (Bilborrow), vii, 332 ” 

Kirkgate (Clitheroe), vi, 365%, 
368 n 

Kirkgate (Preesall), vii, 256 ” 

Kirkhall, Thos., vi, 78 

Kirkham, vii, 68, 71, 90”, 91, 137, 
143, 150-53, 217, 253%, 274, 
288 n; adv., vi, 274, 415, 534; 
vii, 145; chant., vii, 163 ”; char., 
vii, 149; ch., vi, 55”; vii, 144; 
ind., vii, 150; man., vil, I51; 
mkt. cross, vii, 150; mkts. and 
fairs, vii, 151; mill, vii, 152, 
152”; Nonconf., vii, 152; sch., 
vii, I20, 150” 

Kirkham, Ad. de, vii, 71 ”, 1457; 
Agnes, vii, 183 2; Amabil de, 
vii, 180 » ; Anne, vii, 183 n; 
Dav. de, vii, 116 ~; Hen., vii, 
183 ; Jordan de, vii, 98 x, 
146”, 192”; Marg., vii, 183”; 
Maud de, vii, 116”; Ralph de, 
vii, 152”, 180m”; Rich. de, vi, 
92”, 98n; vii, 192”; Rob. de, 
vi, 299; vii, 151 m, 183 2; Thos. 
(de), vi, 128; vil, 116m, 144, 
180, 291; Walt. de, vii, 98”; 
Will. de, vii, 97”, 98%, 1467, 
151”, 179 n, 180 n, I92n 

Kirkham Priory (Yorks), vii, 303 7 

Kirkhouse, man. (Goosnargh), vii, 
196 

Kirkhouse (Wyresdale), vii, 314” 

Kirkland, vii, 291, 293, 297%, 
313-15; cross, vii, 313; man., 
vii, 313; mill. vii, 314; sch., vil, 


315 

Kirkland, Alice de, vii, 313; Joan 
de, vii, 313”; John de, vii, 
313”; Kath. de, vu, 3137”; 
Lawr. de, vii, 313 ~; Marg. de, 
vii, 313; Nich. de, vii, 3137”; 
Rob. de, vii, 313”; Will. de, 
vu, 313 ” 

Kirkland Hall (Kirkland), vii, 314 

Kirkley Water, vi, 552” 

Kirkman, Bald. the, vii, I007” ; 
H., vi, 114 ”; Rob. the, vii, 46 7 ; 
Rog. the, vii, 100 ” 

Kirks Place (Barton), vii, 127 ” 

Kirkstall Abbey (Yorks), vi, 266, 
400”, 409, 410”, 4II, 4127, 
424, 426, 451, 471, 479, 480; 
Ad., abbot of, vi, 457 

Kirkstile, the (Preston), vii, 79 ” 

Kirkstile, Amery de, vii, 100%” ; 
Emma del, vii, 79”; Hen. del 
(de), vii, 79”, 100”; Rog. de, 
vii, 100 ” 

Kirshaw, see Kershaw 

Kitchen (Kechyn, Kitchin), Alice, 
vi, 60”, 61%”; vii, 333; Anne, 
vii, 138”, 333; Barnaby, vi, 
60 n, 61 ”, 413 ; vii, 180 n, 260”, 
333; Edw., vii, 121”; Eliz., 
vi, 413; vii, 333; Grace, vii, 
333; Jane, vu, 333%, 334%”; 
John, vii, 297, 333; Rog., vii, 
291; Thos., vii, 128”; Will., 
vii, 289 n 


INDEX 


Kitson, Ad., vi, 1807; Emma, vi, 
180 2; Thos., vi, r80 ” 
Kiuerdale, see Cuerdale 
Knaresborough, Alice de, vii, 107  ; 
Gilb. de, vii, 107 n 
Knavecastle(Cnavnecastel, Knauen- 
castel), Hen., vi, 485; John de, 
vi, 485”; Rob. de, vi, 474 n, 
477", 485 2; Will, vi, 485 
Knight, Ad. the, vii, 234; Ellen 
the, vii, 234”; John the, vii, 
234”; Jos., vi, 37; Mary, vii, 
117”; Rennie, vi, 527; Will, vi, 
6 n, 237, 311 Nn; vii, 2657” 
Knightbridge, Ant., vi, 86 
Knightcote (Knyttecote), Chris- 
tiana de, vii, 321 2; John de, vii, 
321” 
Knights of St. John of Jerusalem, 
see Hospitallers 
Knolehale, Knolel (Chorley), see 
Knowley 
Knolhale — (Cnolal, —_Knolehale), 
Mabel de, vi, 62; Margery de, 
vi, 140”; Maud de, vi, 140”; 
Rob. de, vi, 140” 
Knoll, fam., see Knowles 
Knoll heys (Preston), vii, 102 , 117 
Knolls, see Knowles 
Knott (Chipping), vii, 28 2 
Knott, Geo., vii, 253”; Jas., vii, 
123m”; Joan, vii, 253”; Sam., 
vi, 208 x; Thos., vii, 187 
Knott End (Preesall), vii, 237, 332 
Knousedene, see Knuzden 
Knoute, Hen., vi, 209 , 212 n 
Knoutescroft (Balderston), vi, 314 
Knowl, the (Bispham), vii, 247 ” 
Knowle Hey, see Knoll heys 
Knowles (Knoll, Knolls, Knowle), 
Ad. (de, del), vi, 11 n, 16 n, 27 n, 
336; vu, 28, 31%”, 33, 113%, 
123”; Alice de, vii, 28, 113”; 
Ann, vii, 263%”; Beatrice de, 
vi, 507 ”; Cecily de, vi, 336; vii, 
28n; Chris., vii, 28”; Edm., vi, 
16”; vii, 28”; Eliz., vi, 16”; 
Ellis de, vi, 507”; vii, I13n, 
125”; Emma de, vii, 287; 
Geo. de, vii, 33 ”; Gerard de, vii, 
33 ; Hawise de, vi, 507 ”; Isabel, 
vii, 28; Jas., vi, 273, 274; Joan 
de, vi, 504”; vii, 33”; John 
(de), vi, 393”; vii, 28, 28n, 
30N, 31 N, 32M, 33, 33%, 34%, 
79”; Jos., vii, 197”; Kath. de, 
vii, 28”; Lauys de, vi, 58”; 
Lawr. de, vii, 28 n ; Lewis de, vii, 
28n; Marg. (de), vii, 28”, 33, 
53”, 212”; Maud de, vii, 79”; 
Miles de, vii, 33 ; Oliver, vi, 16 ” ; 
Reg. (Reynor), de, vi, 507”; 
vii, 33”; Rich. (de), vi, 58%, 
336, 504 2; vii, 16, 27 , 28, 28 n, 
30, 31%, 33, 53”; Rob. de, 
vii, 125”; Rog. (de), vi, 105 ”, 
393”; vii, 28”, 125”; Sally, 
vii, 197”; Steph., vii, 33%; 
Rev. Thos., vi, 318; Thos. (de), 
vi, 298m", 504”; vii, 16, 277, 
28 n, 31 2, 33, 53%, 196M, 206 n, 
212 n, 255, 263 2, 267; Thos. R., 
vii, 116 ; Towneley R., vil, 197”, 
203; Rev. Will., vi, 334; Will. 
(de, del), vi, 11”, 16”, 27%, 
181 ; vii, 28 n, 33”, 118” 
Knowles House (Walton), vi, 296 
Knowley (Chorley), vi, 129, 140 
Knowl Green (Ribchester), vii, 45 
Knowsley House, see Knowles 
House . 
Knuzden (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 276, 
346, 405, 407; ch., vi, 409 
Knuzden, brook, vi, 235, 345 
Knyttecote, see Knightcote 


387 


Konywe, Le (Mellor), vi, 262 

Koul, see Cowhill 

Kuerdale, see Cuerdale 

Kuerden (Chorley), see Cuerden 

Kuerden (Cuerden), Ad. de, vi, 
26m; vil, 66; Agnes de, vii, 
66”; Alan de, vi, 26 ”; Alice de, 
Vi, 23”, 26m”; vii, 52”; Avice 
de, vi, 4n, 26; Beatrix 
(Beatrice) de, vii, 46, 48n, 
53”; Edm., vi, 26”; Eliz., vi, 
26", 61, 64; Ellis de, vi, 
24”, 27n; Eva de, vii, 48n; 
Geo., vi, 26 n ; Gilb. de, vi, 26n ; 
Hen. de, vi, 4, 24m, 25, 26; 
Vii, 48 7, 52 ”, 53”, 115 m, 325 2, 
326n, 328; Hugh, vi, 26”; 
Ingelram de, vi, 24”; Isolda 
de, vii, 326”, 328”; Janet, vi, 
27%; John (de), vi, 24”, 26n, 
27, 27 n, 28 n, 64 n, 71 n, 72, 
73%; vii, 46n, 308; Marg. 
(de), vi, 26”; Pet. de, vi, 267+ 
Ralph de, vi, 26”; Rich. (de), 
vi, 9, 24, 26, 26n, 27”, 46n, 
66x”; Rob. de, vi, 24n, 26n; 
vii, 115 x; Rog. de, vi, 23 2, 24, 
26; vii, 66; Sim. de, vi, 23”, 
247, 26; Thos. (de), vi, 24 2, 26, 
20n, 28, 61; Uctred de, vi, 
26; Will. (de), vi, 26, 28n; 
fam., vii, 102 

Kuhelagh, Alex. de, vi, 475 ” 

Kulnland (Church), vi, 402 ” 

Kydde, Kath., vii, 327 ” 

Kynaston, John, vi, 128 

Kyrkeland, Kyrkelond, Kyrke- 
lund, see Kirkland 

Kytridding (Mitton), vii, 16 


Labege, Marg., vi, 547 ” 

Lache, Alice, vi, 402 ~; Edm., vii, 
147; Eliz., vii, 287”; Jas., vii, 
288; Rich., vi, 407”; Rob., 
vi, 402”; vii, 287”, 288n; 
Will., vii, 241 

Lache Marsh (Clitheroe), vi, 368 ” 

Lacking, —, vi, 453” 

Lacon, Magdalen, vi, 221 ”; Thos., 
vi, 221” 

Lacy, Alice (de), vi, 15 ”, 93, 108 2, 
232 2, 320, 327, 379 , 394”; Vil, 
46", 52”, 59%, 168n, 173n, 
3252; Edm. (de), vi, 15%, 49, 
58 n, 240, 253, 284, 314, 331, 338, 
345, 362, 372, 377 % 379, 390%, 
405, 420, 443, 469, 487, 493, 499 7, 
509 2, 524, 537, 538, 546, 558; 
vii, 32”, 40”, 41”, 45%, 54, 
257”; Eliz., vi, 553; Gilb. de, 
vi, 342, 417; Hen. (de), vi, ay ny, 
61 n, 67 N, 70, 108 n, 239, 245%, 
249, 253, 260, 264, 270, 276, 
279, 291, 297, 314, 326, 338, 340, 
350, 361 ”, 367, 309, 373, 383-4, 
394, 396, 400, 402”, 405%, 407, 
409, 411, 417, 424, 428, 436%, 
443-4, 444”, 440, 469, 471”, 
474, 480, 482”, 487, 493, 499, 
503, 508, 509, 524, 525, 5375 
538 m, 545, 553%; VU, 30, 33%, 
527, 592, 166 n, 1720; See also 
Lincoln, earl of; Ilbert de, vi, 
232, 320, 375, 395, 555, 558%; 
vii, 2; Isabel de, vii, 257”; 
Joan de, vi, 509%; John (de), 
vi, 67%, 93, 242; 297, 3205 
335 2, 350, 372, 373) 377) 387%, 
392, 393, 412%, 444, 455, 409, 
471”, 487, 499, 506, 509, 525, 
539, 546, 552, 558%; VU, 23%, 
240, 27%, 45, 45%, IIE, 238; 
see also Lincoln, earl of; Pet. 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Lacy (cont.) 
de, vi, 356"; Rob. de, vi, 239, 
320, 338, 340, 394, 375, 399%, 
418 n, 424, 489, 471, 479, 507 %, 
509, 538, 555; vi, 2, 27, 4on, 
45, 52”, 54; Sir Rog. de, vi, 
36n; Rog. (de), vi, 11, 18, 57, 
JON, 303 N, 3557, 306n, 368 2, 
371", 391, 455, 457, 480, 54%, 
547; Vil, 14m, 29n, 45m, 520; 
Sarah, vii, 14; Thos. (de), vi, 
509 n ; vii, 14; fam., vu, 8, 171 

Ladmere (Trawden), vi, 551 

Ladpool (Bretherton), vi, 103 2 

Ladyhalgh (Anderton), vi, 220”, 
222, 331 

Lady Huntingdon’s Connexion, vi, 
284 

Lady’s Well (Fernyhalgh), vii, 124 

Lady Well (Preston), vii, 96 2 

Laghez Oxgang (Chatburn), vi, 


73" 

Iavhmon, Ad., vi, 296; Hen., vi, 
291", 293m, 296; Ralph, vi, 
296; Rich., vi, 296; Rob., vi, 
296 ; see also Lemon 

Lailand, see Leyland 

Lairbrec, see Larbreck 

Lairclade (Hutton), vi, 67” 

Laith (Trawden), vi, 552” 

Lamare, see Mare 

Lambert, physician, vi, 365” 

Lambert, Isabel, vii, 210”; Jas., 
vu, 210; John, vi, 559”; —, 
Vig g2T 

I.amewelridding (Ribchester), vii, 
63n 

Lampet, Eliz., vi, 194; Thos., vi, 
1947” 

Lamypot (Stalmine), vii, 252 ” 

Lancashire, Phil., vi, 80 

Lancashire Dike (Colne), vi, 524” 

Lancashire Levite, see Taylor, 
Zachariah 

Lancaster, vii, 68, 71, 74, 747, 
79M, 100 Nn, I14 Nn, 288 nN, 300; 
priory, see below; prison char., 
vi, 90” 

Lancaster, hon. of, vi, 338; vii 
83, 184, 188, 253, 270, 3167 
Lancaster, Alice, ctss. of, vi, 2322; 
vu, 52”; Blanche, dchss. of, vi, 
163; vil, 92; dks. of, vi, 1 
57, 284, 305, 345, 346, 361, 
309, 3747, 394, 409n, 458, 
508 m, 555; Vil, 4, 40, 41, 45, 
55 2, b2 n, 83-2, 134 nN, 171, 173 7, 
177m, 184, I87n, 286, 3037; 
Hen., vi, 2, 570, 252, 360, 
458n, 538, 553; Vii, 24”, 74, 
85, 92m, 187; John, vi, 11», 
89n, 92n, 1O9N, 121 n, 16327, 
277m, 285, 369n, 471, 514, 
553, 5553 Vi, 85, 233", 269n, 
274, 303 ”; earls of, vi, 57, 58, 
104m, 357", 360, 361, 3647, 
369”, 405", 4IOn, 424, 428; 
Vu, 33, 43, 557, 62, 92, 10g, 
115m, 118, 125, 130n, 132”, 
134, 137M", 139, 159”, 165m, 
I7t, 154, 185”, 1897, 216, 
240 m, 248, 285, 301, 302, 303 n, 
325m, 3312; Edm., vii, 927, 
I13, 130M, 132”, 134, 145”, 
162 n, 192 n, 200 n, 216 n, 257 Me, 
302; Hen., vi, 11, 582, 109, 
109 , 127, 163, 229, 264, 361 n, 
552; vi, 837, 84, 106, 160, 
316”; Thos., vi, 19, 58m, 232, 
276, 291, 375m, 400m, 457; 
vu, 13, 52”, 5&3, 8&4, 192 n, 

203M, 314, 314”, 327 
Lancaster, Ad. de, Vi, 132%; 

Agnes de, vii. 229, 300; Alan 

de, vii, 98»; Alice de, vii, 132”, 


, 


’ 


Lancaster (cont.) 


301; Edm. de, vi, 291”; Ellen, 
vi, 167”; Gilb. de, vii, 240”; 
Helewise (Hawist) de, vii, 267 7, 
300, 301, 325”; Sir Hen. de, 
vil, 132”; Hen. de, vii, 129”, 
130m, 131”; John de, vi, 21”, 
167; vil, 190”, 206, 297; 
J., vi, 518 » ; Mabel de, vii, 130 » ; 
Marg. de, vi, 169”; vii, 130”; 
Nich., vi, 167 ”, 217 ”; Rich. (de), 
V1, 17, 21”, 167 #, 109", 177 Nn, 
229n; Sarot de, vii, 301; Rob., 
vi, 167”, 297; Thos. (de), v1, 
21m; vil, 98”; Warine de, vii, 
129, 130m”, 131”, 132”; Sir 
Will. de, vii, 225, 229; Will. 
(de), vi, 86 7, 87, 159, 203; vii, 
118 m, 130”, 131 n, 153”, 181 n, 
182, 183”, 205, 257”, 207%, 
268, 277; 29641, 2or 2, 300, 
301M, 302, 306, 308, 311, 313, 
510M, 320, 32%; 321%, 325 7: 
fam., vu, 276 


Lancaster canal, vi, 32; vii, 79 
Lancaster field (Preston), vi, 562 
Lancaster Priory, vi, 86, 86 n, 158 ; 


vil, 83, 145, 157”, 189%”, 190, 


log”, 222, 222, 226, .227 92, 
244, 250, 252", 254, 2507, 
2570 


Lancelyn, John, vii, 227, 2577; 
Marg., vil, 227, 257 2; Will., vi, 
217; fam., vi, 219 

Lancclyn’s meadow 
Vi, 219” 

Landskill (Catterall), vii, 320, 321, 
324, 320, 330” 

Lane Bottom (Briercliffe), vi, 469 

Lane Bridge (Burnley), vi, 452 

Lane Ends (Hapton), vi, 507 

Lane House (Briercliffe), vi, 471 

Laneshaw (Laneshaw Water), riv., 
Vi, 522, 525 m, 529, 548, 551 

Laneshaw Bridge (Colne), vi, 523, 
530; sch., vi, 535, 536 

Lane Side (Accrington), vi, 423, 
5°7 

Lang, Mary, vi, 6; Rob., vi, 6; see 
also Long 

Langale, see Langho 

Langdale, Dorothy, vi, 313; Sir 
Marm., vi, 290; vii, 76 

Langelcy, see Langley 

Langelyn (Church), vi, 400 2 

Langerathending (Clayton - le - 
Moor-}, vi, yr5” 

Langeton, tnshp., see Longton 


(Adlington), 


Langetre, see Langtree 


Lancfield 
229n 


(Little Carleton), vii 


Langheld, Jas., vi, 557 
Langzgale, see Langho 
Langhirst-ker (Sunderland), vi, 317 
Langho, vi, 235, 326 2, 332 n, 336; 


ch., vi, 332; epileptic colony, vi, 
326, 336 
Langho Green, vi, 332 


Lang House (Yate Bank), vi, 244 


Langley (Langeley), Agnes de, vi, 
377”; Alex. de, vi, 291; Alice, 
vi, 17”; Jas., vi, 8; John, vi, 
102", 173”, 291 n, 510N; Vii, 
322; Kath., vii, 322 x; Ralph, 
vi, 500”; Rich. de, vi, 377”; 
Wil, vi, 17”, 28, 303; —, 
cardinal, vi, 494 ; see also Longley 


Langroyd (Colne), vi, 523, 528 


Langroyd House (Colne), vi, 528 
Langscale(s), see Landskill 
Langshaie, see Laneshaw 


Langton, Agnes de, vi, 292, 321 n, 


429; Alesia de, vi, 291; Alex., 
vi, 217; Alice (de), vi, 292; 
Anne (Ann), vi, 24”, 292, 321”; 


388 


Langton (cont.) 
Comelius, vil, 151; Edw., vi, 
292; Eliz., vi, 30, 292, 300, 
qI2n; vii, 120n, IorHn; Gitb., 
vi, 429; Hen. (de), vi, 24 ", 292, 
302, 321; Isabel (Isabella), vi, 
292, 302, 321; vil, 177"; Jas., 
vi, 292; Jane, vii, 70m, 120; 
Joan (de), vi, 292, 310; vii, 5n; 
John (de), vi, 24m, 77, 134 
291, 296 n, 298; Vil, 120n, 161 nm: 
Leonard, vi, 292; Marg. (de), vi, 
64", 292, 292 n; Mary, vii, 120: 
Pet., vi, 28 »; Sir Ralph (de), vi, 
292, 310; Ralph de, vi, 2y1, 292, 
299, 412"; vil, 177M; Sir hich, 
vi, 292; Rich., vi, 271, 292, 296, 
321”; vil, 120"; Sir Rob. de, 
vi, 24”, 291, 292 n, 296n, 208; 
Rob. (de), vi, 28”, 77, 134, 
198 n, 236, 291, 303, 3067; 
vii, 24; Rog., vii, 102”, 119, 
120, 121 n, 123; Sir Thos., vi, 
24, 57, 292, 294, 296, 403 n, 
555%, 559”, 560; Thos. (de), 
vi, 24, 61, 64m, 160, 302n, 
306; vii, 120m, 131; Walt. de, 
bp. of Lichfield, vi, 87, 384; 
vil, 264; Will. de, vi, 160”; vii, 
119-20, 121m”, 123m"; Zachary, 
vii, 151; —, vii, 116; fam., vi, 
23, 98; sce also Longton 

Langtree, vi, 58 2, 192-9; man., vi, 
107 

Langtree, Alice de, vi, 197 7 ; Anne, 
vi, 177”; Edw., vi, 198 n, 229n; 
Eliz. de, vi, 197 »; Gilb. (de), vi, 
185”, 1947, 1977, 198, 218%, 
229; Hen. de, vi, 197, 1987; 
Hugh, vi, 77 ”; Isabel, vi, 182 n; 
John, vi, 198, 199; Lawr., vi, 
190”, 197m”; Lora, vi, 21817; 
Margery de, vi, 197 ; Ralph de, 
vi, 197”; Rich. (de), vi, 96n, 
171”, 182m, 186, 187, 194n, 
197, 199; Rob. de, vi, 197"; 
Sim. de, vi, 209”; Siward de, 
vi, 193, 197; Thos. (de), vi, 111, 
177”, 182, 190M, 193%”, 197, 
198, 198m, 224; Will. de, vi, 
197” 

Langtree Hall (Langtree), vi, 192 n 

Langtree’s cross (Claughton), vii, 
3252 

Lappage, Edw.,, vi, 518 

Larbreck, vii, 146”, 181-3; chaly- 
beate spring, vii, 181 ; man., vii, 
182 

Larbreck, Ad. de, vii, 182 n, 226 n ; 
Alan de, vii, 183 ”; Rich. de, vu, 
182 ; Rog. de, vii, 182 n, 183 7 ; 
Sibyl de, vii, 226; Will. de, 
vii, 182 

Laregrem, see Leagram 

Larkhill (Billington), vi, 330” 

Lark Hill (Preston), vii, 79 n, 105” 

Larrimer, see Lorimer 

Lashford, Humph., vii, 265 

Lassells (Lassell), Edw., vi, 180 ; 
Rich., vi, 177”; Thos., vi, 
180” 

Lassland (Birtwisle), vi, 509” 

Latewise, see Latus 

Latham, Capt. Wiuil., vii, 21417; 
see also Lathom 

Lathbutt (Rawcliffe), vii, 271 ” 

Lathegrim, see Leagram 

Lathes, Isabel del, vi, 374"; Rich. 
del, vi, 374” 

Lathmers (Clitheroe), vi, 365 # 

Lathom, char., vi, 90” 

Lathom, earls of, vii, 62, 176%, 
281 n; Ld., vi, 34” : 

Lathom (Lathum), Alex. de, vi, 
178; Alice de, vi, 178; Cecily 


Lathom (con?.) 
de, vi, 178; Chris., vi, 179”; 
Edw. (de), vi, 171 m, 174”, 175 n, 
179, 180”; vii, 241”; Eleanor 
(de), vi, 170”, 179”; Eliz., vi, 
179m, 191 nN, 192”; Ellen (de), 
vi, 178”; vu, 241; Geo., vi, 

Hen. 


179”; (de), vi, 171 n, 
178, 189”; Isabel (de), vi, 
1olm, 179”; John (de), vi, 


176, 178, 179N; Vii, 223”; 
Kath. (de), vi, 178, 180”; Lucy 
de, vi, 170", 178; Marg. de, vi, 
204”; Mary, vi, 186; Paul, vi, 
186, 189; Pet., vi, 90, 179”, 
191; Rich. (de), vi, 160, 161 n, 
174”, 175”, 177, 178, 179, 
179m, 180, 180n, 181m; vii, 
10g, 274”; Sir Rob. de, vi, 
262 ; vii, 52 m, TIO, 193 ”, 2737”; 
Rob. de, vi, 120”, 169%”, 171, 
174m”, 178, 179, 179”, 203”; 
vii, 62”, 109”; Sir Thos. (de), 
vi, 170”, I7I1m, 178-9, 2047; 
vii, 241 ”; Thos. (de), vi, Ior x, 
121”, 159, 1602”, 170N, I7I7n, 
175”, 176m, 179; vii, 62 n, 
175”; Will, vi, 155, 159”, 161, 
173”, 179,179”, 180n, 181 n, 
Igin; vii, 175”; see also 


Latimer, Geo., Ld., vi, 421 

Latimer, Eliz., vi, 421 

Laton, see Layton 

Latter Day Saints, see Mormons 

Latun, see Layton 

Latus (Latewise), Dorothy, vii, 
308; Gilb., vii, 174”, 181 x, 
199 n, 329”, 332%”; Matth., vii, 
I99n, 205”; Rich., vii, 270, 
289n; Will, vii, 199”, 205%, 
269 n, 270, 288 n, 308 n 

Latus House, man. (Goosnargh), 
vii, 199 

Laud, Will., 

34”; vii, 88 
Lauediley Clough (Ribchester), vii, 


archbp., vi, 382, 


450 

Laufield (Claughton), vii, 326 ” 

Laumwale, Ad., vii, 229 ” 

Laund Booth, New, vi, 233 ”, 349, 
425, 489, 490, 491-2, 540m; mill., 
vi, 490 

Laund Booth, Old, vi, 230”, 349, 
512, 515, 521-2, 542; ch., vi, 522 

Laund, Higher Old (Old Laund 
Booth), vi, 522 

Launde, Agnes de la, vii, 98”; 
Will. de la, vii, 98 

Laundy, Ellen de, vi, 497 ” 

Lauorchul (Billington), vi, 330 ” 

Lauton, see Lawton 

Laval, Hugh de, vi, 356, 450, 534 

Law (Lawe, Lawes), Ellen, vi, 
500”; Rev. Fran., vi, 313; Jas., 
vii, 239”; John (del), vi, 299, 
438”; Mary, vii, 239”; Rev. 
Pat. C., vi, 313 ; Rich., vii, 227 ” ; 
Sarah, vi, 431; Thos., vi, 208, 
371; Will., vi, 180”; fam., vi, 
246 ” ; vii, 102 

La Warr (Warre), Lds., vi, 179; 
vii, III n, 329”; Thos., vi, 76, 
170”; vii, 112” 

La Warr, Sir John, vi, 170 ” ; John, 
vi, 170”, 171”; Thos. le (la), 
vi, 277”; vii, 62” 

Lawcroft (Bailey), vii, 18 

Lawde, Joan, vi, 227”; Rich., vi, 
227 

Lawe (Gt. Harwood), vi, 338 ” 

Liwe, the (Howath), vii, 318 ” 

Lawe, fam., see Law 

Laweman, see Laghmon and Lemon 

Lawes, see Law 


INDEX 


Lawesteghele 
306 n 

Lawfield, John (de), vi, 97”; vii, 
2557 

Law House (Colne), vi, 528 » 

Law House (Walton), vi, 295 

Lawnd, the (Leagram), vi, 380 ° 

Lawnd, Lower (Leagram), vi, 380 ” 

Lawnd, Over (Leagram), vi, 380 n 

Lawrence, St., relics of, vi, 88 n, 145 

Lawrence, Agnes, vii, 106, 177; 
Alice, vi, 270 n, 301; vii, 106 n, 
133", 162m”, 258”; Edm., vi, 
301; vil, 106m, 119”, 260n, 
312"; Eliz., vii, 189, 274”; 
Isabel, vii, 106”; Sir Jas., vii, 
229m; Joan, vii, 119; John, 
Vi, 301; vii, 106 n, 189 n, 257, 
258, 260, 281 n, 299, 317 Nn; 
Marg., vii, 106, 198 n, 299, 317; 
Sir Rob., vi, 121”; Rob., vii, 
106, 133”, 162, 229n, 234n, 
250, 274 n, 282 n, 317; Sibyl, 
vi, 121”; Sir Thos., vii, 254”; 
Thos., vii, 198  ; Will. vi, 270 x, 
301; Vu, 24, 69x”, 106, 133 2H, 
234”; fam., vii, 107 n 

Lawrence’s cross (Stalmine), vii, 
2527 

Lawrenson, John, vi, 219”; vii, 
205”; Lancelot, vi, 5”; Nich., 
vii, 7Im, 265”, 289”, 201; 
Thos., vii, 299 ” ; —, vii, 150” 

Lawson, Edw., vi, 371; Eliz., vii, 
264”; Joan, vii, 278 »; John, vi, 
368 ; vil, 142 n, 278; Rob., vii, 
142 

Lawton (Lauton), Herb. de, vi, 
131; Mabel de, vi, 131 ; Rich. de, 
vi, 291 ”; Thos., vi, 496 

Layfield, Chas., vi, 86, 88, 89, 
90; John, vi, 86%”; Rob., vii, 
292"; W., vi, 88 

Layland, see Leyland 

Layton, vil, 106m, 215”, 222”, 
235 nN, 240 n, 246, 247-51 ; chant., 
vii, 251; ch., vii, 251; Jews, vii, 
251; man., vii, 236, 248; mkt. 
and fair, vii, 249, 251 ; Nonconf., 
vii, 251; Rom. Cath., vii, 251 

Layton, Gt., vii, 106 ”, 222 n, 248, 
284 

Layton, Little, vii, 106m, 241%, 


(Winmarleigh), vii ; 


24 

Layton (Laton), Ant., vii, 197%, 
211 n; Cecily de, vii, 229 ”, 2382; 
John, vi, 127”; Rich., vi, 160, 
161; Thos., vi, 160”; Will. de, 
vii, 308 ; see also Leighton 

Layton Hall (Layton), vii, 249 

Layton Hawes (Layton), vii, 216”, 
248, 249 

Lea, vil, 72, 73%, 76, 79, 80, 
83 n, 129-37, 163 n, 194”; Chap., 
vii, 87 2; char., vii, 91 ; man., v1, 
38, 41”; vii, 116”, 129; Rom. 
Cath., vii, 77 2; sch., vii, 137 

Lea, English, man. (Lea), vii, 129, 
163” 

Lea, French, man. (Lea), vii, 106 ”, 
129, 135; St. Catherine’s well, 
vii, 129 

Lea, Great, see Lea, English 

Lea, Little, see Lea, French 

Lea (Inglesle, Inglisle, Lee, Ley, 
Leye), Ad. de, vii, 132”, 134”, 
Agnes de, vi, 131, 205 ”, 276, 397; 
vii, 3, 1330”; Alan de, vil, 130%, 
131”; Alex., vii, 131”; Alice 
(de), vi, 92 ”, 93, 93%, 95%; VL, 
131”; Amice, vii, 130”; Anabil 
(Amabel), vi, 120-1; Avice de, 
vii, 134”; Bald. de, vii, 130, 131, 
131”, 132”; Clemency de, vii, 
130; Edm. de, vi, 120; Eliz., vi, 


389 


Lea (cont.) 
106, 143 »; Emma de, vii, 130 n, 
131 2; Geoff., vii, 132 ; Sir Hen, 
de, vi, 29, 30, 37, 38, 120 n, 131, 
205”, 206n, 207n, 397; vii, 
129”, 130, 130”, 313”; Hen. 
de (del, de la), vi, 47 2, 49, 50n, 
70%, 204, 205, 207m", 214n, 
223, 227M; vil, 3, 109 n, 129, 
130, 130m, 131m, 132, 133 n, 
134”, 161, 162; Isolda de, 
V1, 70 ”, 93,97”; Jas., vii, 131”; 
Janett, vii, 131”; Joan, vii, 
88x; Sir John de, vii, 130; 
John de (del, de la), vi, 507, 
204; Vil, 43”, 88n, 1307, 
131M, 132, 134”, 161 n, 285; 
Lawr. de, vi, 121 , 538 x; Maud 
de, vi, 11, 70n, 93, 1317; 
Nath., vi, 257; Nich. (de), vi, 
262, 538 ; Rich. (de), vii, 130 n, 
131 ”, 132 ”, 134; Rob. de, vii, 
130 n, 131 n, 132m, 160”; Rog. 
(de), vi, 114; vii, 130”, 1317; 
Sibyl de, vi, 38; vii, 130; Thos. 
de (del), vi, 190”; vii, 1307, 
131”; Uctred (Ughtred) de, 
vil, 130%, 131”; Warine de, 
vi, 49”; Sir Will. (de), vi, 70, 
722, 92H, 93H, 95%, 12H, 
131; vii, 130”; Will. de (de la), 
vl, ITM, 50%, 7ON, 71H, 93, 
O7%, 132, 205%, 206, 206, 
207; vii, 129”, 130, I30n, 
131 ”, 132 nH, 133 nN, 162 n; —, Vi, 
298 n; see also Legh and Leigh 

Leadbetter, Hannah, vi, 119 

Leagram (Leagram with Bowland), 
vi, 233”, 349, 379-81, 393”; 
vii, 27”; char., vi, 380; vii, 7, 
20%”, 26”; man., vi, 379; mill, 
vi, 379 ; pk., vi, 379 ; Rom. Cath., 
vi, 380 

Leagram Carr (Leagram), vi, 380 ” 

Leagram Hall (Leagram), vi, 380; 
vii, 5 n, On, 32 

Leagrim, see Leagram 

Lea Hall (Lea), vi, 292; vii, 76, 
131 

Leahead (Lea), vii, 130” 

Leahead, Ad. de, vii, 130”; Hen. 
de, vii, 130” 

Lea Marsh (Lea), vii, 130” 

Learoyd, Rich., vii, 42, 60” 

Leatherbarrow, Eliz., vi, 
Will, vi, 113 ” 

Lea Town (Lea), vii, 129 

Leaver, Abra., vi, 471”; see also 
Lever 

Lebbelay (Lebley) (Balderston), vi, 
314, 317, 318 7 

Leckhampton, Amery de, vii, 247 ”; 
John de, vii, 247 

Leckonby, Anne, vii, 64, 65%, 
279”; John, vii, 183”, 278n, 
279n; Mary, vii, 65”, 278%, 
279”; Rich., vi, 96”; vii, 65, 
278, 279; Will., vii, 64, 65%, 
278 n, 279n; —, vii, 272; fam., 
vii, 283, 284 

Lee (Marsden), see Leigh 

Lee, fam., see Lea, Legh, Leigh 

Leeds and Liverpool canal, vi, 32, 
36, 115 . 

Lee Green (Burnley), vi, 447” 

Lee House (Thornley), vii, 32; 
Rom. Cath., vii, 36 

Leeming, Chris., vii, 199 »; Thos., 
vi, 88 . 

Lees, the (Hutton), vi, 68 ” 

Leferirley (Lea), vii, 130” 

Lefwin, see aie 

Legeard, John, vii, 85 

Legh (Lee, Leghs, Ley, Leye), Ad. 
de, vi, 49%, 477%, 480; Alesia 


113; 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Legh (cont.) 
de, vi, 291; Alice de (de la), vi, 
458, 458%, 477, 481, 508%, 
509 m, 511 n, 540 n; Amabel 
de, vi, 339; Anabil de la, vi, 
214m; Anne, vi, I4I, 212”; 
Ant. K., vi, 119 2; Blanche, vi, 


30n; Cecily de (de la), vi, 457, 
474 7, 508 n ; Clemence, vi, 540 »; 
Edm. de, vi, 339; Edw. de, vi, 
482; Eliz., vi, 106”; Fleet- 
wood, vi, 106”; Fran., vi, 540" ; 
Gilb. (de la, de, del), vi, 229, 315, 
327, 397, 451”, 455%, 457, 
458, 458", 470m, 471, 472, 
475", 476n, 477”, 480, 481, 
485”, 489, 507, 508, 509, 510 n, 
511, 511m, 519, 540; VU, 55”; 
Henrietta M., vi, 106, 119”; 
Isabel (del), vi, 143m, 2127, 
510”, 540”; vil, 286; Joan de 
la, vi, 110”; John de (del, 
de la), vi, I10 ”, 143, 212 n, 295, 
315, 397, 410%, 457, 472m”, 
474", 475, 476, 477", 480, 
481, 485, 508, 510, 5IO”, 
539”, 540”; Kath. de la, vi, 
315; Lawr. (de, de la), vi, 397 7, 
457", 458m, 472 2, 475. N, 477 7, 
543; Marg., vi, 481 2; Margery, 
vi, 406; Matth. de, vi, 477”; 


Maud de, vi, 163%; Mich. (de, 
de la), vi, is 474.7, 480, 
qsun; M., vi, 118%; Nich., vi, 


510 n, 540, 5402; Sir Pet., vi, 
30", 957, II1ON, III Nn, 150n, 
231; Pet., vi, 106 , 107, 107 n, 


Iogn, 118%”, L19 Hn, 150M, 151, 
193”; Phil. de, vi, 291; Sir 
Piers, vi, 292, 362”, 3637; 


Rich. (de, de la), vi, 106, 141, 
151 n, 296, 481 n, 508; Rob., vi, 
I4I 2, 143”, 163 2, 212 n, 476n, 
540”, 543; vii, 286; Rog., vii, 
218; Thos. (de, de la), vi, 18 n, 
106 », 181 n, 451M, 510 n, 540 n ; 


Will de la, vi, 2r4n; Mrs., vi, 
118m, 119; —, vi, 119”, ’510, 
5247: fam., vi, 50”; vii, Io2, 


241; see also Lea and Leigh 
Leghcroft, John de, vi, 469 
Leghland (Extwistle), vi, 472" 
Leghshagh, brook, vi, 339 
Lehalercarr (Clitheroe), vi, 365 
Leicester, Rob., earl of, vi, 380 
Leicester, Alice de, vi, 203; vii, 

105”; Christiana de, vii, 3217”; 

Geo. F., see Tabley, Ld. de, ; 

John de, vii, 321»; John F., see 

Tabley, Lil. de; Pet. B., vii, 

286; Rog. de, vi, 68, 203; 

vl, 92 ”, 105; see also Leycester 
Leicester Abbey, vii, 305, 308m, 

313 7, 315, 333% 

Leigh (Marsden), vi, 536, 539” 
Leigh, the (Ribchester), vii, 64 
Leigh, Rev. A., vil, rogm; Dr. 

Chas., vii, 182, 188; Chas., vi, 

97; vii, 187; Claudia, vil, 267: F 

Dorothy, vii, 182; Ellen, vi, 


352; Gilb. de la, vi, 391; Holt., 
vil, 2167; John, vi, 35”, 181, 
295; Vu, 323, 329”; Margery, 


vi, 59; Mary, vi, 172"; Pet., vi, 
483; Rich., vi, rion; vii, 255; 
Rob., vi, 301, 408 1; Rog., vi, 


391 n; Ruth, vi, 483; Theo- 
philus, vii, 187; ; Sir Thos., vii, 
185”, 208; Rev. Thos., vi 


44003 Thos., vi, 59, 152, 153: vii, 
329”; Rev. Will, vi, 267; Will. 
Vi, 52%, 186, 189 ; wi, 187: 
=, 44, 219); fam., vi, 84; see also 
Lea and Legh 


Leighhouses (UInes Walton), vi, 


lio” 

Leighton, Geo., vii, 245; Jas., vii 
245; see also Layton 

Leirbreck, see Larbreck 

Leising, vi, 187; vil, 54 

Lekas, John, vi, 46 

Lemon (Lemmon), 
298; vii, 98”, 102”; Hen., vi 
296 ; Jas., vi, 296; John, vi, 296 ; 


Ralph, vi, 296; Rich., vi, 24 n; 


Rob., vi, 26”, 296; Will, vi, 
296; vii, Io2zm; —, vii, 97 tb; 
fam., Vi, 28 3 see ‘also Laghmon 


Lemon House (Walton), vi, 296 
Lench, Over, vi, 438 » 

Lench, Will. de, vi, 240, 241 
Lenches (Marsden), vi, 436, 536 


Lennox, Gordon, fam., see Gordon- 


Lennox 
Lennox’s Farm (Dutton), vii, 1 


54 

Lenot, see Levenot 

Lenox, fam., see Lynalx 

Lentworth (Over Wyresdale), vi 
250, 381”; vii, 150” 

Leofwin (Lefwin, 
264, 266, 291 n, 
413, 414”, 417, 424, 538" 

Leonard, Chas. W., vii, 188 

Leonard’s Field (Burnley), vi, 4457” 


Lester and Pack, bell-makers, vi, 


297 
Letharum, Rob., 
vi, 485 7” 


Letherland le Hurst (Whittle), vi, 


347 
Letherwyte, tax, vii, 487 7 
Lethnis, see Lichtness 
Lethum, see Lytham 
Levenot (Lenot), vi, 

130”, 132” 

Levens, Rog., vii, 88 n 
Lever, Ad. de, vi, 

vii, 209 n, 

2330; 

vu, 2337; 

331 7 Niche, 


aSi n: 


Will. de, vi, 276 
Levesay, see Livesey 
Leveson, Ellen, vi, 250” 
Levington, bar., vi, 304” 
Lewe, vii, 283 2 
Lewebroc (Eccleshill), vi, 279M 
Lewed, Margery de (the), vi, 209 n, 
212"; Rog. de (the), vi, 209 n, 
2129” 
Leweshaw, brook, vi, 339 ” 
Lewis, Rev. Evan, vi, 4277” 
Lewth (Woodplumpton), vii, 285 
Ley (Cliviger), vi, 481 , 553.2 
Ley, fam., see Lea, Legh, Leigh 


Leyburn " (Leyburne), Anne, vi, 
292, 391 N; vii, 309n; Geo., vii, 
309, 310; Isabel, vii, 257; 
Isolda de, vii, 316”; Jas., vii, 
310; John, vi, 391”; vii, 257, 
293 2, 309, 310; Nich., vii, 310; 
Rob. de, vii, 316”; Thos., vi, 
292; bp., vii, 77», 31291 


Leycester, Dorothy, vi, 35; Geo., 


vi, 35; Hugh, vi, 383 0; see also 


Leicester 

Leye, see Lea, Legh, Leigh 

Leyland, vi, 1-17, 58, 452; vii, 
72, 133M, 160 n, 193 2; adv., vi, 
6, 58, 59; chant. , vi, 9; char., 
vi, 9; ch., vi, 4, 26n: cross, vi, 
10; fairs, vi, 10; ind., vi, 10; 
mans., 
conf., vi, 17; 
17; sch., vi, 9 

Leyland, hund., vi, 1 


399 


Edm., vi, 296, 


Leofwine), vi, 
303, 398, 411, 


vi, 485”; Will, 


485; vii, 


222, 276, 331; 
Giles, vii, 
Joan de, vi, 276; Kath., 
Marg. de, vi, 222, 
vi, 285 ”; Ralph, vi, 
146; Rich. de, vi, 49 ; Rob., vi, 
216; Rog. (de), vi, 49, 2227; 


vi, I, Io, 62, 642; ’Non- 
Rom. Cath., vi, 


Leyland (Layland), Ad. de, vi, 11 9, 
15; Agnes de, vi, 15"; "Alice de, 
vi, 11m, 15, Anne, vi, 2sIMK: 
vii, 31%, 139 2, 196 n, 208 n: 
Avice de, vi, 15”; Avina de, vi, 
I5n; Cecily de, vi, 15; vii, 
torn; Chris., vi, 110m: Eliz., 
vii, 219; Emma de, vi, 15m; 
Geoff. de, vi, 11m; John (de), 
vi, 15, 262”; vii, lor n, 2750; 
Kath. de, vii, 57”; Mabel de, 
vi, 157; Marg. de, vi, 15M; vii, 
IoIn; Margery de, vi, I6n; 
Maud de, vii, 101 »; Osbert de, 
vi, 627; Ralph, vi, 1530; Rich. 
de, vi, 11m, 15”; Rob. de, vi 
15, 15”, 167: vii, 57”, 260n; 
Rog. de, vii, Tor n; Thos, (de), 
vi, II”, 15, 57%, 262 n, 27r il.: 
vii, 31m, IoIm, 119m, 139n, 
204”, 208; Sir Will. ,Vi, 2710; 
vii, 18”, I90%, 196 n, 208 n ; 
Will. (de), vi, 244, 434, 435, 
490, 491, 512”, 515, 519, 520, 
521, 542, 549; Vu, 31m, 134n, 
260 2; fam., vii, 35, 98 n, 161 

Leyland Hall (Leyland), vi, 6,15, 17 

Leyland Moss, vi, 10 

Leyland Old Hall (Leyland), vi, 16 

Leyrebrec, see Larbreck 

Leys, the (Elswick), vii, 282, 284 

Leysinglands (Read), vi, 503 

Leythlandhurst, see Letherland le 
Hurst 

Lichfield, bps. of, vi, 6, 13, 86n, 
87 nm, 240, 298, 312, 346, 356m, 
357) 357”, 309, 498 n; Geoff. 
Blythe, vii, 265”; Walt. de 
Langton, vi, 87, 384; vii, 264; 
Will. Booth, vi, 145”; Will. de 
Cornhull, vi, 413 ” 

Lichtness, Hen. de, vi, 480n; 
Jordan de, vi, 480; Mich. de, vi, 
475”, 480”; Rob. de, vi, 480 n ; 
Sabina, vi, 480” 

Lickfold, Dorothy, vii, 190 n ; John, 
vii, 190” 

as (Goosnargh), vii, 


IgI, 


93” 

uckhurst; Higher (Goosnargh), vii, 

196 
Lickow (Hackinsall), vii, 257 ” 
Licol (Hackinsall), vii, 257 
Lidgett (Colne), vi, 523 
Lidulf, see Liulph 
Lidum, see Lytham 
Light Ash (Myerscough), vii, 138 
Lightfoot Green (Broughton), vii, 


II 

Light Hazels (Read), vi, 506» 

Lighthurst (Chorley), vi, 129 

Lighthurst (Parbold), vi, 180, 180 ” 

Lighthurst, Hen. de, vi, 180 7 ; 
Will. de, vi, 180 

Lightshaw, man., vii, 280” 

Lightworkhouses. (Broughton), vii, 
11g 

Lilburne, Col., vi, 75 ” 

Lilford, Ld., vi, 104, 106, 116, 150, 
151 

Limbrick, vi, 213 

Limefield (Brierfield), vi, 537 | 

Limestone Scarr (Thursden), vi, 471 

Linacre, vii, 285 

Linacre, Rich. de, vi, 225" 

Linalx, see Lynalx 

Linbottiscroft (Mellor), vi, 262 1 

Lincoln, hon. of, vii, 327 

Lincoln, ctsses. of, vi, 377”, 388, 
391", 396, 412, 457, 471, 5°75 
545, 552, 558; vil, 2, 55”; Bae 
vi, 320, 327; vii, ‘168 ; Marg., 
284, 326, 327; earls of, v1, 18" 
70 n, 103, 108, 208, 214M, 217%, 
218 n, 231, 258, 270, 271, 273, 


Lincoln (cont.) 
285, 291, 301, 332%, 335, 345, 
347", 304”, 369”, 375, 394%”, 
409%, 410, 418, 507, 538, 545, 
552 2, 558, 5593 Vil, 2, 5”, 27, 
33, 33%, 52”, 167 n, 168 n, 172, 
177 ”, 178 n, 200 n, 307 n; Edm. 
de Lacy, vii, 325”; Hen., vi, 
60”, 70M, 131, 264, 314, 327, 
332 2, 345; 439, 444 7, 455 ”, 509, 
555, 550; Vil, 30”, 16607; 
John, vi, 193 ”, 444; Vil, 45 

Lincoln, John de, vii, 41 

Lindley (Lindelay), John de, vi, 
241, 327 ad ts 

Lindley Close (Wrightington), vi, 
174n 

Lindsay, bar., vii, 302 

Lindsay, Ada de, vii, 301 », 302 ; 
Alice de, vii, 301 ; Christiana de, 
vii, 302, 305, 316”; Gilb. de, 
vii, 302, 309 ”, 316”; Walt. de, 
vii, 300”, 302; Will. de, vii, 
300 M, 301, 302, 316 n, 318 n 

Linedred (Marsden), vi, 537, 540 

Linen manufacture, vi, 338”; vii, 


150 

Lingard (Lingart), Ad. de, vii, 48 m ; 
Christiana de, vii, 183 ”, 320”; 
Edm., vii, 320”; Ellen de, vii, 
320n; Isolda de, vii, 320”; 
Rev. Jas., vii, 42, 56”; John 
(de), vii, 183”, 316”, 3207; 
Mabel de, vii, 183”; Petronilla 
de, vii, 183 2; Quenilda de, vii, 
183 ”; Rich. de, vii, 320 2; Rob. 
de, vii, 320”; Thos., vii, 138”; 
Walt. de, vii, 320” 

Lingart (Garstang), vii, 315, 318, 


320 

Linlands (Eccleston), vi, 164 ” 

Linley, John, vi, 58”; Walt., vi, 
58n 

Linley Clough (Wrightington), vi, 
175” 

Linney (Lyney), Randle, vi, 241, 
242; Rog., vi, 191 n 

Linton, Will. de, vi, 262 

Lionel, dk. of Clarence, vi, 101 ” 

Liscoe (Out Rawcliffe), vii, 273 

L'Isle, Gerard de, vi, 101 n; Mar- 
gery de, vi, IorI 

Lister, Anne, vi, 560”; Ant., vi, 
559”, 560”; Bridg., vi, 539”; 
Chris., vi, 30, 250”, 285, 378%, 
470, 510M, 523”, 528, 539%; 
Eliz., vi, 393 ”, 470; vil, 102”; 
Ellen, vi, 30, 250”, 285, 378”; 
Jane, vi, 560”; Joan, vi, 554”; 
John, vi, 259, 500”; Kath., vi, 
500; Lawr., vi, 523”, 537% 
539, 549 ”, 559 2; Rob., vii, 218 ; 
Rosamond, vi, 306; Thos., vi, 
367, 396, 463”, 465%, 493, 
510m, 526, 527%, 554%, 559, 
560; Sir Will. vi, 383; Will. 
(the), vi, 30, 306, 393%, 470, 
523”, 528, 539”, 559”; VU, 
98 n, 102 n; —, vi, 368 n, 524” 

Lithcarr (Marton), vii, 174 ”, 242 ” 

Litherland, Rob. de, vi, 62 ” 

Lithum, Lithun, see Lytham 

Litlton, Will. de, vi, 34” 

Litterbrittergate (Cliviger), vi, 480” 

Littlebury, Martin de, vi, 240” 

Littledale, Osborn, vii, 142 

Little Furlong (Ribbleton), vii, 
106 ” 

Little Harwood Hall (Little Har- 
wood), vi, 251 

Littlehead (Duxbury), vi, 211 7 

Little Horseman’s Hill, vii, 228 » 

Little Law, mere, vi, 272 ” 

Little Mearley Hall, vi, 378 

Little Mitton, fam., see Mitton 


INDEX 


Little Mitton Hall (Little Mitton) 
vi, 389 : 
Little Moss (Longton), vi, 73 ” 
Little Poulton Hall (Poulton), vii, 
2270” 
Littlerode (Simonstone), vi, 499 ” 
Littlewood (Ulnes Walton), vi, 13 2, 
21, 108; man., vi, 110 
Littlewoodhey (Brockholes), vii, 
120” 
Liulph (Lidulf), vi, 65; rector of 
_Croston, vi, 87 
Liverpool, vii, 286n; capture 
(1644), vi, 135; man., vii, 129; 
reservoirs, vi, 280 
Liverpool, Geo. H. Brown, Rom. 
Cath. bp. of, vii, 161 
Liverpool, Joan (de), vi, 66”, 140”; 
John, vi, 140”; Rob. de, vi, 
66 n 
Livesey, vi, 235, 284-9, 375 7, 408 ; 
vii, 126; char., vi, 284; ind., 
vi, 284; man., vi, 232,284; Rom. 
Cath., vi, 289 
Livesey, Ad. (de), vi, 267, 284 n, 
285 n, 287 n, 288; vii, 3”; Alex., 
vi, 285 » ; Alice (de), vi, 267, 269, 
285, 286, 286, 401 n; vil, 37; 
Anne, vi, 225”, 285, 286, 401; 
Avice de, vii, 3%; Cecily (de), 
vi, 265, 285; Christiana, vi, 
285; Edm., vi, 285 ”; Eliz., vi, 
48 n, 285 n, 286 ; vii, 229, 229”; 
Geoff. de, vi, 281 ”; Geo., vi, 285, 
285, 288”; vii, 229”; Giles, 
vi, 282 n, 285, 287, 401 ; Hawise 
(Helewise) de, vi, 288; vii, 33%; 
Hen. de, vi, 285, 287”, 288; 
Hugh, vi, 285%”; Isabel, vii, 
21In; Jas., vi, 50”, 268, 269, 
278, 282, 285, 286, 286n, 
288 n, 401 2; vii, 18”; Jennet, 
vi, 285; John (de), vi, 269, 
269”, 282n, 285, 286n, 288, 
288 n, 500”; John P., vi, 225”; 
Jos., vi, 290; vii, 92”; Lawr., 
vi, 285”; vii, 229, 229”, 2727”; 
Marg., vi, 42I, 500; vii, 272 7 ; 
Margery de, vi, 287”; Mary, vi, 
285, 286, 286 n, 287; Oliver, vi, 
285 n ; Percival, vi, 285 ” ; Porter, 
vi, 286; Ralph (Randle), vi, 
48n, 285, 286, 286, 288, 318; 
Rich. (de), vi, 46”, 225”, 285, 
287, 288, 288n; vil, 210%; 
Rob., vi, 225 , 285 n, 288; Rob. 
B., vi, 325; Rog., vi, 285”; 
vii, 127 2; Sarah, vi, 244; Thos., 
vi, 225 ”, 241 n, 265, 267 ”, 269, 
285 n, 288 n, 329, 421; Will. (de), 
vi, 281, 284-5, 286, 288, 298, 
300, 420; vii, 3%, 33%, 487; 
—, vi, 229”; fam., vi, 347; 
vii, 65 ” 
Livesey-Bell, Rob., vi, 286 : 
Livesey Fold (Over Darwen), vi, 


270 

ey Hall (Livesey), vi, 286 

Liveshay, Livyesay, see Livesey 

Lochard, Will., vi, 87 s 

Lockfield (Whittingham), vii, 213 ” 

Lockhart, Capt., vil, 77 ” 

Lodge, the (Bowland), vi, 380 n 

Lodge, the (Myerscough), vil, I 38 

Lodge (Reedley), vi, 49° 

Lodge, riv., vi, 492 

Lodge, Edm., vi, log” 

Lodyat gate (Kirkland), vii, 313 ” 

Lofthouse (Lofthousum), Walt. de, 
vil, 46 2, 59” 

Loghteburgh, see Lothburgh 

Lohonis, vii, 229 ” m, 

Lomas, Geo., vi, 80; vil, 291 ” 

Lomax, Helen, vi, 341, 419; Jas., 
vi, 340, 341, 344, 419, 423; John, 


ay 


Lomax (cont.) 

V1, 419; Mary, vi, 341, 4197; 
Ralph, vi, 54”, 277, 277 n; 
Rebecca, vi, 419; Rich., vi, 419; 
Rich. G., vi, 340, 341, 419, 423 2; 
R., vii, 291; Thos., vi, 419; 
Will, Vi, 419 ” ; —, vii, 123 ; fam., 
Vi, 415 

Lomclough, Matth. de, vi, 4817; 
Poke de, vi, 480 

Lomeshay (Marsden), vi, 537, 543; 
mills, vi, 540 2 

Lomeshay, Higher (Marsden), vi, 
521 

Lomeshay, Lower (Marsden), vi, 
521, 540 

Londe, Walt. de, vii, 318 2 

London, Hen. Wingham, bp. of, 
vu, 146 

London, Nich. de, vi, 11 2 

Long, Geo., vi, 399”; vii, 220; 
Hen., vii, 19; see also Lang 

Longbottom (Cuerden), vi, 24 

Long Castlegate (Cuerden), vi, 24 ” 

Long Causeway (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Longerygge, see Longridge 

Longesnape cloht (Cuerdale), vi, 
301 n 

Longetre, see Langtree 

Longfield (Church), vi, 402 ” 

Longfield (Lea), vii, 132 

Longflat (Winkley), vii, 13 ” 

Longflatt (Mawdesley), vi, 99 ” 

Longford (Goosnargh), vii, 198 

Longford, Avice de, vi, 170%”; 
vii, 192; Dorothy, vi, 3907”; 
Hen. de, vii, 182 , 192, 321”; 
Nich. de, vii, 193; Nigel de, vi, 
I7on; vii, 192; Oliver de, vi, 
170”; vii, 192; Rich., vi, 416 

Long Leadenham (Lincoln), vii, 41 2 

Longlegh, Longleigh, see Longley 

Longley (Goosnargh), vii, 191, 
192 n, 193” 

Longley (Longlegh, lLongleigh), 
Alex. de, vi, 303; Edm., vi, 
298; John de, vi, 303; Rog. de, 
vi, 276”; Thos., vi, 315”; Will. 
de, vi, 303 ”; sce also Langley 

Longley Hall (Goosnargh), see 
Latus House 

Long Marsh (Poulton), vii, 225 

Longmoor (Garstang), vii, 304 

Longridding, Rob. del, vi, 131 ” 

Longridge, vii, I, 15, 36, 37, 43) 
54, 61, 66”, 79 N, 207 ; ch., vii, 66 

Longridge Fell, vi, 230; vii, I, 
10 1, 20, 32, 45, 51, 54, 56 

Longrodes (Freckleton), vii, 168 ” 

Longshaw, brook, vii, 52” 

Longton, vi, 11, 18, 52, 58, 58”, 
69-74; chap., vi, 55-6; char., vi, 
56; ch., vi, 73; Man., vl, 59, 
62, 69; Nonconf., vi, 52, 74; 
Rom. Cath., vi, 74; sch., vi, 56, 


74 

Longton, New, vi, 74 

Longton, Abel de, vi, 70”, 72” 5 
Ad. de, vi, 72”; Agnes, vu, 
125; Alice, vi, 71”; Beatrice 
de, vi, 722; Edith de, vi, 62 » ; 
Edw., vi, 69”; Geoff. de, vi, 
62", 72”; Hugh, vii, 125”; 
Isoude de, vi, 1512; John (de), 
vi, 69, 71”, 72%, 73%; Lewis, 
vi, 69”, 70%, 73%; Margery de, 
vi, 70”; Maud de, vi, 151”; 
Mich. de, vi, 7072; Rob. de, vi, 
53”, 702, 71M, 72%; Rog. de, 
vi, 72 2; Sibyl de, vi, 53%, 70™ 5 
Swain de, vi, 70%; Thos. (de), 
vi, 69”, 71%, 72%; Will. de, vi, 
7ON, JIN, 722, ISIN; See also 
Langton ‘ 

Longtonhey (Cuerden), vi, 27 # 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Longworth, vi, 272 

Longworth, Ellen, vii, 2%7; Fleet- 
wood, vii, 182; Isabella, vii, 
272; Jas., vi, 19; John, vi, 23; 
Ralph, vii, 264m, 267, 271%, 
272, 320; Rich., vii, 182, 
272; Solomon, vi, 323, 387; 
Thos., vill, 272”; —, vi, 4n 

Lonsdale (Lonsdall), Eliz., vi, 415 ; 
John, vi, 269; Rob., 1, 499” ; 
Thos., vi, 269”, 499, 499%; —, 


V1, 394, 499 ; 
Lord (Lort), Alex., vi, 438; Jas., 
vi, 437, 438, 439; Joan, vi, 


438; John, vi, 427, 435”, 439; 
Lawr., vi, 438, 439 

Lord’s Hall (Over Darwen), 

Lord’s Ing (Colne), vi, 536 

Lorimer (Larrimer), Geo., vii, 1267, 
218; Jane, vii, 257 2; Joan, vii, 
31”; John, vii, 126, 2877; 
Will, vii, 31” 

Lort, see Lord 

Lostock (Cuerden), vi, 27 

Lostock, riv., vi, I0, 23, 29, 32, 
47, 61, 75, 91, 108, 110 n, 289 

Lostock, Jas. de, vi, 24”, 291, 
291 n, 295; Magote (Margery) 
de, vi, 295 

Lostock Brow 
Cross, Vi, los 2 

Lostock Hall (\Walton-le-Dale), vi, 
27, 289, 295; Vil, 235” 

Lostockhey (Cuerden), vi, 26” 

Lothburgh (Loghteburgh), Rich. 
de, Vi, 131 ”, 134”, 1350” 

Lothresdene, Godf. de, vi, 548 

Loucoks, Thos., vil, 4 

Loud, riv., vi, 230, 379; vii, 20, 26, 
29 n, 32, 34M, 191 

Loud (Lowd, Lowde), Edm., vi, 
363"; vil, 18; Edw., vii, 137”; 
Isabel, vii, 18; Jas., vii, 18, 32 ”, 
152, 155”; Joan, vii, 18; John, 
vii, 18; Marg., vil, 15”; Rich., 
vii, 15»; Rob., vi, 511 ”; Thos., 
vii, 18; Will, vii, 15 ”, 18 

Loud Bridge (Thornley), vii, 32 

Loudoun, carl, vii, 164” 

Loudscales (Goosnargh), vil, IgI, 
196 n, 206 n, 267 

Louerd, Ad. le, vi, 335 

Louersal, Will. de, vii, 297 

Louis Philippe, king of France, vi, 
210” 

Lourdes, Hfen. de, 
Dublin, vii, 1467 
Louvre (Paris), Standish collection, 

vi, 210 n 
Love Clough (Higher Booths), vi, 


Vi, 292 


(UInes Walton), 


archbp. of 


433-4 

Lovel, Maud, Lady, vi, 140; Lds., 
vi, 178m, 310; John, vi, 140; 
Will, vi, 305 ; Fran., vsct., vi, 304 

Lovel (Lovell), Geo., vi, 4237; 
John, vi, 140 

Loveley (Wilpshire), vi, 335 ” 

Loveley Hall (Salesbury), vi, 256 

Low Chapel (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 
292, 297 

Lowde, see Loud 

Lowe (Low), Anne, vi, 35 7; Chris., 
vi, 499 n; Cuth., vi, 399; Ellen, 
v1, 399  ; Isabel, vi, 457”; Jas., 
vi, 497; John, vi, 85", 153, 
213m, 399”, 467; Margery 
del, vi, 117; Mocock de, vi, 
480; Rich. del, vi, 117”; Rob., 
Vi, 35%, 399”, 399"; vii, 177; 
Thos., vi, 213 ”; Will, vi, 467 2, 
499”; Dr. —, vi, 36; —, vi, 208, 
499; see also Lowes 

Lower Abbot House (Mellor), vi, 253 

Lower Alston Farm (Ribchester) 
vu, 45 


, 


Lower Chorley Hall (Chorley), vi, 
134 

Lower Cockden (Bricrcliffe), vi, 
469 

Lower Cross (Higher Booths), vi, 


434 
Lower End (Leagram), vi, 380” 
Lowerford (Barrowford), vi, 541 
Lowergate (Clitheroe), vi, 361 
Lower Gate (Twiston), vi, 558 
Lower Green (Hapton), vi, 512 ” 
Lower Hall (Penwortham), vi, 60 n, 


61 

Lower Hall (Read), vi, 505, 506 

Lower House (Whittingham), vii, 
213 

Lower Houses (Habergham Eaves), 
see Thornhill Holme 


Lower Oxgang (Pendleton), vi, 
393% ; : 

Lower Thornhill (Pendleton), vi, 
3947 


Lowes, John, vi, 19 m, 23; Nancy, 
vi, 19”, 110”, 164”; see also 
Lowe 

Lowick Hall (Salwick), vil, 165 7 

Low Moor (Clitheroe), vi, 371 

Loxham (Loxam, Loxum), Ad. de, 
vi, 72”; Alice de, vi, 72n, 
154”; Geoff. (de), vi, 70 n, 72"; 
Isabel, vi, 72”; Joan de, vi, 
72m, 73%; John de, vi; 72"; 
Margery, vi, 72 2; Ralph, vi, 55, 
73”; vil, 291; Rob. (de), vi, 
69 n, 72m; Vil, 224, 255, 259; 
Rog. de, vi, 72 2; Thos. (de), vi, 
67, 72, 73; Warine de, vi, 
72n; Will. (de), vi, 55, 69%, 
JON, 72M, 732, 74, I54n; W., 
vi, 74 

Loynd, John, vi, 516”; Mrs. vi, 
516n 

Lubley, Eliz., vii, 136” 

Lucas, Lady, vi, 421 

Lucas, Anne, vil, 49”; Cecily, vi, 
228m; Sir Chas., vi, 523; John, 
vu, 199"; Rob., vi, 2282”; Will., 
vu, 196" 

Lucas Green (Whittle-le-Woods), 
vi, 32" 

Luck Field (Brockholes), vii, go 

Lucy, Ada de, vii, 267; Amabil 
de, vii, 207 2; Edm. B., vi, 210” ; 
Geoff. de, vi, 303 ”; Marg. L. M., 
vi, 210 n; Rich. de, vii, 267 ” 

Ludecholis, see Loudscales 

Lufclough, Lugheclogh, see Love 
Clough 

Luffeley Hall, see Loveley Hall 

Lumb (Newchurch), vi, 437, 440 

Lumland (Newton), vii, 166” 

Lumley, Sir John, vii, 301; Lucy 
de, vii, 301”; Marm. de, vii, 
301 2; Sir Rob. de, vii, 3017; 
Rob. de, vii, 301”; Thos., vii, 
301; —, curate of Pilling, vii, 


334 

Lummelade 
258n 

Lum Mills (Ribchester), vii, 51 

Lumpton, Jas., vi, 113 

Lund, vii, 137”, 149, 161, 162; 
chap., vii, 163 ”, 165 

Lund (Lunt), Ant., vii, 141, 206 n, 
207”; John, vi, toon; Maud 
del, vi, 101m; Rich. del, vi, 
10oIn; vii, 26”; Thos., vi, 80, 
260; Will, vi, 79; vii, 175”; 


(Clayton-le-Dale), vi, 


—, vu, 164” 
Lungridding (Church), vi, 402 
Lungvilers, Eudo de, vi, 509; 


John de, vi, 509 
Lunt, see Lund 
Lushington, Hen., vii, 184 
Lusignan, Geoff. de, vii, 84 


392 


Lussell, Ad., vii, 116; Chris., vi, 
324; Edw., vi, 325; vii, 98"; 
Grace, vi, 325; Hen., vi, 325; 
John, vi, 324, 325; vii, 79m, 
110; Kath, vii, 79"; Maud, 
vil, 79"; Kich., vii, 192 " ; Thos., 
Vi, 3245 Vl, 79" 

Lutener, Rev. Will, vi, 313, 319 
Lutwidge, Chas. R. F., vi, 163; 
Hen., vi, 163 2; Jane, vi, 163. 

Lyce (Church), vi, 402” 

Lydda, Rob. Gradwell, bp. of, vii, 
161, 165n, 330 

Lydiate (Lydiate Leys) (Ecel-ston), 
vi, 165 n, 1677 

Lydton, Will. de, vi, 34” 

Lymetrough (Gt. Harwood), vi, 340 

Lymwelridding (Alston), vii, 63 

Lynalx (Lenox, Linalx), Alex., vii, 
47; Cecily, vil, 47”; Eliz., 
vii, 39”, 47”; Isabel, vii, 47"; 
John, vii, 47, 48”, 58n; Kath. 
(de), vii, 43 ”, 47; Rich. (de), vii, 
47”, 48n; Rob., vii, 43”, 47, 
487, 49, 50, 50”, 56n, 64n; 
Thos., vii, 1, 18, 39 , 47 , 48n; 
Thurstan, vii, 47”; Will. (de), 
vii, 43”, 47; —, Vil, In 

Lynerode (Little Marsden), vi 
459” 

Lyney, see Linney 

Lynstanhurst (Hoghton), vi, 38 » 

Lynstanhurst, Alan de, vi, 37” 
Alice de, vi, 37.” 

Lynstede, Anne, vii, 197”; John, 
vii, 197 » 

Lyolfscroft (Freckleton), vii, 168 

Lysewy, Rog. de, vi, 369 

Lytham, vu, 68, 71, 79”, 129, 
137”, 149m, I51, 165, 174, 
213-8, 285; adv., vii, 217; char., 
vii, 219; ch., vii, 214”, 215”, 
216; cross, vil, 214”, 215n; 
dock, vii, 80; grange, vii, 215”; 
man., vii, 163, 164 ”, 174”, 214, 
242; mill, vii, 214, 216”; 
Nonconf., vii, 218; pk., vii, 
215; pewter vessels, vii, 217; 
Rom. Cath., vii, 219; sch., vii, 
219; sundial, vii, 217; wards, 
vii, 214 

Lytham, John, vii, 223 

Lytham Hall, vii, 145, 215, 219 

Lytham Priory, vi, 69, 103, 103, 
104”, 107; Vil, 92”, 97, 132, 


’ 


146”, 156”, 160, 168, 170n, 
17Im, 172, 174, 175m, 215. 
216”, 217, 231", 242, 271, 


281 n, 285, 332, 332”; John de 
Normanby, prior of, vii, 332 
Lythe Carr, see Lithcarr 
Lythegreyns, see Leagram 
Lytton, Will. de, see Fitton 
Lyvesay, see Livesey 


Mabbeson, Hugh, vii, 100 n; Rich., 
vii, loon 

Mabbott, Gilb., vii, 319 n ; Martha, 
vii, 319” 

Mabholm (Chipping), vii, 29 

Macclesfield, Chas., earl of, vii, 304 

MacDiarmid, Mrs., vi, 413 

Macdonald, Donald, vii, 78 

Macdonnell, Jas., vii, 4; Myles, 
vii, 14” 

McGrath, Rev, Hen. W., vi, 299, 
313 

McKean, John, vi, 154 

Macrorie, Will. K., bp., vi, 426 

Macy, os vii, 264 

Maden, John, vi, 440 

Madman Hole (Trawden), vi, 55! 

Madoc, vii, 330” 


Magdalene’s Hospital (Preston), vii, 


99" 

Maggeldesmedow-cliffe (Clayton-le- 
Dale), vi, 258 

Maggeson, see Magson 

Maghull, vii, 169 ” 

Magnus, vii, 108, 179, 273 

Magson (Maggeson), Hen., vii, 92 ; 
Maud, vi, 154”; Rob., vii, 
92; Rog., vi, 154 7 

Maiden Cross (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Maiden’s House (Ribbleton), vii, 
106 n 

Mains (Mains Hall) (Singleton), vii 
183, 185, 186 

Mainwaring, Eliz., vi, 376, 3947: 
Sir H., vii, 32; John, vii, 280 » ; 
Marg., vil, 286”; Rog., vi, 376, 
394 2; see also Manwaring 

Maire, Hen., vil, 309 x 

Makinson, Pet., vi, 31 1, 299 

Makon, Jas., vi, 104 % 

Malalis, fam., see Malsys 

Malbisse, Rich., vi, 471 

Malham (Mallum), Alice de, vi, 
553”; John (de), vi, 5362, 


553 % . 
Malherbe, John, vi, 91, 92, 115, 
116, 130; Mabel, vi, 92 n; Thos. 


, 


vi, 92 ” 

Malkin Fields (Goldshaw Booth), 
vi, 515 7” 

Malkin Tower (Barrowford), vi 
516, 520, 542 

Malkin Yard (Colne), vi, 525 » 

Malla, Edw. Dicconson, bp. of, vi, 
186 

Malley, Fran., vii, 141 2 

Mallory, Thos., vi, 161 

Mallum, see Malham 

Malpas, Hen., vi, 87 

Malsys, Ad. de, vi, 556 2; Alice de, 
vi, 556”; Rich. de, vi, 556”; 
Will. de, vi, 556 ” 

Malt-kiln estate (Chipping), vii, 26 

Malveysgate (Maluaysegate, Mal- 
uesgate) (Clitheroe), vi, 365, 
366 n, 368 n 

Manchester, diocese, vi, 2 

Manchester, Edw., vi, 358 

Mancknowles, Manconhelis, see 
Manknowles 

Manehouse, see Mosney House 

Manknowles, (Mancknowles, Man- 
conhelis, Manknolls), Hen. (de), 
vi, 538”, 539; Jas., vi, 519; 
John (de), vi, 519, 538”, 539, 
546”; Lawr., vi, 536%”, 539, 
545”; Rob., vi, 519; —, vi, 
524” 

Manley, Isaac G., vi, 31”; Rob., 
vi, 16” 

Manneby, Rob. de, vii, 13 

Mansel, John, vii, 219; see also 
Maunsell 

Mansergh, Edw., vii, 253 ” 

Manwaring, Rev. Edw., vii, 165; 
see also Mainwaring 

Mapleton, John, vi, 160, 161 

Marays, see Marsh 

Marbury, Thos., vi, 105 » 

March, Beatrice, vii, 173”; John, 
vii, 114, 173 2; sce also Marsh 

Marchden, see Marsden 

Marcroft, —, vi, 426 

Mare, Hen., vi, 69”; Isabel de 
la, vi, 92; John de la, vi, 86x, 
92, 96”, 97”, IOIN, II6%n, 
154”; Mabel de la, vi, 92”; 
Marg.; vi, 69; Margery de la, 
vi, 70"; Maud de la, vi, 93; 
Sir Will. de la, vi, 120”, 262; 
Will. de la, vi, 70, 71 ”, 92, 95, 
96 n, 130 

Marebonne (Chipping), vii, 29 


e; 


INDEX 


Mareounson, Will., vi, Io7 n 

Margaret, d. of Rich., vii, 159 », 
214, 2867; w. of Chris., vi, 107"; 
w. of Hen, V1, 339017; w. of Rich. 
the smith, vi, 92 

Margaret Acre (Brockholes), vii, 
III yn 

Margaret-riding (Clayton-le-Dale) 
vi, 258n pois 

Margery, vi, 391 n, 538; vil, 
t6on; dl. of Agnes, Vi, 201 2 ; 
d. of Hen., vi, 103 1; w. of Ad., 
V1, 397 2; w. of Alan, vi, 1547; 


Marhalgh, Alan de, vii 
Isabel de, vii, 133” 

Mariona, w. of Hen., vi, 201 2 

Maritzburg, Will. Macroric, bp. of, 
V2, 426 

Markedholme, see Martholme 

Marketgate (Clitheroe), vi, 367 1, 
577” 

Marketholme, see Martholme 

Markets and Fairs, vi, gr, 120, 121, 
143, T44, 237, 238, 247, 274, 291, 
338, 339, 361, 364n, 308, 426, 
431, 439, 437, 439, 441, 442, 
443) 447, 492, 523; vil, 27, 45, 
51, 72, 77, 91, 92, 93, 95, 96, 
97", 151, 176, 184, I91, 251, 

Marketstreet (Clitheroe), vi, 368 

Markham, Cath., vii, 275»; Edw., 
Vil, 275” 

Markland (Marklan), Alice de, vii, 
166%”; Bertie, vii, 167; Rich. 
de, vil, 166”; Will. de, vi, 
201 2 

Markpool, vi, 68 1; vii, 172 ” 

Marland (Burnley), vi, 452 

Marler, Hen. the, vii, 120 » 

Marling, Lady, vii, 212 

Marmyon, John, vii, 24” 

Marreys, see Marsh 

Marsall (Marsden), vi, 540 7 

Marsden (Great and Little), vi, 
233”, 307, 349, 350%, 3612, 
479", 4897, 492, 522, 524, 
524”, 527, 528, 529%”, 530, 
539-41, 543%, 547, 551M, 552; 
bridges, vi, 537; ch., vi, 541; 
coal-mines, vi, 537; convents, 
vi, 541; cross, vi, 537; earth- 
work, vi, 536; ind., vi, 537; 
mans., vi, 232, 233%, 537; mill, 
vi, 539%”; Nonconf., vi, 541; 
quarries, vi, 537; Rom. Cath., 
vi, 541 

Marsden (Merclesden, Merkesden), 
Alice (de), vi, 407, 538”; Avice 
de, vi, 544; Chris., vi, 265, 277 ”, 
302, 539; Edw., vi, 468%, 
527, 530, 540”; Ellen (de), vi, 
526 n, 5407; vii, 92; Gilb. de, 
vi, 4097”, 526, 538%”, 539”, 
544”; vii, 24, 24”; Grace, Vi, 
527”; Hen., vi, 142, 277, 277 %, 
282, 539; vii, 65 2, 170 2; Hugh, 
vi, 48 n, 367; Jas., vi, 283%, 
290, 367, 391 2, 520”, 52712; 
Jane, vi, 527; Janet, vii, 65”; 
Jer., vi, 274 ”, 360”; John (de), 
vi, 301, 494, 538%, 539, 539% 
544; vii, 24”, 25, 252; Lawr., 
vi, 527”; Marg., vi, 28», 48n, 
5267, 527”; Miles, vi, 28%, 
265; Nich. (de), vi, 277, 526%, 
527; Osbert de, vi, 537; hie 
de), vi, 407, 471 %, 537, 535%; 
fealgh vi, 272”; Rich. (de), 
vi, 233”, 277%, 327%, 379, 
452, 4712, 485”, 519, 525%, 


BEE) 


» T33NG 


Marsden (cont.) 

526, 527, 537) 538, 539, 542, 
344, 540; vii, 34 2, 290; Rob. 
(de), vi, 371, 396, 443, 5251, 526, 
527%, 537, 538”, 54412; Thos., 
vi, 181; Will. (de), vi, 269 n, 
278, 283, 526n, 5387, 539, 
5462; vii, 24, 191, 196, 292 ; 
—) V1, 524”; fam., vi, 380 2 

Marsden Edge (Burnley), vi 

Marsden Hall (Marsden), \ oe 
ae (Marsden), vi, 536, 

teins da vi, 536, 537; 541% 
aes s tenement (Chipping), vii, 

Marsey, Randle (Ranulf) de, vi, 
199, 204, 208, 213, 217, 260; 
Rog. de, vi, 204, 208, 213, 260; 
fam., vi, 193 2, 276, 279 

Marsh, the (Clifton-with-Salwick), 
vii, 161 

Marsh, the (Hutton), vi, 67 1 

Marsh (Marays, Marreys), Alice del, 
vii, 227”; Anne, vii, 2297; 
Denis del, vii, 1752; Ellen del, 
vii, 249»; Evan, vi, 111; Geo., 
vi, 5”; Hen, vii, 229”; 
Humph., vi, 110, 111; John 
(de, del), vi, 111; vii, 1542; 
Nich. del, vii, 154, 175 ”, 227 n, 
249”; Rob. de (del, de la), vii, 
III”, 226n, 227; Rev. —, vi, 
181 7; see also March 

Marshal (Marshall), Alan the, vii, 
toon; Alex. the, vii, 10on; 
Alice, vi, 66 ” ; vii, 100 n; Cecily, 
vii, too”; Christiana, vii, 92 7 ; 
Eliz., vi, 492”; Fred., vi, 57; 
Grace, vi, 398; vil, tol 7; Guy, 
vi, 495”; Hen., vi, 492 7; vii, 
2847; Jas., vi, 398; vii, IoIn; 
John (the), vi, 395 ”, 495 7; vii, 
79n, 92m, Ioom; Lawr., vii, 
to1n; Maud, vii, 252”; Milla, 
vii, too m; Rich. (the), vi, 66 7, 
398 n, 492”, 494”, 495%; Vii, 
89 2, 92 2, 100”; Thos., vi, 493, 
496; Will. (the), vi, 57, 377, 
398 1; vii, 73 2, 74, 100 n, 252 n 

Marshey, the (Simonstone), vi, 
498 N, 500” 

Marshford, Rob., vii, 24 

Marsh House (Elston), vii, 115 

Martel, Marg., vi, 390; Rog., vi, 390 

Marten, see Martin ; 

Martholme (Gt. Harwood), v1, 
122, 338, 339%, 340, 341-2; 
mill, vi, 340, 418 , 

Martin (Marten), Alice, vil, 211 7; 
Cecily, vi, 64; Rev. Edw., vi, 
74n; Edw., vi, 55; Jas. vi, 
64; vii, 86, 87; John, vi, 237%, 
415 ; Lancelot, vil, 211 7; Matth., 
vi, 32; Rich., vi, 167 2; Thos., 
vi, 239 2; —, Vil, 65 2 

Martindale, Ad., vi, 170; Pct., 
vi, I51 

Martin mere, see Marton mere 

Martin of St. Felix, see Woodcock, 
Ven. John 

Marton, vii, 213 7, 214, 215%, 219, 
222 N, 225, 229 2, 235 2, 239-42) 
242”, 249”; cChap., Vil, 224, 
242; char., vii, 225; ch., vii, 242 ; 
mans., Vii, 163, 164 #, 236 2, 240; 
mkt., vii, 240; Nonconf., vil, 242; 
Rom.Cath., vii, 242; sch., vil ,225 

Marton, Gt., vii, 165, 239, 249 247 

Marton, Little, vii, 165, 176%, 177) 
239, 2402; Man., Vii, 163, 104%, 
241; sch., vii, 242 

Marton, Ad. de, vu, 249, 241”, 
242 2; Alice de, vu, 240 n ’ 
Beatrice de, vil, 23425 Chris., 
vi, 494”; Hen. (de), vi 54675 


ite) 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Marton (cont) 
vii, 241; Hugh de, vil, 2407; 
John, vii, 123; Marg. de, vii, 
240n; Margery de, vii, 2347, 
240 n, 241"; Matth. de, vii, 240 ; 
Mich. de, vii, 240”; Paul de, 
vu, 241”; Rich. de, vii, 234%, 
240, 241 n, 242 2; Steph. de, vii, 
241; Thos., vi, 55”; Will. de, 
VU, 234°", 290, 245.1, 24277 
Col., vn, 128 

Marton Green farm (Marton), 
225 

Marton (Martin) mere, vi, 106, 115, 
I16 nm; Vu, 176 n, 238 n, 239, 240; 
fishery dispute, vi, 106, 117 2 

Marton Moss (Blackpool), vii 4 25E 

Mary, queen, vii, 59 7, 153, 245” 

Maryden, John, vii, 24 

Masca, see Myerscough 

Mascroft, Will, vi, 182 

Mascy, see Massey 

Mason (Mavson, Mazon), 
287; Anne, vii, 154”; Cuth., 
At, 1542; Eliz, vu, 28723 
Gree, vo; yn? Hens vi, 
134”; Hen. W., vu, 145; Hugh, 
Vu, 1594”; Jas.. wa, rp, Ty, 
290% Jane, Miu, 255 2; Mare. le, 
Vl, 390; Vi, 30”, 154%, 1597; 
Pct., vi, 166; wil, 121”, 1547, 
1jon; Ralph, vi, 154"; Rich, 
Vi, Iozm; vil, 154", 1597; 
Kob., vu, jon, 2572; Rox. Ie, 
Mig 390% Wall, vi, 148, 1924 ‘vil 
5in 

Massey (Mascyv, Massy, 
Alice, vi, 292"; Vii, 
Edw., vi, 160; Eliz., vii, 
Ellen, vil, 2497; 
2927 Jas.,. v1, 
231 G2 Jey 
John, vii, 


vu, 


Aloe, vil, 


Massvec}, 

249 n; 

307 n; 

Hamon, vi, 

653; vil, 2277, 

239", 249, 3077; 

Lign, 225 :n, 230-0, 
241 n, 249"; Ralph, vii, 201 2; 
Rich., vi, 292 ” 

Ma-ter, Anne, vi, 89; Edw., vi, 119, 
128; Eliz., vi, 89, 90”, yonn; 
Gilb;. G.,°V1,. 5475 Gs Six Vi, 80% 
Jas. S., vi, 147; John W., vi 
147; Legh, vi, 86 , 89; Marg., vi 
a5n, Son, 89 2; Oswald, vi, 89; 
Penelope, vi, 85; Rob., vi, 80, 
89, 119 n, 128, yoo 2; Rev. Rob. 
ML. vi, 85, 89, 119, 452, 482”; 
Rev. Streynsham, vi, 85, 80 n, 89, 
go n, 93, II4, 119: —, vi, 452 

Master-Whitaker, Rev. A., vi, 86, 
452”; Mary C., vi, 482" 

Mather, Joan, vi, 217"; Reg., vi 
2218” 

Matshead (Matcshead) (Claughton), 


Vi, 324, 329m; paper-mill, vii, 
330 

Matthew, vi, 480; the physician, 
vii, 204, 296 

Matthew, Tobias (Toby), archbp. 


of York, vii, 14 

Matthews, Rev. Jas., vi, 452; Jas., 
vi, 358, 516, 558; —, vil, 188 ” 

Matthewson (Mawson), Ad., vi, 
504”; Rich., vi, 493; Rog., vi, 
504% 

Maud, vii, 180, 331”; d. of 
Godwin, vii, 45 2; d. of Hen., vii 


105”, 1ogn; d. of Ivctte, vii, 
98; d. of Rich., vii, 285; Ww. of 
Alex., vii, 209 2; w. of Ellis, vii, 


169 n; w. of Grimbald, vii, 192 n; 
w. of Rob., vi, 66”; w. of Will. 
the fisher, vi, 166”; w. of Will. 
the marshal, vii, 252” 
Maude, Fred., vii, 67 
Maudlands (Preston), vii, 
797n, 1637 
Maudslev, see Mawdesley 


74 n, 


Maudson (Mauldeson), 
31M, 33 

Mauleverer, Kath., vii, 280; Sir 
Fet., vii, 280”; Rich., vi, 254; 
Sibyl, vi, 254 

Maulke, vi, 548 

Maunsell (Mauncel), Edm., vii, 62 7 ; 
Eliz., vi, 377"; Marg., vi, 296; 
Rich., vi, 29"; see also Mansel 

Maurice, vii, 31, 31%; abbot of 
Evesham, vi, 65; abbot of Kirk- 
stall, vi, 480” 

Maw, Mrs., vi, 413 

Mawdesley, vi, 81, 86, 91 7, 96- 
Ioo ; char., vi, 90, 9I ” ; man.. vi, 
97; Nonconf., vi, I00; Rom. 
Cath., vi, 100; sch., vi, 89, 100 

Mawdesley (Maudsley), Ad. de, vi, 
97%", 98n; Alan de, vi, 97”; 
Alex. vi, 97 ”, 166, 198 ; Alice de, 
vi, 97”; Benet de, vi, 93”; 
Chris., vu, 32; Dorothy, vii, 
226n; Edw., vi, 97”, 2857; 
Eliz., Vi, 285; Emma (de), vi, 
429 n, 455; Hen. (de), vi, 97 7, 


John, 


ily 


272", 367"; Vii, 31, 32; Hugh 
de, vi, 97”; Jas., vi, Ioon; 
Joan de, vi, 97” John de, vi, 
97 n, 98n; Ixath., vi, 39827; 
Marg., vi, Ioon; Ottwell, vi, 
97"; Pet., vi, 204; Ralph de, 
vi, 97; Rich. (de), vi, 97%, 
tran? Rich, H. dey va, 197-205 
Kob., vi, 97”, 98, 100; vi, 
2252; Rog. de, vi, 97”; Rev. 
Thos., vi, 97; Thos. (de), vi, 
88, 94”, 97", 166n, 167n; 
VU, 24”, 25, 204”; Thurstan, 
vi, 72", 97", 167, 239, 273, 


398 ; Wi ill, (de), vi, 97 2, 98, 100, 
177%, 429 n, 459; Will. H. de, 
vl, 97”; —, vi, 74"; fam., Vi, 
TJs 13% B40 2 
Mawdesley Hall, vi, 97, 98 
Mawson, see Matthewson 
May, Edw. vi, 214 2; Jas. W. S., 
Vu, 259; see also Mey 
Maycrarth (Shevington), vi, 202 n 
Mayfield, John, vii, 222, 239; 
Mary, vil, 239”; —, vil, loyn 
Mayhew, Perceval S., Vii 210; Walt. 
vi, 210 n 
Maynard, Dorothy, Lady, vii, 
250, Eliz., Lady, vii, 287; 
Banastre, Ld., vii, 285, 287; 
WulL, Ld., vii, 286 2, 287 » 
Maynes, the (Euxton), vi, 19 2 
Maynes, the Pe aL V1, 296 
Maynidding (Ribehe-t 1), vii, 47 ” 
Mayon, Mazon, see Mason 
Meadowcroft (Church), vi, 402” 
Meadowcroft, Ad. de, vi, 200 n; 
Nich. de, vi, 406”; Rich., vi, 
23; Rog. de, vi, 482” 
Meadowgate (Rawcliffe), vii, 268 
Meadowlache (Simonstone), — vi 
499 2 
beeen 3 (Accrington), vi, 423 
Meanwood (Wrightington), vi, 1757” 
Meatley, vi, 349, 375-79, 555”, 
558, 559, 559; Mans., vi, 375; 
mill., vi, 375 7, 377 0, 378 0 
Mearley, Gt., Vi, 359”, 375, 379 N, 
379 n, 504, 555% 

Mearley, Little, vi, 356 ”, 375, 377 
Mearley, Ad. de, WA; 395) 3 Agnes 
de, vi, 365”, 375; Eve de, vi, 
375”; Hugh de, vi, 377, 559”; 
Lawr. de, vi, 559”; Ralph de, 
vl, 375”, 559”; Steph. de, vi, 

355 n, 375; see also Morlcy 
Mearley Bank (Mearley), vi, , 378 n 
Mearley Hall, vi, 376 


Mears, T., vi, 354, 450, 517, 533; 
vii, 23, 82, 295 


394 


, 


Mears & Co., vi, 186, 239, 354, 
370; Vii, 40, 145, 217 

Mears & ‘Stainbank, Vi, 54, 342, 
495; Vii, 123, 203, 217 

Meath, Rich. de, vii, 229" 

Meatham, Rev. Edw. » Vi, 435” 

Medcalfe, see Metcalfe 

Medgeall, fam., see Midgehalgh 

Medholme (Lytham), vil, 216n 

Medlar (Medlar-with- “Wesham), vu, 
108, 143, 143 ™, 144, 144m, 150, 


153-7, 176", 179, 182m, 187n, 
196 m; man., vil, [53 
Medlar, Eda de, vii, 153”; John 


de, vil, 1577; Margery de, vii, 

157”; Rog. de, vii, 153"; sim! 

de, vii, 157m; Will. de, vii, 

I57n 

Medulache (Read), vi, 503 

Meger, Ad. le, vi, 507”; Thos. Ie, 
vi, 507” 

Mekes (Lea), vii, 130” 

Mekmyr (Nether Wyresdale), vii, 
302n 

Meldrum, Sir John, vii, 144” 

Meleire, see Mellor 

Meles, see Meols 

Melling, vi, 419 ” 

Melling, Eliz., vii, 
117; Mary, vii, 
143” 

Mellor, vi, 235, 260-3, 278, 319, 
555”; vil, 49”, 50”; char., vi, 
244; ch., vi, 263; man, vi, 260, 
378; mill, vi, 262”; Rom. 
rem., vi, 260 

Mellor, brook, vi, 260, 263, 313 

Mellor (Meleire, Meluer, Meluir), 
Emmota de, vii, 30”; Hen. de, 
vi, 262; Hugh de, vi, 262; John 
de, vi, 262, 263”; Rich. de, vi, 


324”; Jas., vi, 
I30n; Wil, vi 


262; Rob. de, vi, 202, 2632; 
Rov. de, vi, 202 2; Will. de, vi 
202, 345 

Mellor Brook (Samlesbury), vi, 
260, 393 


Mellor Moor, vi, 251, 260 

Meluer, Meluir, see Mcllor 

Menegate (Cliviger), vi, 485 

Meneriding (Whittle), vi, 36” 

Menerode (Cliviger), vi, 485 ” 

Meols, North, vi, 58”, 59 

Meols (Meles), Ad. de, vi, 7”; vii, 
168 n, 109 n, 180n, 315 n; Ad. W. 
de, vi, 7; Alan de, vii, 169; Alice 
dc, vii, 227; Gilb. de, vii, 165, 
109”; Hugh de, vi, 62”; John 
del, vi, 11 2, 62 ”, 256; Margery 
de, vii, 168”, 109”; Matilda 
del, vi, 256; Will. de (del), vi, 
7, 11 n, 62; vii, Log n, 2270 

Mercer, Alex., vi, 342; Alice, vu, 
161”; Chris., vi, 499; Edw, 
vi, 342 ; vii, 161 ; Lliz., vii, 161 1; 
Ellen, vi, 340 ” ; Isabel, vi, 499 1; 
John, vi, 161, 338; vii, 159%”, 
161, 320”; Mary, vi, 161 7; vil, 
304”; Rich., vi, 499; Rob., vil, 
174m; Rob. C., vi, 344, 416; 
Thos., vi, 95”, 99 2, 141, 367m, 
432"; vil, 304”; Will, vi, 11 7, 
342; Vi, 161 n; —, vi, 340 

Merchat, tax, vil, 487” 

Merclesden, see Marsden 

Merclie (Lea), vii, 130” 

Merclisden, see Marsden 

Mere, the (Salesbury), vi, 253 

Mere, Anne, vi, 476”; Join, vi, 
476; Jordan de la, vi, 2349; 
Rich. de la, vii, 234 2; Thos. del, 
vli, 234” 

Mere Brow (Tarleton), vi, 115 

Merecliff (Hothersall,, vii, 05 ” 

Mere Clough (Cliviger), vi, 
vii, 27", 141” 


479; 


Mereclough, Mocock del, vi, 480; 
Rob. de, vi, 481”; Will. de, vi, 
481” 

Mereclough Eilsy (Salesbury), vi 
253 

Meregatelache, see Mergelache 

Meregrene (Pendleton), vi, 393 ” 

Mere Hole Well (Accrington), vi, 


’ 


423 
Merelache (Clayton-lk:-Moors), vi, 
417 2, 418 


Merelich (Lea), vii, 130” 

Merepool, see Markpool 

Mereslack (Trawden), vi, 552 

Mereton, Meretun, see Marton 

Mergelache Clough (Clayton-lc- 
Moors), vi, 417 7, 418 

Merivale Abbey (Warws.), vi, 150 ; 
Rob. de Okethorp, abbot of, vi, 
s150n; Will., abbot of, vi, 150 

Merkelstene, Merkesden, see Mars- 


den 

Merlay, Merlee, Merleye, — see 
Mearley 

Merrick, John, vii, 18 7 

Merrick’s Hall (Bailey), vii, 19 

Merryloft, Geo., vi, 56 ” 

Merseland (Church), vi, 402 » 

Mershey, see Marshey 

Merstalknoll (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 
290 

Merstholme (Lea), vii, 130” 

Mersyke (Chipping), vii, 29 » 

Merton, par., see Marton 

Merton, Walt. de, vii, 84 

Merton College (Oxf.), vii, 84” 


Metcalfe (Medcalfe), Chris., vit, 
282; Jas., vi, 274%, 416; vii, 
310” 


Methodists, vi, 17, 32, 49. 65, 74, 
Sr, 96, 108, Inj, 116, Taz, 134, 
171, 178, 199, 203, 229, 248, 
257, 275, 275, 278, 289, 300, 
344, 348, 371, 372, 373, 387, 
409, 423, 427, 435, 436, 440-1, 
452, 453, 468, 473, 496, 519, 
535) 541, 544, 552 5 VU, 103, 179 2, 
237, 251, 276, 291 

Methop, see Mythop 

Meuland, Rog. de, vi, 240 ” 

Mey, Maud, vi, 538”; Rob., vi, 
538; Will, vi, 538; see also 
May 

Meynell-Ingram, Mrs., vii, 237 

Meynil, Hugh de, vi, 92 ” 

Michael, vi, 457; the clerk, vii, 
252; the reeve, vii, 2567; 
the stock-keeper, vi, 424 

Michael Kirk (Upper Rawcliffe), 
vii, 267 

Micheles-cherche, see St. Michael- 
on-Wyre 

Michell, Cath. C., vi, 167; Jas. C., 


vi, 167; Rev. Will., vi, 167, 
168 ”; see also Mitchell 

Mickle brook (Goosnargh), vii, 
193” 


Micklefal (Balderston), vi, 313 
Micklehey (Church), vi, 402 ” 
Micklehey (Rishton), vi, 346 
Micklehurst (Habergham Eaves), 


Mi, 454 . 
Micklesykecarr (Longton), vi, 71 ” 
Miclelhalgh (Charnock), vi, 207 


Middelarghe, Middelerwe, Ste 
Medlar 

Middelrotheclyue, see Rawcliffe, 
Middle 


Middesholme (Dutton), vii, 57” 

Middilhargh, see Medlar 

Middleforth Green (Middleforth), 
(Penwortham), vi, 57%”, 58%, 
61”; char., vi, 56”; ch., vi, 61 ; 
Nonconf., vi, 61 

Middleforth moor, vi, 61” 


INDEX 


Middlehill (Habergham Eaves), vi, 


457 

Middlehurst, Jas., vii, 82” 

Middlemore, Margery de, vi, 480 
482»; Will. de, vi, 480, 482 1 ; 

Middle Raweliffe, see Rawcliffe 
Middle 

Middleton (Goosnargh), vii, 191; 
man., vii, 196 

Middleton, Ad. de, vil, 2357”; 
Agnes (de), vii, 100 7, 173”, 
235m”; Alan de, vii, 235 0 ; Alice 
de, vii, 177”; Geo., vii, 159, 
159 H, 201 n; Gervase, vii, 159 2, 
173, 173”; Hen, de, vi, 366; 
Hugh de, vii, 192 m, 196 n; Jas., 
vi, 556"; John (de), vi, 5502; 
vil, toon; Pat. de, vii, 196n; 
Rich. de, vii, 196”; Rob., vii, 
74, 75% 173, 1770, 1967, 
328 2; Rev. Thos., vi, 313 ; Thos., 
vii, 159”, 201 n 

Middleton Hlall (Goosnargh), vii 
197 

Middlewood (Chatburn), vi, 3737 

Middleyard (Ightenhill Park), vi, 
4883 n 

Midehope, see Mythop 

Mideste Routheclif, see Rawcliffe, 
Middle 


) 


Midgehalgh (Medgeall, Midgeall, 
Midgehall, Migechalgh, Migel- 
halgh, Miggehalgh, Mighall), 


Alice, vii, 199 ” ; Edw., vii, 128 », 
199, 205, 205 ”; Ellen, vii, 128 n, 
199”; Geo., vi, 67 n, 73”; vii, 
128, 199, 205; Marg., vii, 
199 x; Rob. (de), vi, 66”, 72”, 
73"; vi, 128”, 195”, 199, 
199 n, 288; Thos. de, vi, 66% ; 
Will., vii, 199”; Rev. —, vi, 


333” 

Midge Hall (Leyland), vi, 10; 
Nonconf., vi, 17 

Midgehall, fam., see Midgehalgh 

Midgeley (Midgley, Mygeley), Rob., 
vi, 259 ”, 549; Thos., vi, 531 ” 

Midghalgh (Myerscough), vii, 138, 
139 #, 141 

Midgrum Holme (Trawden), vi, 552 

Midhope, fam., vii, 174” 

Migehalgh, Migelhalgh, Miggehalgh, 
fam., see Midgehalgh 

Miggylund (Lytham), vii, 215 ” 

Mighall, fam., see Midgehalgh 

Mikel, brook (Clayton-le-Dale), vi, 
258Nn 

Mikelbroc (Dinckley), vi, 336 

Mikelfal (Sunderland), vi, 320 

Mikelridding (Mykelridding), John 
del, vi, 336; Will. de, vi, 337 

Mikerode (Simonstone), vi, 499 ” 

Milanesmur (Carleton), vii, 229 ” 

Mill, brook, vi, 192, 556; vii, 192” 

Millard, Ernest T., vii, 291 

Millbridge, vi, 477 ” 

Mill Carr (Lea), vii, 130” 

Mille, vii, 130” 

Mill End (Newchurch), vi, 441 

Miller, Gilb. the, vi, 335”; John, 
vii, 179”, 296, 310; Jos. vu, 
136”; Rob. the, vii, 268 ; Thos., 
vi, 167 n; vii, 97”, 138%, 1787, 
185; Thos. H., vii, 178, 185, 
188, 239”; Will. the, vu, 268; 
see also Milner : 

Miller, Burys & Co., vi, 513 

Miller park (Freston), vil, 91 

Miller’s Barn (Waterfoot), vi, 440 

Millfield (Lea), vii, 130” 

Millfield (Speke), vi, 206 

Mill Furlong (Lea), vii, 132 

Mill Hill (Kirkham), vu, 150 

Mill Hill (Livesey), vi, 263, 284 

Mill Hill (Whithalgh), vi, 289 


395 


Millholme (UInes Walton), vi, 91 » 
Millington, Anne, vi, 93 n, 04 n; 
N., vi, 94 2; Rich., vi, 93 7 ; 
Millom (Millum), Avice “de, vii 
92 Nn, 229 Nn, 285"; Rob. de, vii, 
215”; Will. de, vii, 92” 229 n, 
285 n j ; 
Mills, vi, 18, 66 n, 67”, 68, 68n 
TOON, 142, 183, 253m, 262 n, 
2042, 269, 270, 272", 277, 
277 N, 279, 301 n, 302 n, 313, 326, 
328, 336, 338, 3392, 340, 345 n, 
3641, 307, 372, 372, 375n, 
377", 378", 379, 384, 303%, 
397 H, 400 2, 4OI n, 402 n, 4oHn, 
407, 418, 424, 428, 428n, 431, 
439%, 441%, 443, 447”, 459 Nn, 
472, 4772, 479, 488, 489, 489 n, 
499, 491, 493, 4972, 498, 499, 
507", 508”, 5I10n, 515, 521, 
524) 539%, 540, 540 2, 543, 543 2, 
545, 549, 551, 552”, 553, 554%, 
559M; Vil, 13, 13”, 14”, 16n, 
27%, 50, 79%, 92 nN, 94N, ION, 
102%, I06, 107, 109, I12n, 
Il4H, 115”, I160n, I18H, 119 Hn, 


125M”, 127, 128”, 136, 152, 
152, 201, 209”, 211, 214, 
216n, 268, 270n, 273”, 278, 
280, 281 n, 283, 284, 284 n, 


292, 293 2, 302 n, 303, 31 

Mills, Arth. E., vi, fee ies 

Millson, —, vi, 178 

Millstones, Old (Ashton), vii, 77 » 

Millum, see Millom 

Millward (Milward), Anselm, vii, 
205”; —, vi, 3657” 

Milne, brook, vi, 338 

Milne, John del, vii, 136 7 

Milneclough, vii, 59” 

Milne croft (Heath Charnock), vi, 
216%” 

Milnedey (Simonstone), vi, 499 

Milne pool (Layton), vii, 223 2 

Milner (Eccleston), vi, 165 ” 

Milner, Isaac W., vi, 52 ; Rev. John, 
vii, 23; John, vii, 25, 26; Kath., 
vi, 74”; see also Miller 

Milneriding, le (Balderston), vi, 313 

Milnholme (Dutton), vii, 55 

Milnshaw (Accrington), vi, 423, 
425 2 

Milnshaw Park (Accrington), vi, 426 

Milward, see Millward 

Mincepitt well (Preston), vii, 96” 

Minshull, fam., vi, 84 ” 

Minspit Weind (Preston), vii, 89 » 
Miresco, Mirescowe, see Myers- 
cough : 

Mirre, vii, 96 2, Ioo ” 

Mirrell (Chatburn), vi, 372”  « 

Mirreson, Ad., vii, 99 »; Christiana, 
vii, 98; Hen., vii, 98”; Mar- 
gery, vii, 99; Rog., vii, 997; 
Will., vii, 99 ” 

Mirscho, see Myerscough 

Mischief night, vii, 27 ” 

Mitchcock, John, vi, 371 

Mitchell (Mitchel), Eliz., vi, 528 m ; 
Hen., vi, 528”; Jas., vi, 542”; 
John, vi, 521, 530; vil, 14”; 
Nich., vi, 528%, 530; Pet., vi, 
528 2; Sarah, vii, 14; Will., vi, 
440; Rev. W., vi, 164”; —, vi, 
524n; See also Michell 

Mitchellfield Nook (Newchurch), 
vi, 439 % 

Mitholme (Hapton), vi, 510” 

Mithop, see Mythop _ 33 

Mitton, Gt. (Yorks), vi, 375”; Vi, 
2, 8n 

Mitton, Little, vi, 230, 234, 349, 
356 N, 357, 388-91 ; vu 321, 
321 n, 3223 char., vil, 20”; 
man., vi, 388, 395 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Mitton (Little Mitton), Ad. de, vi, 
379, 388 n; Alice de, vi, 389; 
vn, 33”; Amabel de, vil, 15; 
Anabil de, vii, 2 ; Beatrice de, vil, 
192, 324; Bern. de, vil, 927, 
Cecily de, vii, 15, 33 2; Denise 
de, vii, 3; Geo., vii, 2495 ; Hawise 
de, vii, 168; Hen., vi, 388%, 
520, 542”, 545; Hugh de, vi, 
47"; Vi, 2, 4, 33 2, 168 n, 182 n, 
192, 272, 321, 322”, 323%, 
324 n, 3307, 369"; Joan de, vil, 
330; John (de), vi, 3917; 
vil, 2, 15, 15”, 33; Jordan de, 
vi, 375”; Vu, 2”, 3, 4, 15, 33; 
Margery de, vi, 389; vii, 2, 15 7, 
192 n, 322 n; Maud de, vu, 272; 
Nich. de, vu, 16”; Sir Ralph 
de, vi, 388; vii, 192; Ralph 
de, vi, 2545 vii, 2, 3, 13, 15”, 
17, 33%, I92n, 322m, 3240, 
3752; Rich. vi, 355”; Rob. 
(de), vi, 355 ”, 404; vu, 2, 4, 13, 
13, 192”; Rog. (de), vi, 520; 
vii, 15, 33 2; Steph. de, vi, 355 2; 
Will. (de), vi, 394%, 520; vn, 
I6n;—, vi, 395” 

Mocatta, Will. A., vil, 245 

Mocockson, Rich., vi, 477 ” 

Modwoodhouse (Cliviger), vi, 451” 

Mohun, Ld., vu, 304 

Moketlands (Clitheroe), vi, 365 7 

Molanus, Anne, vii, 329”; John, 
VU, 329 2 

Moldesfield (Wrightington), v1,173” 

Molding, Edw., vi, 312 ” 

Molebrek, see Mow breck 

Mollington Banastre, man. (Chester), 
vi, 38; vil, 130 

Molyneux, Lds., vi, 19 #, 22, I11, 
129, 1b4 25 Vil, 75, 116, 144727 
Caryll, vi, aio"; Rich., vil, 
164 2; vsct., Vl, 290 

Molyneux (Mulyneus), Sir Ad. de, 
vii, 1o5Ha; Agnes de, vi, 19; 
Alice de, vi, 209; Anabil, vi, 
164m; Anne, Vi, 19”, 1957n; 
vii, 163, 274", 308"; Bnidg., 
vi, 138, 195 m, 207; Vil, 1822; 
Cecily de, vil, 249 2; Edw., vi, 7; 
Eleanor, vi, vo 2; Eliz., vi, 33 7, 
143 ", 305; Vi, 127, 163, 224”, 
274; Ellen, vi, 212; Emma de, 
vi, 198, 302; Fleetwood, vu, 
128; Frances, vil, 215; Jane, 
vi, 163%; Joan de, vi, 19, 206, 
301, 302; Vii, O4n, TOOn; Sir 
Johu, vi, 163; John, vi, 113, 
123”, 212. “7, 93404 
Juliana, v1, 421; Kath. (de), v1, 
302, 320; Leticia (Lettice) de, 
Vi, 302; vil, 316; Lucy, vi, 113, 
103”; Marg. (de), vi, 317; vu, 
rosa; Mary, vii, 164; Ralph, 
V1, 212; Sir Rich., vi, 36”, 65 n, 
110, III m, 163%, 104, 165%, 
106, 217", 305, 421; vii, 98n, 
116m, 125, 201, 215 n, 278n; 
Rich. (de), vi, 25, 26, 60, 163, 
198”, 206, 209m, 262, 302; vi, 
115, 125, 152m, 183, 184, 
201 #2, 283", 316; Capt. Rigby, 
vi, 163 n ; Rob. de, vi, 25, 164 1; 
vn, 108; Sir Thos., vi, 177; 
vu, 274; Thos. (de), vi, 61, 
1ogm, Iv4, 212m, 249, 262 n, 
282, 301, 302, 305”, 320, 321; 
vu, 94%, 96, I06n, 1377, 
163 m, 249 n, 292 2; Sir Will. (de), 
Vl, 19, 22%, 33”, 57”, 1637”, 
195”; Vil, 127, 163, 201%, 
213", 229n; Will. (de), vi, 19, 
247, 26m, 110; vii, 182, 182 7, 
2835 == vil, 2qi Yam., wi; 
16-17, 23, $13 vil, lu 


Figee 
Pn 


Mon, John le, vi, 470”; Rich. le, 
vi, 470"; Rob. le, vi, 470 # 

Monachis, Ad. de, vi, 471 ", 473." 

Monasterus, Jas. de, vu, 204 

Monk, fam., see Albemarle 

Monk Bretton Pnory (Yorks), vi, 
487 

Monkdyke (Downham), vi, 556” 

Monke-flattes (Sunderland), vi, 318 

Monkeshall, Hen. de, vi, 471 7 

Monkeshulles (Hoghton), see Monks- 
hill 

Monkfal (Balderston), vi, 313, 314 

Monkgate (Clitheroe), v1, 366 n 

Monk Hall vi, 469, 471 ”, 472 

Monkholme (Monk Heys) (Reedley), 
vi, 490 

Monkroyd (Foulridge), vi, 525%, 
544, 547, 551 : 

Monkroyd, Emma del, vi, 548; 
Will, vi, 547 # 

Monks Hall, see Monk Hall 

Monkshill (Hoghton), vi, 
48 n, 497 

Montagu, Eliz. Montagu, dchss. of, 
vi, 233; dks. of, vi, 380, 490” ; 
Geo. Brudenell, vi, 233; John 
Montagu, vi, 233; Ralph Mon- 
tagu, vi, 233; Ld., vi, 362; Hen. 
J. D. S. Montagu, Ld., vi, 233, 
234 ; 

Montagu, Mary, vi, 233 

Montbegon (Montbegan), Sir Rog. 
de, vi, 91, 92; Rog. de, vi, 91, 
92, 96 n, IIb, 130 

Montbegon, fee, vi, 91m, 1155 Vi, 
I0ln 

Monteagle, see Mounteagle 

Montford (New Laund Booth), vi, 
499, 492 

Monumental effigies, 


37 #, 


vi, 186, 354, 


370 

Niscae. John, vi, 160; Jordan, vii, 
16”, 17”; Ralph, vii, 17”; 
Rich., vi, 183, 154, 186, 189; 
Rob., vi, 198 » 

Moon’s Mill, see Walton, Higher 

Moor (Clifton), vil, 162 ” 

Moor, Ad. de la (del), vi, 187, 
34; Vii, 116, 227n; Anne, 
vu, 150”; Ellen del, vu, 79%”; 
Hen. del, vil, 79 7; Jas., vii, 43, 
7gn; John, vii, 41, 792; Rich. 
del, vil, 170; Rob. del, vii, 
125, 108; Walt. del (de la), 
Vii, 220, 227; Will. del, vii, 
2260n; fam., vi, 69; see also 
Moore and More 

Moorbreck, see Mowbreck 

Moor Butts (Worston), vi, 374 

Moore, Anne, vi, 279; Sir Cleave, 
vil, 230 n ; Edw., vi, 141 n, 2261; 
vii, 230; Eliz., vi, 395 »; Harold 
B., vi, 558; Hen., vi, 546”; 
Hugh, vi, 494”, 513”, 517; 
vii, 241”; Jas., vii, 200”; 
John, vi, 73, 166, 279, 395%, 
419, 491, 492, 494 7, 513”, 515; 
Sir Jonas, vi, 513; Letitia, vii, 
207”; Marg., vii, 230”; Nich., 
vi, 513”; Rich., vi, 22, 4947; 
vii, 165; Thos., vi, 3”, 22”; 
Will., vi, 166%, 279, 358; vii, 
98 n, 241 nN; —, vi, 513”; Vii, 
281; see also Moor and More 

Moorfield (Chorley), vi, 136 

Moor Field (Preston), vii, 79 

Moorfields (Burnley), vi, 445 ” 

Moorfields (Elston), vii, 114 

Moorflat (Hutton), vi, 69 

Moor Furlong (Ribbleton), vii, 106 

Moorgate (Preston), vii, 76 

Moorgate (Whithalgh), vi, 288 

Moorgate Fold (Livesey), vi, 254 n 

Moor Hall (Preston), vii, 102 ” 


396 


Moor Hall (Woodplumpton), vii 
288 

Moorhey (Clayton), vi, ro 

Moorheys (Anderton), vi, 222 

Moorhiles (New Laund Booth), vi, 
499, 491 

Moor House (Whittingham), vu, 
207, 2130" 

Moorhouses, man. (Clifton), vii, 162 

Moor Isles, see Moorhiles 

Moor Park (Preston), vii, 77, ut 

Moorplat (Preston), vii, 99 

Moor quarter (Hoghton), vi, 37 

Moors, the (Leyland), vi, 3 

Moorside (Woodplumpton), vii, 285 

Moorsyke (Haighton), vii, 120 

Morae, Paul, vi, lon 

Morbreck, see Mowbreck 

Morea, Ad. de, vii, 53”; Ellen de, 
Vu, 53” 

Mordaunt, Agnes (Annes), vii, 255, 


258”, 259; Anne, vii, 257 n, 
258, 259; Will, vii, 257, 
258, 259 


More, Ad. del, vi, 34”; Amery 
atte, vi, 71 2; Ellen del, vi, 34 n; 
John, vi, 73”; Steph., vi, 371; 
Sir Thos., vii, 19, 95 »; Thos. de 
la, vi, 71; Warine de la, vi, 
71a; Will. atte, vi, 71”; see 
also Moor and Moore 

Moreacres, the (Hoghton), vi, 39 

Moreau, Jas., vii, 111”; Paul, vii, 
III m, 112M” 

Morehouses (Over 
270 

Mores, see Morris 

Moresby, Eliz., vi, 294; Jas., vi 


Darwen), vi, 


, 


294 

Moreton (Whalley), vi, 381, 387, 
505; Vil, 14 

Moreton, brook, vii, 13 

Moreton (Morton, Morteyn), Alma- 
rica (Amiria) de, vi, 387”; vn, 
14; Edw., vi, 88”; Gamel de, 
vii, 14; Gilb., vi, 387 n; Grace, 
vil, 205; Hugh de, vii, 160 n, 
171 n, 172 n, 229 n, 285. n; John, 
vi, 387”; Jordan de, vi, 387; 
Kath., vi, 387”; Marg. de, vii, 
172", 229”, 285; Ralph de, 
vu, 15”; Siward de, vi, 387”; 
vil, 14”; Sybil de, vii, 147; 
Will, vii, 200 ” 

Moreton Hall (Whalley), vi, 387 

Morcton House (Whalley), vi, 387 7; 
vil, I 

Morgan, archd. of Richmond, vii, 
217” 

Morilegh (Bilsborrow), vii, 332 ” 

Morley, Ld., see Morley and Mount- 
eagle, Ld. 

Morley (Morleys), Agnes, vi, 377”; 
Ambrose, vi, 330; Chas., vi, 
330; Eliz. (de), vi, 330, 366%, 
376, 377"; Ellen de, vi, 330; 
Jran., vii, 128; Hen., vi, 330; 
Hugh de, vi, 208; Isabel, vi, 
330; Jane, vi, 330; Jennet, vi, 
330%; John (de), vi, 330, 330%, 
377, 378m, 391, 393; Marg. 
(de), vi, 208m”, 330”, 377"; 
Nich., vi, 330; Kich. (de), vi, 
339, 366 n, 376, 377 n, 391 n, 
393”; vii, 332”; Rob. (de), 
V1, 329, 330, 377, 378"; vil, 
15; Rog., vi, 330; Sim. de, vi, 
330; Thos., vi, 377”; Ughtred, 
vi, 330, 330”; Will. (de), vi, 
330, 377 n; see also Mearley 

Morley and Mounteagl-, Ld., vi, 
100, 200 n, 218, 241 7 

Morleye, see Morley and Mearl-y 

Morley Hey (Mearley), vi, 375” 

Morley, see Morley and Mearley 


Mormons, vi, 74”, 249; vii, 104 

Morrell Heights (Higher Booths), 
vi, 435 

Morris (Mores, Morres, Morrice), 
Arth. J., vi, 404; Fran., vii, 263; 
Rev. Hen., vi, 452; John, vi, 5 x, 
241, 259 ”, 260 

Morisson, Ad., vi, 107 x; Rich. vi, 
107 2; Rog., vi, 107 # 

Mort, Ad., vi, 300 2; vii, 75, 7S x, 
toz 2; Ann, vi, 306 ”; Eliz., vii, 
tozm; Janet, vil, Io2m; Seth, 
vii, 102 n 

Mortain, John, ct. of, see John, 
king of England; Steph., ct. of, 
vii, 246 

Morteyn, Morton, see Moreton 

Morvill (Morvell), Ada de, vii, 
267; Helewise de, vii, 267 ; 
Hugh de, vii, 267”; Will, vi, 


496 
Moseley (Habergham Eaves), vi, 


454, 407 : 

Mosley (Moseley), Sir Edw., vii, 
322n; Edw., vi, 77”, I7on, 
173”, 176m; vii, 111”; Rich. 
de, vi, 369 7 

Mosney House (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 
295 

Moss, John, vi, 72, 73; Vil, 607, 
312; Rob., vi, 72, 73, 341} Vu, 
224”; Will., vi, 72 

Moss Dyke (Haighton), vii, 125” 

Moss House (Colne), vi, 525 

Moss House (Foulridge), vi, 546 

Mosshouses (Hoole), vi, 149 

Mossiley Carr (Dutton), vii, 57 ” 

Mossop, Isaac, vii, 291 

Moss Side (Leyland), vi, 17 

Moss Side (Little Marton), vii, 242 

Mosvale (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 290 

Moton (Motoun, Muttun, Mutun), 
Ad. de, vii, 46”, 47”, 487, 
53”; Agnes, vil, 35”, 477; 
Alice, vii, 35 x ; Amabel, vii, 45 ; 
Cecily, vil, 40m, 55”, 57” 
Denise, vii, 46 n ; Edusa (Edith), 
vii, 46; Ellis, vii, 46; Hen., 
vii, 46, 48x, 53”, 57%, 201 ; 
Isabel, vii, 46, 47; John, vii, 
212; Kath., vii, 47; Nich., vii, 
55”, 57”; Rich., vii, 46n, 
47; Rob., vii, 35", 417, 46, 
47, 48, 53”; Thos., vii, 47”; 
Walt., vii, 40, 45, 45”; Will. 
(de), vi, 451”; vii, 27”, 43%, 
45, 47, 49%, 50, 52, 52%, 53%, 
57 , 63” 

Moudeslegh, Moudesley, see Maw- 
desley 

Moulden, Hen., vi, 46 2; John, vi, 
237"; Will, vi, 237” 

Moulden Water bridge (Livesey), 
vi, 284 

Mounsill, see Monkshill 

Mount, the (Fleetwood), vii, 237 ” 

Mounteagle(Monteagle), Lds., vi,2”, 
51 n, 61, 9I N, 100, 140%”, 143 7, 
195, 204 ”, 206, 213, 217 ”, 218; 
vii, 3, torn; Edw. Stanley, vi, 
94, 132, 200, 225, 250, 292, 
379”; Thos., Stanley, vi, 108 7, 
116”, 200 n, 250; Will. Stanley, 
vi, 2, 213 

Mountford, Eliz., vii, 4; Will. 
vu, 4 

Mourholme, man., vii, 303 ” 

Mowbank (Broughton), vii, 119 ” 

Mowbreck, man. (Medlar with Wes- 
ham), vii, 135, 149, 153, 154-6, 
176”, 270, 271 n, 281”; Rom. 
Cath., vii, 157 

Mowbreck, Ad. de, vii, 153 »; Rich. 
de, vii, 153 

Mowbreck Hall, vii, 144” 


INDEX 


Much Harwood, see Harwood, Gt. 

Much Hoole, see Hoole, Much 

Muchland, man. (Furness), vi, 30 1 

Mukedelandes syke (Clitheroe), vi, 
306 2 

Mulebrec, see Mowbreck 

Mulhum, Avice de, vii, 159 2; Will. 
de, vii, 159” 

Mulnesgate (Clitheroc), vi, 365 ” 

Multon, Ada de, vil, 267; Alan 
de, vii, 301; Amabil de, vii, 
267; Joan de, vi, 261”; vil, 
329”; Lambert de, vii, 267, 
270; Sarot de, vii, 301 ; Thos. de, 
vii, 267; Will. de, vi, 261 n, 
329” 

Mulyneus, see Molyneux 

Muncaster, Rog., vii, 77, 293 

Mundegum, Ad. de, vi, 
John de, vi, 117 ” 

Mundegumeland (Greenhalgh), vii, 
180 

Munson, Ant., 
vii, 352” 

Murgatroyd, Grace, vi, 503 

Murton, fam., vi, 395 7 

Musbury (Bury), vi, 232”, 2337, 
431, 438 x 

Muschamp, Thos., vi, 526 2 

Musden (Bury), vi, 233 #, 438” 

Musgrave, Sir Chris., vi, 54 

Musifield (Ribbleton), vii, 107 ” 

Muslin manufacture, vi, 220 

Mussendale, see Musden 

Mustard, Ellen, vii, 1267”; Rog., 
vii, 126” 

Mustihalgh 


117 Hn; 


vii, 35"; Fran., 


(Briercliffe), vi, 469 
470 
Mustihalgh (Burnley), vi, 444 ” 
Muthom (Altham), vi, 413 ” 
Mutun, Mutton, see Moton 
Myerpool (Inskip), vii, 282 
Myerscough, vi, 313; vii, 68, 73”, 
75, 79, 137%, 138-41, 265%, 
269, 281%; forest, vii, 138, 
324”; Rom. Cath., vii, 141 
Myerscough, Agnes, de, vii, 193” ; 
Alice de, vii, 328”; Edm. de, 
vii, 322”; Godith de, vil, 325 », 


326n; Isolde de, vii, 328”; 
John de, vii, 193 ”, 324, 326%, 
328; Rich. de, vil, 121%, 


330 ; Rob. de, vii, 151 2, 3287; 
Thos., vii, 306”; Walt. de, vii, 
139”, 326, 328%; Will. de, 
vii, 324, 328; —, vil, 305” 
Myerscough Field (Claughton), vii, 
326” 
Myerscough Hall, vii, 138 
Myerscough House, vii, 138 
Myerscough Lodge, vii, 140 
Mygeley, see Midgeley 
Mygelhalgh, see Midghalgh 
Mykelleghe (Woodplumpton), vii, 
2387 ; 
Mykelridding, see Mikelridding 
Myr, Will. de, vii, 114 ” 
Myres, T. H., vii, 82 ” . 
Mythop (Weeton with Preese), vil, 
156”, 176, 178 vf 
Mythop (Methop), Ad. de, vil, 
178”; Nich. (de), vu, 1784, 
284n; Rich. de, vi, 1787; 
Rob. (de), vii, 178”, 2847; 
Thos. de, vii, 178%; Will. de, 
vii, 107 ” 
Mythorp, see Mythop 


Nab, the (Billington), vi, 328 


Nabbenoke (Gt. Harwood), Vv), 
338 2 

Nabbs, Will., vi, 518 

Naden, Edm., vii, 66”; Rev. 


Thos., vii, 66 


397 


Nairne, Maj., vii, 77 ” 

Nanehcy Wood (Habergham Eaves), 
vi, 468 

Nateby, vii, 291, 293, 297 7, 308-11, 
334; mMan., vii, 308; Nonconf., 
vil, 311; oratory, vii, 309” ; 
Rom. Cath.,, vii, 310 

Nateby, Gt. and Little, vii, 308 

Nateby, Benedict de, vii, 308” ; 
Isabel de, vii, 308; John de, 
vii, 308”; Ralph de, vi, 70”; 
vii, 308; Will. de, vi, 70”; vii, 
308 

Nateby Hall (Nateby), vii, 310, 
311 

Naylor, Thos., vii, 29, 34”; WiL, 
vi, 96” 

Naze, the (I’reckleton), vii, 167 

Needham, Mary, vii, 309 ” 

Neeld (Neild), Sam., vil, 137; 
Will., vii, 201 2 

Neherflat (Salesbury), vi, 253 # 

Neild, see Neeld 

Neilson, Neilston, see Nelson 

Nelfelt (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 290 

Nelson, vi, 350, 469, 520, 537, 
540-41; ch., vi, 541; Noncont., 
vi, 541; Rom. Cath., vi, 541 

Nelson (Neilson, Neilston, Nelston) , 
Agnes, vii, 99 », 234; Amne, vi, 
165”; Edw., vi, toon; Ellen, 
vii, 205; Fran., vi, 99”; Geo., 
vi, 96, 99 7; Gilb., vi, 99, 100 ; 
Hen., vi, 99”; Hugh, vi, 99”, 
165 n, 166, 172 n; Jane, vi, 165”, 
172”; John, vi, 178, 180; vii, 
234”; John A., vi, 180% ; 
vii, 267”; Marg. vi, 99”, 
175 n-6n; vii, 59”; Mary, vi, 
165; vii, 234”; Mary J., vii, 
142; Maud, vi, 99”; Maxie, vi, 
175”, 176”; Maximilian, vi, 
roo”, 175”, 176”; Mich., vi, 
82n, 99”; Rich., vi, 99, 99%, 
100 #, 102 N, 173 H, 175 H, 176M ; 
Rob., vi, 98, 99”; Thos., vi, 
95”, 98n, 99n, 169N, 175; 
vii, 99 x; Warine, vi, 98 x; Will., 
vi, 95”, 99” 

Netherderwend, Netherderwent, 
Nether Derwyn, Netherderwynd, 
see Darwen, Lower 

Nether-eastfield (Altham), vi, 413 ” 

Netherfield (Rawcliffe), vii, 271 7 

Netherhalgh (Dutton), vii, 54” 

Netherhey (Clayton-le-Moors), vi, 
418” 

Netherley (Colne), vi, 527 ” 

Netherton, vi, 339, 381 

Netherwood (Briercliffe), vi, 472 

Nether Wood (Myerscough), 
139 n 

Nettleton, Margery de, vii, 288 » 

Neuhuse, Neusum, see Newsham 

Neuton, Neutune, see Newton 

Never, Jas., vi, 191 ” 

Nevill (Worsthorne), vi, 475 ” 

Nevill, Alex. de, vi, 475; Alice, vi, 
431, 498; Anne, vi, 92”; Bar- 
bara, vi, 4987; Edm. de, vi, 
228; vii, 73; Eliz. vi, 498; 
Geo., vi, 431 ”, 498, 499 ” ; Isabel 
de, vi, 201 x; Joan de, vi, 201 7 ; 
Sir John, vi, 498; John (de), vi, 
92”, 201”, 435, 498; Marg., vi, 
131”; Sir Rob. de, vi, 91%, 
93”, 201”; Kob. (de), vi, 127, 


vil, 


431, 498 ; ie 
Newark College (Leic.), vii, 83, 
85 n, 87, lol n 
Newbigging, see Singleton Grange 
Newbo Abbey (Lincs.), vi, 47! 
Newbridge (Barrowford), vi, 542 
Newburgh, vi, 90 7 
Newcastle, Hen,, dk. of, vi, 233 


A HISTORY OF LANGASHIRE 


Newchurch in Pendle, vi, 514, 515. 
517, 518, 519; ch., vi, 369 

Newchurch-in-Rossendale, vi, 349, 
497-40} char, Vi, 441; ch, 1, 
39, 439; fairs, vi, 437: forest, 
vi, 435; ind., vi, 437; Nonconf., 
VI, 440 

New Close (Eccleston), vi, 166 2 

New College (Leic.), see Newark 
College (Lvic.) 

Newearth (Wrightington), vi, 173.” 

New Fall (Lragram), vi, 380 n 

Newfield (Longton), vi, 72 7 

Newfield (Preston), vil, 74”, 99” 

Newfield (Ram-greave), vi, 252” 

Newfield (Wiswell), vi, 397)”, 
399” 

Newfield Barn, vi, 552 

Newfield Head (Trawden), vi, 551 

New Hall (Barnacre), vii, 317 ” 

New Hall (Clayton-le-Dale), vi, 258 

New Hall (Heskin), vi, 166 

New Hall (Mawdesley), vi, 99 7 

New Hall (Salwick), vii, 163 2 

Newhallhey (Bury), vi, 233 7, 435.” 

Newhay (Ribbleton), vii, 106 2 

Newhvry (Blainscough), vi, 227 » 

Newhey (Huddlesden), vi, 233 7, 
273, 438” 

New House (Briercliffe), vi, 471 

Newhouse (Heskin), vi, 167 2 

New House (Thornley), vu, 36 

New Jerusalem Church, sre Swe- 
denborgians 

Newland (Accrington), vi, 233” 

Newland (Yorks), vil, 59 

Newlands, see Laund Booth, New 

Néevman, Edm., Vi, 1ozj Rew, 
Rich., vi, 435; Rich., vi, 359 

Newsam, see Newsham 

New Sett End (Eccleshill), vi, 278 

Newsham, vii, 79, 120”, 127, 143, 
144, 146, 190, IQI, 200, 211 n, 
272 n, 255 Hn 

Newsham (Newsam, Newsom), Ad. 
idle, vii, 200, 200 7, 2or 2; Alice 
(de), vil, 200 n, 288 n; Chas., vu, 
174; Elizs, vii, 35°" 7 Geo., vil, 
50n, 158n, 167, 200, 200n, 
201, 247, 252, 287n; Hen. 
(de), vil, 50”, 158, 200 n ; Joan 
de, vi, 258”; John (de), vi, 
qo5n; vil, 138”, 1587, 200n, 
282", 257 n, 288; Rich. (de), 
vii, 80, $2, 200n, 211, 284n; 
Rob., vil, 45 », 158, 200, 200 n, 
288m; K., vil, 203; Thos., vii, 
50n; Uctred, vii, 200”; Will, vi, 
200n; —, vi,75”; fam., vil, 98” 

Newsham Hall (Newsham), vii, 200 

Newsom, see Newsham 

Newton (Hardhorn with Newton), 
Vi, 393”; vii, 238 

Newton, bar., vi, 292, 293, 412 ” 

Newton, Ad. de, vii, 151, 166 n, 
247”; Alan de, vii, 151”; Alice 
de, vii, 196m, 181m; Almorica 
de, vil, 166m; Etheldreda, vii, 
30m, 102, 121 n; Goditha de, 
vi, 193 n; Gunilda de, vii, 166 » ; 
Humph., vii, 30”, 987, Io2zn, 
121 n; John de, vii, 157 ”, 166 n, 
181m; Jordan de, vi, 1167; 
vil, 166, 167; Leysing de, 
vii, 166; Maud de, vii, 1327, 
Thu”, 171 #2; Rich. de, vi, 193 n; 
vii, 157”, 167 n, 168", 17112; 
Rob. de, vi, 358; vii, 132 ”, 147, 
Ibo m, 166m ; Rog. de, vii, 167 ” ; 
Siegrith de, vii, 166”; Thos., 
vil, 33%; Wilfrid, vii, 1219”; 
Will. de, vi, 116; vii, 1667, 
2470 

Newton-by-Freckleton, see Newton- 
with-Scales 


Newton-with-Seales, vi, 21.1, 58”; 
vii, 143, 143", 144, Tg4n, 140m, 
149, 149 1, 155, 150m, 157M, 103, 
105-7, 108m, 173”, 177, 1777, 
185; High Gate inn, vii, 160 ; 
man., Vii, 166; sch., vii, 167 

Nicholas, vi, 475 ", 477 1; vil, 487, 
94m”, 158", I70n; the car- 
penter, vi, 95”; the clerk, vii, 
114.7; of the cross, vi, 272 3 
prior of Burscough, vii, 99” ; 
the vicar, vi, 87, 497 7 

Nicholas Manor (Tyldesley), vii, 280 

Nicholson, Alice, vii, 2887; Geo., 
vii, 267, 288; Hen., vii, Troon ; 
Joan, vii, loom; John, vi, 204 7 

Nick of Dungnow, vi, 417 

Nickson, Amery, vil, 158”; John, 
Vii, 157”, 158, Iota; Nich., 
vii, 225; Wil, vii, T4827, 158 2H, 
tora; see also Nixon 

Nizhtingale (Nighgall, Nightegulc), 
Hen. (de), vi, 219”, 225u; 
Isabel, vi, 225; John, vi, 2257” ; 
Jonathan, vu, 284%; Mary, vi, 
3443 Miles, vi, 2173 Will, wt, 
225; Mrs., vil, 150% 

Nixon, Joan, vil, 116”; Thos., vil, 
110 n; see also Nickson 

Noble, Rev. Rich., vi, 354, 359, 


404 ; 

Noblett, Edm., vii, 283 2; Rich., 
vii, 374; Rob., vu, 1747"; 
Thos., vii, 283 x; Will, vii, 174 ” 

Nock, Anne, vii, 56%; John, vii, 
560n 

Nocton (Lines.), vi, 459 

Nocl, see Nowell 

Noggarth End (Barrowford), vi, 


542 
Nogworth Cross (Extwistle), vi, 


469 
Nook (Leyland), vi, 17 ” 
Nook (Mawdesley’), vi, 96 
Norasius, vii, 92 ” 
Norbreck (Norbrec), vii, 
240-7 
Norbreck, Ad. de, vii, 247 2; Alex. 
de, vil, 247"; Ellis, vii, 2477; 
John de, vii, 253 2; Rob. de, vii, 
247m; Thos. de, vii, 2477; 
Will. de, vii, 247 7, 253.” 
Norbury, see Northbury 
Norcross (\lston with Hothersall), 
wil, O1 
Norcross (Carleton), vii, 228, 230, 
240 n, 248n 
Norcross (Lytham), vii, 216 ” 
Norcross, Agnes, vii, 234 2; Chris- 
tiana de, vii, 230”; Chris., vii, 
62; Dav., vii, 234”; Hen., vii, 
42; Jas., vii, 44”, 63”; John, 
vi, 229”; Rog. de, vii, 234”; 
Thos. de, vii, 228 n, 230”; Rev. 
Will, vi, 435”; Will. (de), vi, 
5353 Vil, 44”, 234” 
Norden, brook, vi, 338, 344, 347 
Norfolk, Cath., dchss. of, vii, 327”; 
Mary, dchss. of, vi, 72 n, 132; 
vii, 6, 7, 19, 487; dks. of, vii, 
59”; Chas., vii, 327”; Thos., 
Vi, 132 n, 290; vii, 6, 7”, 48” 
Norham, Edm., vi, 404”; Rob., 
Vi, 342 
Norhampton, Fromund de, 
62; Hawise, vii, 62” 
Norhicbiec, see Norbreck 
Normanby, John de, vii, 332 
Normanville, Rob. de, vi, 358; 
Rog. de, vi, 488 
Norreys, vsct., see Abingdon, earl 
of; Caroline L., vsctss., vi, 460, 
_ 509 
Norris (Norreys), Alan le, vi, 221; 
vu, 132 7,229 n; Alex., vi, 500"; 


398 


2297, 


vii, 


Norns (cont.) 
Alice, vl, 64m, §00; Cecily le 
Vi, 32h) Ehz., vi, 2230; Geo., vi, 
gon, 107m, 117; Gilb. le, vi, 
gen; Hen. (le), vi, ogn: vir 
rs2n; Hugh (le), vi, 15t n, 
218, 225; Sir John le, vi, 
321; John le, vii, 182”; John 
T., vi, 430”; Maud Ie, vi, 225 n, 
228; Nich. (le), vi, bon, 117 nm, 
205M, 20ON, 225 Nn, 206, 321 Hn; 
Rich., vii, 13; Rob, le, vi, zoqn, 
218 n, 228; Thos., vi, go, gon, 
OL Hn, 93, 223; Walt., vi, 720; 
sir Will, vi, 59; Will) H., vi, 


74 
North, Dorothy, vii, 187”; Sir 
John, vii, 187  ; Marg., vii, 317 7 
Northale (Blackburn), vi, 312 ” 
Northampton, Will, mass. of, vii, 
3047" 
North Bank (Bricrelitic), vi, 471" 
Northbreck (Rawelitic), vii, 271 
Northbrook (Northbroc) (Walton- 
on-the-Hill), vi, 301, 302 » 
Northbury (Norbury), Greg. de, 
vi, 383; Rog. de, bp. of Lich. 
field, vi, 357” 
Northcote, Jas., vi, 352 
Northcrofts (Hackinsall), vii, 256 n 
Northecross, see Norcross 
Northdene, brook, see Norden 
North Deyne (Gt. Harwood), vi, 
340 
Northey, Hen., vi, 405 ” 
Northfurlong (Tarnacre), vii, 271 n 
North Hall (Worthington), vi, 224 
Northhows (Lytham), vii, 215 
Northlegh, Margery de, wi, 15H, 


109, 150m”, I51”, 163”; Vii, 
159”; Thurstan (de), vi, 14, 
109, I50”, 151”, 163; vii, 


139 n, 1597, I60n 

Northman Hill (Marsden), vi, 538 

North Town (Padiham), vi, 492, 513 

Northumberland, John Dudley, dk. 
of, vi, 163 

Northwood (Padiham), vi, 494 

Norton, John, vi, 312, 354; Rich. 
de, vi, 488 

Norton Abbey (Ches.), vii, 282 ” 

Norwich, John de Gray, bp.’of, vi, 
320, 326 

Nustcll Priory (Yorks), vi, 314 ” 

Noter, see Nutter 

Notton, Avina de, vi, 304; Gilb. 
de, vi, 116, 338; Rog. de, vi, 
558; Will. de, vi, 304 

Nowell (Noel), Ad. (de), vi, 339, 
375, 377%, 393%, 403%, 559%, 


vii, 110”; Agnes, vi, 377%, 
392”; vii, I10”; Alex., vi, 
341m, 378, 504, 505, 506, 


506"; vii, 14; Alice, vi, 376, 
387, 494”, 504m; Vil, 14; 
Anne, vi, 366, 378", 3917; 
vii, 15”; Arth, vi, 5047; 
Cecily, vi, 403”; Chas., vi, 
378n; Charlotte, vi, 3417"; 
Chris., vi, 278 ”, 377 ”, 378, 379; 
Dulcia, vi, 122 n; Eliz., vi, 120 n, 
261 n, 339, 366m, 375", 377%, 
378, 378 n, 391 n, 403 2, 504%; 
Ellen, vi, 378”; vii, 3; Flor- 
ence, vi, 500 n; Grace, vi, 366, 
391 n, 504; Hen., vi, 377, 378»; 
Isabel, vi, 504”; vii, 14; Jas., 
vi, 368 n ; Joan, vi, 375”, 378", 
Rev. John, vi, 435”; John, vi, 
122 n, 261 N, 337 7, 339, 349 343, 
370, 377", 378, 391, 392%, 
4032, 412", 491, 504, 506%, 
515”; vil, 194”; Juliana, “I, 
378; Kath., vi, 376", 387%, 
503, 504; Lawr., Vi, 339, 34°, 


Nowell (cont.) 
343, 376, 378 , 503, 504 ; Lettice, 
vi, 391, 505”; Marg., vi, 366 n, 
504”; Mary, vi, 378m; vii, 
194”; Maud, vii, 247; Nich., 
vi, 340, 504; Ottwell, vi, 5047; 
Rich., vi, 375, 376”, 377, 403 n, 
504”, 505”; vil, 3; Rob., vi, 
375", 377%, 504”; Vii, 11oNn; 
Rog., vi, 120, 122 n, 234, 339, 
340, 353, 366”, 375, 376, 377%, 
378 n, 387%, 391 n, 398, goon, 
402M, 403%, 425, 498, 499, 
500 M, 504, 505, 500, 507, 514, 
520m; vii, 3”, 15m, 19, 247; 
Sim., vi, 393”, 546”; Steph., 
vi, 403 n; Thos., vi, 340, 377 n, 
504, 505”; Will, vi, 300n, 
375%, 377, 378", 4o3n; Capt. 
=, vi, 378 x; —, dean, vi, 459 » ; 
—, vi, 374”, 377 ”, 378 n, 514 0, 
51S” 

Noyna, hill (Foulridge), vi, 544, 
546 

Noynoe (Foulridge), vi, 546 ” 

Nugworth Bank (Barrowford), vi, 


5427” 
Nunhouse Stead (Claughton), vii, 


330 ” 

Nunny, Will. de, vi, 369 

Nusum, see Newsham 

Nutbrook strinds (Ribchester), vii, 
40n 

Nutgreave (Longton), vi, 72” 

Nuton, see Newton 

Nutshaw (Birtwisle), vi, 458, 509 ” 

Nutshaw (Downham), vi, 556 

Nutshaw (Hapton), vi, 454, 507 

Nutshaw (Howick), vi, 66, 67 ” 

Nutshaw (Nutshagh), Agnes de, vi, 
66 x; Gamel de, vi, 66 ; Hen. de, 
vi, 66”; vii, 180n; Jas., vi, 
66; John de, vi, 66”; Marg., 
vi, 66”; Maud de, vii, 180”; 
Ralph, vi, 66”; Rich., vi, 66”; 
Rog. de, vi, 66; vii, 168, 179”, 
180; Thos. (de), vi, 66” 

Nutshaw Farm (Downham), vi, 558 

Nutshaw Hall (Howick), vi, 66 ” 

Nutshawhead (Howick), vi, 66 

Nuttall, Agnes, vi, 438”; Alice, 
vi, 438”; Ant., vi, 438; Chas., 
vi, 438”; Chris., vi, 438, 438 », 
439, 518; John, vi, 434, 435%, 
438, 438, 439; Rev. Joshua, 
vi, 435”; Rob., vi, 251, 425; 
Susan, vi, 251; —, vi, 425” 

Nutter (Noter), Alice, vi, 399”, 
520; Ant., vi, 515 ”, 522; Chris., 
vi, 491”, 492; Edm., vi, 515, 
522; Eleanor, vi, 492; Ellen, vi, 
490; Ellis, vi, 490, 491, 492; 
Hen., vi, 447, 490, 490%, 491, 
492, 515; John, vi, 399%, 499, 
491, 492, 515, 516, 517, 521, 522; 
Lawr., vi, 520; Marculph, vi, 
515”; Marg., vi, 491; Miles, vi, 
520; Rich., vi, 515, 516, 520; 
Rob., vi, 490, 491, 492, 515; 
Sibyl, vi, 490”; Steph., vi, 515; 
Will., vi, 516 7, 519, 520, 547 123 
Mrs., vi, 515 2; —, vi, 518 

Nutto, see Nuttall 


Oak Bank Farm Cross (Barton), 
vii, 127 

Oakenbottom, John del, vi, 402 ” 

Oakenclough (Bleasdale), vii, 141, 
142 

Oakenclough Head mere 
Darwen), vi, 272 ” 

Oakeneaves (Habergham Eaves), 
vi, 454, 467 : 


(Over 


INDEX 


Oakenhead (Goosnargh), vii, 192 n 

Oakenhead (Mellor), erie n c 

Oakenhead, Thos. del, vii, 193 

Oakenhead wood (Lower Booths), 
VI, 435, 436 

Oakenholt syke (Rishton), vi, 347 

Oakenshaw (Clayton-le-Moors), vi, 
338 m, 417, 423 

Oakenshaw, Hen., vi, 9”, ton; 
Rich. de, vi, 347; Thos. de, 
Vl, 347; Will, vi, 5 

Oakenshaw Printing Co., vi, 505 

Oak Hill, park (Accrington), vi, 
420 

Oakworth, vi, 551 

Oatfall, the (Claughton), vii, 3297” 

O’Brien, Phil., vi, 114 2; Rich., vi, 
114 

Occleshaw, John, vi, 88 

Oddie (Oddy), Jas., vi, 556 »; John, 
v1, 305 ”, 370; Sibyl, vi, 550n 

Ogden (Milnrow), vi, 438 2 

Ogden, brook, vi, 514, 519 

Ogden, Rev. Geo., vii, 42, 43, 61 1 

Ogden Clough (Barley), vi, 518 

Ogilby, —, vii, 311 

Ogilvy, Ld., vi, 290 

Ogle, Joan de, vi, 131; Rob. de, 
vi, 131” 

Oglethorpe, —, vii, 78 

O’Hagan, Alice M., Lady, vi, 446, 
460, 484 »; Lds. vi, 460 

Okenheved, see Oakenhead 

Okenwood, vi, 233 

Okeover (Akovere), Dorothy, vi, 
63; Hugh de, vil, 316” 

Okethorp, Rob. de, vi, 150” 

Old Bruches (Lea), vii, 132 2 

Old Dyke, earthwork (Heald Moor), 
vi, 479 

Oldebacon, Ad., vi, 326 

Oldelande, Oldelaunde, see Laund 
Booth, Old 

Oldemon _ Ridding 
Moors), vi, 418 

Oldfield (Clitheroe), vi, 368 ” 

Oldfield (Croston), vi, 95 ” 

Oldfield (Hothersall), vii, 63 ” 

Oldfield (Ingol), vii, 134 

Oldfield (Mearley), vi, 377 ” 

Oldfield (Preston), vii, 97 ” 

Oldfieldhalgh (Hothersall), vii, 63 ” 

Oldfield Heys (Croston), vi, 96 ” 

Old Hall (Burnley), vi, 441 

Old Hall (Salwick), vii, 163 2 

Old Hall Postern (Burnlcy), vi, 443 

Oldham, Rev. John, vi, 549; Lawr., 
vi, 406 n; Will., vi, 406 ”, 408 

Oldham’s Cross (Oswaldtwistle), 
vi, 406 

Oldhey (Simonstone), vi, 499 72 

Oldhouse (Brockholes), vii, 111 2 

Old House (Myerscough), vii, 141 

Oldland (Pendleton), vi, 393 ” 

Oldlands (Read), vi, 503 ” 

Old Laund Hall (Old Laund 
Booth), vi, 521, 522, 

Oldmill holme (Church), vi, 400 ” 

Old Orchard (Dutton), vii, 547 | 

Old Park (Habergham Eaves), vi, 


(Clayton-le- 


459 0 ; 
Old Park Lodge (Leagram), vi, 380 
Old Park Wood (Osbaldeston), vi, 


I 

Ghisnope Clough, see Cockhill 
Clough ; 

Oldtwincroft (Church), vi, 402” _ 

Oliver, Anne, vii, 90”; Rob., vii, 
266; R. D., vi, 43 

Oliverson, R., vil, 202 ” 

Ollerhead, Ollernhead, see Holren- 
head i 

Ollershaw (Catterall), vii, 324” 

Ollerton (Withnell), vi, 37%, 38 2, 
47, 48, 59; CTOSS, V1, 47 


399 


Ollerton, Cecily de, vi, 48 2, 5I”; 
Rich. de, vi, 37%, 38, 47 n, 48 n, 
49 %, 50; —, vi, 37 

Ollertrodes (Church), see Alley- 
troyds 

Ollodweele (Padiham), vi, 511” 

Olotson, John, vi, 95 », 96; Will, 
vl, 95”, 96%; see also Elletson 

Omthull (Shevington), vi, 201 n 

O’Neil, fam., vi, 111 » 

Ooze Castle Wood (Yate 
Pickup Bank), vi, 280 

Opehey (Chatburn), vi, 37372 

Openshaw, Fred., vii, 65; Jas., 
is 50; Jonathan, vii, 40, 50 n, 

5 

Oram, Will, vi, 237 ” 

Orborowlache (Hapton), vi, 510 » 

Orchard Ing (Clitheroe), vi, 366 n 

Orlage (Livesey), vi, 285 

Orley (Ribchester), vii, 43 » 

Orm (Orme), vi, 239 , 304 », 3537, 
364, 388; vil, 48x 

Orm, Rich. de, vi, 469 ; Rob. de, vi, 
469 

Ormerod (Cliviger), vi, 479, 484 

Ormerod (Ormeroid), Ad. (de), vi, 
480, 484 n ; Agnes, vi, 410, 477 7; 
Charlotte A., vi, 484; Eliz., vi, 
445”, 484; Geo., vi, 410, 431, 
434, 436%, 445”, 477”, 490; 
Gilb. de, vi, 477 2, 484; John, 
vi, 274, 411, 425%, 434, 441, 
475%, 4777, 484, 486, 514; 
Lawr., vi, 484; Matth. de, vi, 
484 n ; Oliver, vi, 431, 434, 514 2; 
Pet., vi, 358, 4347, 438, 483, 
484, 486; Rich., vi, 434; Susan, 
vi, 483; Tille (de), vi, 480, 
484”; see also Ormrod 

Ormerod House (Cliviger), vi, 484 

Ormeroid, see Ormerod and Ormrod 

Ormeston, John, vi, 468 x 

Ormonde, Eleanor, ctss. of, vii, 
176”, 179”, 241 1; earls of, vii, 
241 n, 273; Jas., vii, 176”, 178 

Ormrod, Jas., vii, 304”; Jas., C., 
vii, 304; Capt. Pet., vii, 304, 
305; Pet., vil, 304, 305; Mrs., 
vu, 305; see also Ormerod 

Ormsclough (Dutton), vii, 56 7 

Ormskirk, vi, 90” 

Orrell, Ad. de, vi, 95”, 2072; 
Anne, vi, 64”, 65”; Cecily de, 
Mi 207M JEUZ.. ONT, 3035 NAL, 
275; Kran., vi, 642; Hen. de, 


and 


vi, 207”; John, vi, 30; vii, 
275; Kath., vi, 218”; Mar- 
gery de, vi, 207”; Nich., vi, 


207”; Ralph, vi, 218; Rich., 
vi, 64, 65 n; Thos. de, vi, 207 7; 
Will. (de), vi, 30, 180%, 207», 
208 n; fam., vi, ITI ” 

Orrett, Thos., vi, 2297; Will. G., 
vi, 187 ”, 190 

Orsegate (Poulton), vii, 226 » 

Orton, Rev. —, vi, 181 7 

Ortt, Rev. Rich., vi, 435 

Osbaldeston, vi, 319-25, 396; deer 
park, vi, 324; man., vi, 232, 314, 
320; Rom. Cath., vi, 325 

Osbaldeston, Ad. de, vi, 314, 320, 
324; Agnes, vi, 321; Sir Alex., 
vi, 104 ”, 272, 317, 321; Vil, 59 7, 
83, 85, 107”, 125”, I69R, 
185 n, 280 n, 283 7, 325 2, 331 Nn; 
Alex. (de), vi, 217 ”, 237”, 250, 
272, 302, 316”, 317, 318, 318%, 
320, 321, 322, 322”, 325; vii, 
20, 35, 65", 70%, 118M, 155 %, 
207 n, 218”, 233 2, 287”; Alice 
(de), vi, 260”, 301 ”, 320, 321; 
Amabel de, vii, 33”; Anabella 
de, vi, 320; Anne, vi, 322 ; Anne 
S., vi, 322 ; Benedict de, vi, 320; 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


O-bald ston (cont.) 
Cecily de, vi, 321; Sir Chas., vi, 
319; Dorothy, vi, 296m”; Sir 
Edw., vi, 238, 282, 317, 319, 
3220 Vil, gon, 179; Edw, Vi, 
235 , 272, 251 n, 282, 302, 302 %, 
317, 319, 322, 324, 325: VU, 35%, 
329M, 332"; Eliz., vi, 17%, 
198", 246m, 315, 316, 317%, 
321; vii, 280”; Ellen, vi, 321, 


322, 324; Vil, 35; Fran., vi, 
322; Geott. (de), v1, 249, 271, 
272, 302, 320, 321, 327, ” 


vi, 322 2; Grace, vi, 321; Ham- 
let, vi, 317 »; Hannah, vi, 3187; 
Hen. (de), vi, 321”; vii, 55”; 
Hugh (de), vi, 314, 320, 324; 
vii, 52, 332; Isabel (de), vi, 
302, 317, 321; vil, 55”; Jane, 
vi, 321; vii, 281%; Joan (de), 
vi, 320, 321; Vil, 126"; Sir 
John, vi, 321; John (de), vi, 9, 
104m, 249, 250, 271, 272, 280, 
282, 302m, 303, 315, 316, 317, 
318, 319, 320, 321, 322, 324, 325, 
325.2; VU, 35, 417, 437, 48 nN, 
50, 59H, 120m, 126", 2817, 
332; Kath. (Cath.) de, vi, 392, 


317%, 318 n, 320; Vil, 1557; 
Lawr., vi, 325; Lettice, vi, 
407; Marg: de, vi; 327). 321, 


322, 325"; Mary, vi, 317%, 
322; vii, 18; Maud, vi, 322, 
324% Mich... i, 3225 Pet,,. v1) 


325; Ralph, vi, 29582; Rich., 
vi, 237.2, 200 2, 302 ”, 316, 317, 
321; Rob., vi, 246n, 299, 325, 
358; vil, 48; Rosamond, vi, 
317", 325; Thos. (de), vi, 17%, 
Igdn, 230 n, 250, 302, 314-15, 
H20, B21, BOA Mo B22), F22 Ny BBA, 
327; Vi, 32%, 33, 33%, 35%, 
50 n, 2002; Thurstan, vi, 321 7; 
Will. (de), vi, 296 2, 301 n, 318 », 
320, 321, 321m, 325; vii, 494, 
50n; —, vii, 251”; fam., vi, 
263 m5 vii, 66 

Osbaldeston Green (Osbaldeston), 


vi, 319 
Osbaldeston Hall (Osbaldeston), vi, 
290 n, 319, 323 
Osebaldreston, see Osbaldeston 
QOsbern (Dilworth), vi, 53 2 
Osbert, vii, 127, 101, 161, 108 1, 
170", 1757n 
Osboston ferry (Ribchester), vil, 


49 7 

Oswaldtwistle (Oswaldtuisil), vi, 
234) 349, 350 1, 387 M, 494-9, 429, 
521m; vil, 49m; char., vi, 404; 
ch., vi, 409; Cross, vi, 4o53 ind., 
vi, 405; Man., vi, 232, 405; mill, 
vi, 406”; Nonconf., vi, 409; 
quarnes, vi, 405; Rom. Cath., 
vi, 409 

Oswaldtwistle, Hen. de, vi, gor n, 
4o2rn, 405; Phil. de, vi, 405 2; 
luich. de, vi, 4065 Rog: de, vi, 
FOT dH, 402m, 4058, 406, 407, 
Sim. de, vi, yo22; Will, vi, 
405 2 

Oswaldtwistle Moor, vi, 235, 405 7”, 
4O7 n 

Otemaste (Greenhalgh), vii, 180 ” 

Othedis (Farington), vi, 62 

Othegrenehulles, John, vii, 307; 
Rich., vii, 30 2 

Quand (Poulton), vii, 226” 

Oubeck (Warton), vil, 171 2 

Oudlawe, Will., vii, 231 

Ounespool (Kirkland), vii, 313 ” 

Outgreenfurlong (Longton), vi, 71 ” 

Outlane (Lea), vii, 130 7” 

Outlane Wra_ (Freckleton), 
1687 


vii, 


Out Rawcliffe, Outrouthechf, see 
Rawcliffe, Out 

Ovall (Barton), vii, 127 ” 

Over Darwen, Overdarwyn, Over- 
derewente, Overderwend(t),Over- 
derwyn, see Darwen, Over 

Over-eastfield (Altham), vi, 413 " 

Over End (Leagram), vi, 380 

Over Green (Hapton), see Fenny- 
fold 

Overhalgh (Dutton), vii, 54” 

Over Hall (Samlesbury), vi, 306, 307 

Overhead, man., vi, 233 ” 

Overheads (Henheads), vi, 437 

Overholme (Chaigley), vii, 16 

Overholme (Habergham Eaves), vi, 


455% 

Overland of the Marsh (Poulton), 
vii, 226 » 

Overlee (Bispham), vi, 101 7 

Over Moor (Foulridge), vi, 546 

Over Northfield (Worsthorne), vi, 
77" 

Overthemarketgate (Barton), vii, 
1307 


Over Thornhill (Pendleton), vi, 
393 7 . 

Overton, the (Gt. Harwood), vi, 
3392 


Overton, Rob., vii, 297 

Overtown(e) (Broughton), see Dur- 
ton 

Overtown (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Overtown (Whalley), vi, 387 ” 

Over Wood (Myerscough), vi, 
139” 

Owen, vil, 130” 

Owen, Hen., vi, 549; 
150”; Mary, vi, 150” 

Owen-Smith, Hen. P., vi, 181 

Oxcliffe (Oxcleve, Oxclyf), Alice 
de, vil, 253; John (de), vii, 
223, 252n, 253"; Nich. (de), 
vil, 189, 252, 253”; Will. de, 
Vi, 252, 253 

Oxedene clough (Clayton-le-Dale), 
vi, 258 

Oxendale (Osbaldeston), vi, 325 

Oxendale Hall (Osbaldeston), vi, 
325 

Oxenholme, 
2527 

Oxford, Philippa de Vere, ctss. of, 
vil, 303; Rob. de Vere, earl of, 
Vi, 293”; Vii, 303 

Oxgang (Staynall), vii, 252 

Oxhey (Heskin), vi, 165 

Oxhey (Mearley), vi, 376 2 

Oxhcy (Pendleton), vi, 393 # 

Oxhey (Ribbleton), vii, 106 # 

Oxhey wood (Whalley), vi, 382 4 


John, vi, 


the (Stalmine), vii, 


Pack & Chapman, bell makers, vi, 
297 

Packet, Thos., vii, 85 

Pacock, Pacok, see Peacock 

Paddescrook (Leyland), vi, 14.” 

Pade, Rog., vii, 94 2 

Padiham, vi, 349, 355”, 357, 452, 
454, 459%, 493, 464, 4897, 
492-96, 500 n, 501 n, 507 0; adv., 
vi, 495; chant., vi, 494; chap., 
vl, 495; char., vi, 496; ch., vi, 
494; coal-mines, vi, 492; cotton 
manuf., vi, 492; fairs, vi, 492, 
523 #2; man., vi, 232, 233 ”, 493; 
mill, vi, 447 %, 493 ; Noncont., vi, 
496; quarries, vi, 492; sch., vi, 
496 

Padiham, Gilb. de, vi, 493 

Padiham Field (Padiham), vi, 493 


Padiham Green (Hapton), vi, 507, 


511 


400 


Padiham Hey (Padiham), vi, 493 
Padiham Moor, vi, 514 , 
Padingham, see Padiham 

Page, Amabil, vii, 260 n; Geo., vi 
251; Hens, va, 252° John, vi 
2042, 249, a Saee Vb 25s 
Vu, 260n; ob., vi, : 
Will., vi, 282 ; me 

Page Croft (Elswick), vii, 284 

Pageficld (Euxton), vi, 19” 

Painter, Will., vi, 166 

Pakoc, Pakok, see Peacock 

Palace House (Habergham Eaves), 
Vi, 450 

Pale, the (Whalley), vi, 379 " 

Paler, John, vii, 86, 87 

Paley (Payley), Isabel, vi, 471 4; 
Jas., vi, 471m, 527 n, 530, 545 

Palmer (Paumere), Joan, vi, 97: 
John, vi, 238; Matth., vii, 41; 
Will. (le), vi, 97 2; vii, 134” 

Pankct, Chas., vi, 380 

Panshaicbrook (Foulridge), vi, 545 » 

Pan Stones (Dutton), vii, 54 

Paper manufacture, vi, 270, 275, 
284, 303, 345, 301, 4425 vit, 141, 
330 

Paradise (Croston), vi, 95 

Paradise (Shevington), vi, 200 » 

Parbold, vi, 68”, 155, 178-81; 
char., vi, 90 7, 91m, Ib1; ch,, vi, 
180; man., vi, 178; Rom, Cath., 
vi, 181 

Parbold, Ad. de, vi, 180”; Alan 
de, vi, 180”; Albin de, vi, 
180"; Alice «de, vi, 200n; 
Bern. de, vi, 180”; Hen. (de), 
vi, 180”, 181, 200; Hugh de, 
vi, 180 2; Mabel de, vi, 180”; 
Maud de, vi, 180”; Rich. (de), 
vi, 180 n; Rob. de, vi, 180” 

Parbold Hall (Parbold), vi, 181 # 

Parbold House (Parbold), vi, 180 

Paris, Ad. de, vii, 158 2; Rich., vi, 
3057 

Parish, Rob., vi, 358 

Parisourge (Clitheroe), vi, 367 

Park, brook, vi, 252, 257 

Park, fam., see Parke 

Parkbrook (Shevington), vi, 200 », 
202” 

Parke (Park, Parkes), Herb. T,, vi, 
48; H. T., vi, 144; John, vi, 17, 
48; vii, 178; Lawr., vi, 2377; 
Mary, vi, 48”; Phil, vii, 199; 
Rob., vi, 48”; Will. B., vi, 48; 
Will, P., vii, 198; fam., vi, 47; 
vii, 98 0 

Parkenrode 
vi, 407 

Parker, Ad. the, vi, 140 7; Agnes, 
vi, 380n, 4507, 538; Alex., 
vi, 526, 530, 54, 5140”; Vii, 
158”; Alice, vi, 2507, 5537; 
Anne, vi, 25, 142, 366m, 446, 
446; Ant., vi, 452; vii, 156"; 
Rev. Arth. T., vi, 25”, 459, 
451, 452; Banastre, vi, 25, 28; 
Bern., vi, 492, 494, 525, 539; 
Brian, vi, 397, 368m; Cath. 
(Kath.), vi, 142; vii, 156”; 
Chris., vi, 545, 549”; vii, 155”, 
156, 158”; Edm., vi, 407, 472”, 
473, 539, 549; Edm. J., vi, 
538; Edw., vi, 3807, 407N, 
472 nN, §26n, 533; Eliz. vi, 25, 
106, 208, 256, 366, 3S0n, 
401 2, 407 1; Vii, 89 m, 300, 315; 
Ellen, vi, 543; Ellis, vi, 525%, 
549 ; Geoff. (the), vi, 525 ”, 548; 
Geo., vi, 127”, 142; Gilb., vi, 
407; Giles, vi, 350m, 368n, 
518”; vii, 229”; Harrict S., vi, 
25, 472; Hen., vi, 513”, 521, 
525 #, 526, 527 1, 53%, 544, 549; 


(Habergham Eaves), 


Parker (cont.) 
vii, 212%; Hugh, vi, 142, 256, 
513”, 521; Isabel, vi, 5537; 
Jas., Vi, 140”, 142; vii, 32”; 


INDEX 


Parr (cont.) 


vi, 553”; John, vi, 502, 500; 
vu, 149, 284; John O.,, vii, 87; 
Marg., vi, 5007; Margery de, 


Pearce (Peers), Pet., vi, 
Thos., vii, 25 
Pearl fishing, vii, 188 


143 2; 


Pearson (Pereson, Person, Pierson), 
Rev. Alf, vi, 452; Jane, vi, 
225”, 229m; John, vi, 50, 161; 
vil, 158”; Marg., vi, 225 n, 361; 
Oliver, vi, 50; Rob., vi, 4457; 
Thos., vii, r41 7, 335 

Peche (Chatburn), vi, 372 2 

Pecop, see Pickup 

Pedder, Col. Chas. D., vii, 102 n; 


Jane, vi, 256 ; vii, 155 »; Joan, vii, 3282; Rich. (de), vi, 160 
vi, 456%, 5IIM, 5432, 546; 161; vii, 3287; Rob. de, vii, 
John (the), vi, 142, 256, 260, 328; Sir Thos., vii, 303; Sir 
335”, 3807”, 397%, 445, 468 1, Will, vii, 301 7, 303 2; Will, 
472, 473, 488, 511 2, 512 n, 525, vil, 227 2, 2571; —, vi, 500 ; 
539, 542, 546, 548, 549, 553; Parratt’s fields (Parbold), vi, 180 ” 
vil, 25%, Iqim, 156m”, 1587; Parr Hall (Eccleston), vi, 162 

John F. H., vii, 142; Col. John  Parrock, Higham (Higham), vi, 


W. R., vi, 526; Lawr., vi, 513” Edw., vi, 65; vii 

: + Vi, ; vii, 102 n, ; 
472, 526, 530, 5382, 546, Parrock, Old (Higham), vi, 513 182, 211; "fabal, vit Bey 
549; Vi, 306”; Marg., vi, Parrock-hey (Preesall), vii, 258 2 Jas., vii, 102”, 106n, "206 7 


525”, 546; vil, 156”, 158n; 


3 Parrock stone (Colne), vi, 5240 
Margery, vii, 158 #; Martha, vii, 


298, 312; John, vii, 295, 296 2, 


21zn; Mary, vi, 285, 2867, 
472 ; Matth., archbp., vii, 42 » ; 
Maud, vii, 253; Miles, vi, 472 1 
543; Nich., vi, 366 , 367, 451 7, 
472; Oliver, vi, 142”, 407; 
Phil. the, vi, 546; Ralph, vi 
525"; vii, 204; Reynold, vii, 
25”; Rich. (the), vi, 1797, 
208 n, 256, 335”, 366”, 4721, 
512”, 525”; Vii, 13, 25, 257, 
qin, 180n, 181”; Rob., vi, 25, 
106 n, 380”, 4592, 472, 473 n, 
526; vii, 65%”, 74, 253, 3272; 
Capt. Rob. T., vi, 25 2; Rob. T., 
vi, 25, 135, 300, 446, 450, 452, 
528; vii, 74; Rog., vi, 142”; 
R., vii, 290; Susannah, vi, 25; 


5) 


Parrott, Sir John, vii, 26 

Parrox Hall (Preesall), vii, 258 
Parsonage Field (Church), vi, 399 
Parsons (Parson), Rev. Geo. L 


“iy, 


vii, 148; Will., vii, 224 


Parsonweind (Preston), vii, 79 Nn 
Partington, —, vi, 283 


Parva Harewode, see Harwood, 
Little 
Paslew (Pasley), Alice, vi, 398, 


399”, 521; vil, 1337; Eliz., 
vi, 398-9; Fran., vi, 398, 399; 
John, abbot, vi, 298, 354, 384, 
385, 415, 495; John, vi, 394”, 
398, 521”; Rob., vii, 1332”; 
Thos., vi, 398 


Passavent, John, vi, 154 7 


298; John W., vii, 296, 298; 
Rich., vii, 102 2, 296, 298 ; Thos., 
vii, 102 n, 296 n, 298; Will, vi, 
296; Wilson, vii, 296%, 298; 
fam., vii, 91 

Pedder House (Walton), vi, 296 

Pedley, Edw., vi, 358 

Pedwardine, Isabel de, vii, 301 » ; 
Sir Walt. de, vii, 301 

Peel, the (Duxbury), vi, 210 

Peel, the (Hutton), vii, 235 » 

Peel (Marton), vii, 163 7, 175%, 
239, 242 

Peel (Peele, Piele), Eliz., vi, 454; 
John, vi, 251, 406, 4477, 
494; Jonathan, vi, 399 ”; Rev. 
Nich., vi, 344; Nich., vi, 55; Sir 


Paston, Clem., vi, 460; Mary, vi, 


Rob., vi, 399”, 406; vii, gz, 
460 n i 


406; Will, vi, 406; fam., vi, 
Pastorini, see Rama, Chas. Wal- 284 n 

mesley, bp. of Peel Fold (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 251, 
Pasture Head (Foulridge), vi, 544 406 
Pateson, see Pattisson Peel Hall (Preston), vii, roo n 
Patrick, vii, 183 Peers, see Pearce 
Patrington, Alex. de, vi, 475 Pegge, Sam., vi, 80, 81 
Patten, Eliz., vii, 34; Hen., vii, Pekeshey (Wrightington), vi, 170» 


Thos., vi, 140m”, 142”, 285, 
286 n, 367 n, 380m, 456 », 472 2, 
526, 546; vii, I07”, 2007; 
Thos. T., vi, 25, 32, 36, 472; 
Thurstan, vi, 407 ; Wilkinson, vi, 
472; Rev. Will., vi, 283; Will., 
vi, 3807, 470”, 549, 553”; vii, 
28”, 29”, 156n, 158”, 2127; 


Col., vi, 546; —, vi, 524, 549 0 
Parkes, see Parke 
Park Falls (Fulwood), vii, 108 
Park Farm (Gt. Harwood), vi, 340 
Park Green (Leagram), vi, 380 ” 
Park Hall (Charnock Richard), vi, 


298; Mary, vii, 34; Rob., vi, 
135”; vii, 77”; Thos., vii, 29, 
34, 208, 307; Thos. W., vii, 
307 n; Will, vii, 29, 34 ”, Io2z 7; 
—, vi, 525; vii, 164”; fam., 
vii, 76, 100 n ; see also Patton and 
Wilson-Patten 


Pelie (Worsthorne), vi, 475 7 

Pelle (Pelie, Polie), Ad., vii, ror 7; 
Ismania, vii, 101 7; Rich., vii, 
IOI #2, 331%”; Rob., vi, 475; 
Will., vu, Ior n, 331 72 

Pemberton, vii, 280 7 

Pemberton, Ad. de, vi, 76 i7, 336, 


Patten Arms (Cabus), vii, 305 

Patten Field (Preston), vii, 103 ” 

Patten Hall, see Thornley Hall 

Patten House (Preston), vii, 77 2 

Pattisson (Pateson, Pattison), Alice, 
vii, 231”; Hannah, vi, 394”; 
Rich., vii, 158 ~; Thos., vii, 144, 
231”; Will., vii, 144” 


397, 550; Alice de, vi, 336, 
397, 556”; Hugh de, vi, 79, 
201 , 3360; Jas., vi, 177; Rich. 
(de), vil, 113 x, 169 »; Sir Thos., 
vii, 61; Will, vii, 113 ” 

Pembroke, Mary de St. Pol, ctss. 
of, vil, 302 ”, 303 ” 

Pembroke, Eliz., vi, 154”; John, 


205 

Parkhead (Whalley), vi, 387, 505 

Park Hill (Barrowford), vi, 542, 
543; mills, vi, 543 

Park House (Wyresdale), vii, 304 n 

Parkhulley (Barrowford), vi, 544 

Parkin, Geo., vii, 66 7 

Parkinson, Alice, vii, 199 x; Anne, 
vii, 23 ; Cecily, vii, 140 7, 322; 


Chris., vii, 32 ”, 142, 181 32, 204, Patton, Mrs., vi, 413; see also vi, 154” 
331”; Cuth. A., vii, 141; Patten _ Pendle, hill, vi, 230, 373, 375, 552, 
Dorothy, vi, 380”; Edm., vii, Paulet (Poulet), Chas. W., vi, 557, 558 


Pendlebury, Anne, vii, 231 x; Hen., 
vi, 188 ; Rog., vii, 231 

Pendle Cross (Heyhouses), vi, 513 

Pendle Forest (Pendle), vi, 232, 
2337, 349, 301, 367, 488, 489, 
490, 491, 512, 514, 516, 527, 541, 
543, 544, 546; chap., vi, 517; 


21on; Susan A. G., vi, 210”; 
Will., vii, 297 ” 

Paulin (Paulinus), vi, 400”; vii, 
94%, 192” 

Paulinsson, see Pawesson 

Paumere, see Palmer 


199”, 331”; Edw., vi, 399; 
vii, 108”, I40n, 175%”, 199 11, 
3227, 329”, 331”; Eliz., vi, 
380; vii, 3312; Ellen, vii, 
128, 199”; Geo., vii, 141 7, 
329; Hen., vii, 142”; Isabel, 


vii, 140”, 322”; Janet, vii, Pawesson (Paulinsson), Agnes, vi, 1 

181”, I99”; John, vi, 3807; 662; Eliz., vi, 366”; Rob., witchcraft, vi, 515, 537 | 

vii, eed a 3297; ed a 366 0 Pendle Hall (Higham), vi, 20%, 
vii, 201, 206, 329”; Marg., vii, Payley, see Paley 512, 513 = 
199 2; Mane. ait 23. Paik Payne, Geo., vi, 248 Pendleton (Great Pendleton), vi, 
vii, 31”, 141”, 204”; Rich., Paythorn (Yorks), vil, 110; man., 349, 356%, 357, 372%, 391%, 


392-6, 513, 553, 554%; Ch., vi, 


i, 421” : 
wed 396; ind., vi, 392; man., vi, 


vii, 31, 32, I2I1 n, 142, 199%, eaea 
» 31, 32, ae Paythorne, Christiana de, vi, 317; 


282, 329”; Rob., vii, 23, 66, 


ii ; i 61m, 376”, 392, 489; 
I4Im, 142; Rog., vii, 199”; Ughtred de, vi, 317 233", 3 7 : 
R. vii, "36 : Thos., vii, 317”, Peacock, brook, vii, 27 ” es vi, 393%; Nonconf. vi, 
142”, I5I, 199”, 292m”, 299 Peacock, hill, vi, 548, 552 39 : : 
312, at al Will, vi, 194 n, Peacock (Pacock, Pacok, Pakoc, Pendleton, Little, vi, 232, 356 n, 
199”, 292”, 322n, 331”; —, Pakok), Ad., vii, 1892; Agnes, 366m; man., VI, 253, 254, 393; 
canon, vii, 66”, 142”; —, vii, vii, 183 n, 278; John, vii, 278” ; mill, vi, 393 7% 


305 ”; fam., vii, 195 ” 

Parlick Fell (Brow), vi, 230; vii, 
20, 26, 29 n, 141 

Parr, Agnes, vi, 553”; Edw., vi, 
21”, 162; Ellen, vi, 50”; Hen., 


(| 


Rich., vii, 297; Rob., vii, 183 7, 
278n; Rog., vii, 297; Thos., vi, 
342; WilL, vi, 288; fam., vu, 
2547” 


4 ee = 
Peacock Hey (Chipping), vii, 30 ” 


401 


Pendleton, Agnes de, vi, 393%; 
Cecily de, vi, 393 7; Ellis de, vi, 
3937; Hawise de, vi, 393”; Hugh 
de, vi, 393 7; Isold de, vi, 393 % ; 
Quenilda de, vi, 305%, 3937); 


St 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Pendleton (cont.) 
Reg. de, vi, 365”, 393"; Rob. 
de, vi, 393”; Sabasdus de, vi, 
393"; Siward de, vi, 3937; 
Thos. de, vi, 393 ™; Will. de, vi, 
393%, 455.7% ; 

Pendleton Hall (Pendleton), vi, 
349, 393, 394% | 

Pendleton waste, vi, 391 ”, 514 

Pendleton wood, vi, 375 ”, 395 

Pendle Water, riv., vi, 446, 464, 
489, 490, 536, 542, 543 

Pendrecham, see Penwortham 

Penelache (Whittle-le-Woods), vi, 
34” 

Penelton, see Pendleton 

Penereth, Emma de, vii, 
Will. de, vii, 177 ” 

Peneverdant, see Penwortham 

Penhille, Rob. de, vi, 519 

Penhulton, Penilton, Peniltune, see 
Pendleton 

Penketh, —, vii, 7 

Penley, vi, 530” 

Pennant, Piers, vi, 524"; Thos., 
vi, 237,1395%% ; vii,§37 

Pennington (Pinnington), Ad. de, 
vi, 200n; Sir Alan, vi, 209”; 
Alan de,¥ vi, 509 ; Cath. 
(Kath), vu, 89, 317; Gabriel, 
vil, 126%; Sir John, vi, 209”; 
vii, 317”; Jos., vi, 65”; Mar- 
gery, vi, 26%; Thos., vi, 5097; 
Sir Will, vi, 65; Will, vi, 65”; 
fam., vi, 64 

Penny, Rev. Jas., vii, 82; Jas., 
vu, 25, 87; John, vii, 142, 205 

Penny stone (Bispham), vii, 246 » 

Pennyworth (Accrington), vi, 425 7 

Penswick, Thos., vii, 279” 

Penuertham, see Penwortham 

Penwortham, vi, 1, 29”, 52-61; 
Vii, 90, 91 m, 144 n, 149 7”, 2880; 
adv., vi, 54; char., vi, 56; ch., 
Vi, 53, 67; cross, vi, 56, 57”; 
ferry, vii, 76; fishery, vi, 57, 
58; grange, vi, 59; ind., vi, 
52; Man., Vil, 13 ”, 57; vii, 175”, 
209; Nonconf., vi, 52; sch. vi, 
56, 67, 74 

Penwortham, bar. (fee), vi, 2, 10, 
18, 29, 33, 37, 573 Vii, 70, 108, 
166, 167, I7I, 172, 173, 173%, 
176, 177, 178, 191, 200, 207, 282, 
325 

Penwortham, Ad. de, vi, 60n; 
Agnes de, vi, 602; Alex. de, vi, 
52; Alicc dv, vi, 60”; Bussel 
of, vii, 240 2; Christiana de, vii, 
99”; Ellen de, vi, 60”; Hen. 
de, vil, 99”; Joan de, vi, 607; 
Kath. de, vi, 60”; Mabot de, 
vii, 63”, 132; Marg. de, vi, 
602; Nich. de, vi, 602; Phil. 
de, vi, 60; Ralph de, vii, 223; 
Rich. de, vii, 52 »; Walt. de, vi, 
607; vii, 63 ”, 132”; Will. de, 
vii, 63”, 132” 


177"; 


Penwortham Castle, vi, I, 537%, 
56, 57 ; 

Penwortham Hall, vi, 57 

Penwortham Moss, vi, 61; vii, 


102 ”, 117 
Penwortham Priory, vi, 6, 53, 54, 
58 n, 59, 69, 70, 73 2; Vii, 145 
Peploe, Rev. Sam., vii, 86, 87, 113, 

I2I n, 123, 2057” 
Pepperfield (Preston), vii, 99 
Pepper Hill (Clifton), vii, 161 
Pepper Syke (Goosnargh), vii, 192 
Perbald, Perbalt, Perbold, see Par- 
bold 
Perburn (Coppull), vi, 222”, 224, 
225n 
Perburn, brook, vi, 183, 197 n, 224. 


Perburn, Ad. de, vi, 219"; Agnes 
de, vi, 174"; Hugh de, vi, 228; 
Margery de, vi, 228; Rich. de, 
vi, 174”; Rob. de, vi, 228; 
Thos. de, vi, 228 3 

Percy, Will., vi, 374 ” 

Perebold, see Parbold 

Peres, see Preese 

Pereson, see Pearson 

Perient, Sir John, vii, 211 7 

Perlebarn, John, vi, 198 7 

Perod (Marsden), vi, 538 7 

Perpoint, Perpont, Perpunt, see 
Pierpoint 

Perrin (Perryn), Fred. E. P., vii, 
43; Rev. F. E., vii, 40; Sir 
Rich., vi, 187 7, 190; Rich., vi, 
190 

Perry, Rev. Steph., vii, 12 

Person, see Pearson 

Pesecroft (Accrington), vi, 424 

Pestur, Christiana le, vii, 98%”; 
Hen. le, vii, 98”; Rich. le, vii, 
99 n; Rog. le, vii, 99" 

Peter, the chaplain, vi, 3697, 
546”; the physician, vii, 24 

Peterborough, John Towers, bp. of, 
vil, 54% 

Petit Middleargh (Hackinsall), vii, 


2577 

Petre, Lady Cath., vi, 422; Lds., 
vi, 278, 332, 347, 423, 425; Vil, 
58; John, vi, 2597; Rob., vi, 
422; Rob. E., vi, 422 2; Rob. J., 
vi, 4227” 

Petre, Edw., vi, 422 ; vii, [11-12 ; 
E. H., vii, 112 ; Fran., vi, 259; 
Geo., vi, 404; vii, 14; Geo. 
E. A. H., vi, 328, 329, 335, 346, 
347, 422; Sir Geo. G., vi, 422; 
Geo. W., vi, 422; G. E., vi, gor ; 
Hen., vi, 422”; Hen. W., vi, 
422; Oswald H., vi, 278, 304; 
bp., vii, 61 

Petrington (Worsthorne), vi, 475 7 

Peule (Upper Rawcliffe), vii, 268 1 

Peverel, hon. of, vii, 240 

Pewter vessels, vi, 415, 5173; vii, 
2 

Peycroft (Mawdesley), vi, 97 7 

Peyke, Geo., vi, 518 7 

Peytevin, Isabel, vi, 366”; Maud, 
vi, 366 , 395 ; Ralph, vi, 366 ” 

Phenixcoales, see Feniscowles 

Philip, vii, 98; of Chester, vi, 
295; the priest, vi, 287; rector 
of Croston, vi, 87 

Philipson, Carus, vi, 557 

Philiptoft (Garstang), vii, 296 

Phillips, Fran., vii, 263 ; Rev. John 
B., vi, 440 

Philpott, Hen., vii, 260 » 

Phipps, Mary, vii, 278”; Thos. 
H. H., vii, 278 n ; —, vii, 272 

Phisick, see Fishwick 

Phusthor (Freckleton), vii, 168 » 

Physick, see Fishwick 

Piccop, Piccope, see Pickup 

Pickard, Alice, vii, 136”; Will., 
vii, 136” 

Picke, John, vii, 255 

Pickerell, John, vii, 263” 

Pickering, Ant., vii, 287", 3247; 
Cecily, vii, 324”; Isabel, vii, 
257; Jas., vil, 193 7, 253 ”, 25471, 
257, 258 n, 324 1; Joan, vii, 257 ; 
John, vii, 324 ~ ; Mabel, vii, 257; 
Marg., vii, 257; Rich., vii, 20; 
Rob., vi, 88, 89, 158, 161; Rog., 
vil, 324”; Thos., vi, 280”; Sir 
Will, vi, 356”; Will. vii, 3247 

Pickering Place (Cliviger), vi, 481 7 

Pickoppe, see Pickup 

Pickup (Habergham Eaves), vi, 454, 
497 


402 


Pickup (Pecop, Piccop, Piccope, 
Pickoppe, Picop), Cath., vi, 381; 
Edm., vi, 438; Jas., vi, 283, 
430 m, 438m; John, vi, 342, 436; 
Mich., vi, 440; Rob., vi, 457; 
‘Thos., vi, 381, 436; Will, vi, 
450, 4070 

Pickup Bank, vi, 230 n, 280 

Pickup Bank Height, vi, 280 

Piele, see Peel 

Pierpoint (Perpoint, Perpont, Per- 
punt), Agnes de, vi, 200 n, 201 » : 
Alice, vi, 201 1; Augustus, vi, 
214; Cecily de, vi, 201 n; Dav., 
vi, 214m; Denise, vi, 21gn; 
Joan le, vi, 201"; John de, vi, 
201”, 305m; Vii, 321”; Mar- 
gery de, vi, 71”; Matilda de, vi, 
305”; Nich., vi, 201”; Rich. 
(de), vi, 200m, 201m, 214m, 
217"; Vil, 321; Rob. de, vi, 
201 »; Rog. de, vi, 201 »; Thos. 
de, Vi, 7I #, 201 2, 203 n, 204n; 
Will. de, vi, 291 2 

Pierson, see Pearson 

Piggot, see Pigot 

Pighel (Whithalgh), vi, 288 

Pighill (Wrightington), vi, 174 1: 

Pighle (Cuerden), vi, 28 » 

Pighle, the (Stonyhurst), vii, 4 1 

Pighole (Briercliffe), vi, 469 

Pighole (Colne), vi, 524 

Pightle (Sunderland), vi, 318 

Pigot (Piggot), Ad., vii, 200n; 

dw., vii, 67; Hawise, vii, 
2007; Hen., vi, 80; John, vi. 
217; fam., vii, 102, 102 

Piked Edge eae vi, 522 

Pikedlow (Habergham Eaves), vi, 


457 

Pike Law (Barley), vi, 519 

Piladhalers (Charnock), vi, 207 n 

Pilatefurlong (Westby), vii, 175 ” 

Pilgrim, Thos., vi, 189 

Pilkington (Pilkinton, Pylkinton), 
Alex. de, vi, 474; vii, 181%; 
Alice, vi, 85, 228, 474”; Sir 
Chas., vi, 316”, 458; Edm., vi, 
555 2; Edw., vi, 316; vii, 198 n; 
Eliz., vi, 228 » ; Geoff., vi, 228 » ; 
Hen. de, vi, 474”; Hugh, vi, 
3177; Isabel (de), vi, 101 n, 458; 
Jas., vi, 85, 86 7, 88, 166”, 242: 
Joan, vi, 316; Sir John, (de) vi, 
316; vii, 213”; John, vi, 142, 
220, 488 ; vii, 185 n, 198; Kath., 
vi, 216”; Lawr., v1, 228; Lora 
de, vi, 194, 200”; Marg., vi, 
89n; Rich., vi, 215m, 2167; 
Rob., vi, 186, 191m, 215%, 
216"; Sir Rog. de, vi, 194; 
Rog. de, vii, 181 2; Will. (de), 
vi, 85, 86 n, 88n, 89, 4747; Vii, 
188 ; fam., vi, 246” 

Pilkington Hall (Wakefield), vi, 
3167 

Pillhouses (Lytham), vii, 216 

Pilling, vii, 256, 291, 292, 293, 299, 
332-5; adv., vii, 333; chap., 
vii, 299, 334; ch., vii, 334; man., 
vi, 413; vii, 274 ”, 333; Nonconf., 
vii, 335; Rom. Cath., vii, 335; 
sch., vli, 335 

Pilling (Pylling), John, vi, 2727, 
438, 438”, 439; Rog., vi, 434; 
Will, vi, 551 2 

Pilling Hey (Pilling), vii, 333 

Pilling Lane (Preesall), vii, 256 

Pilling Moss, vii, 304, 308 ”, 313” 

Pillock, Ad., vi, 264” 

Pilotholes, John de, vi, 205 ” 

Pilsworth, Will. de, vi, 221 7 

Pimlico (Clitheroe), vi, 360 : 

Pincock, Hugh, vi, 51”; Rich., vi, 
10; Thurstan, vi, 9” 


Pincock mill (Euxton), vi, 18 

Pindar (Pinder), Chas., vi, 416; 
Will. the, vii, 257 ” 

Pinkpool (Hutton), vi, 68 2 

Pinnington, see Pennington 

Piper, Jas., vi, 118” 78 

Piper Yard (Colne), vi, 525” 

Pippin Street (Brindle), vi, 75 

Pirleston (Norf.), vi, 227 . 

Place, Isaac, vi, 432; Thos., vii, 
218; Will., vi, 191 

Plague, vi, 236 ; vii, 73, 75, 285, 292 

Plantagenet, Arth., vi, 163 ”, 164”; 
Eliz., vi, 163 ” 

Platfordale (Platford Dales) (Pres- 
ton), vii, 79 2, 97 #, 99 » 

Platt, Rev. —, vil, 220 » 

Playters, Eliz., vi, 227 

@Pleasington, vi, 235, 266-9, 408 ; 
alum mine, vi, 235; char., vi, 
244; man., vi, 266; mill, vi, 
269; Rom. Cath., vi, 269 

Pleasington (Plesington), Ad. de, vi, 
266, 409”; Agnes de, vi, 162”; 
Alice (de), vi, 266, 267 1”, 410 » ; 
vii, 28m”, 179”, 180%, 3232”; 
Amabel de, vi, 266, 266, 282; 
Beatrice de, vi, 266 ” ; Diana de, 
vi, 266, 266”, 267”; Diota de, 
vi, 170; Ellen (de), vi, 290”; 
vii, 154”, 306"; Ellis (Elias) 
de, vi, 266, 267, 269, 281, 
282, 326, 409 n, 410; Geoff. de, 
vii, 179m”, 180; Hen. (de), 
vi, 61”, 266, 267”, 269, 282; 
vii, 247, 306”; Isabel (de), vii, 
306 n, 324; Joan de, vi, 2677; 
John (de), vi, 61”, 267, 281, 
282 ; vii, 28 m, 297 n, 306 2, 308, 
319 M, 320, 324 2, 3262, 328; 
Mabel de, vi, 267 ”, 281; Nich., 
vii, 323”; Rich. (de), vi, 266; 
vil, 28”, 212”, 319”, 3257; 
Sir Rob. de, vi, 61, 266; vii, 
152”; Rob. (de), vi, 61 », 162 n, 
266, 267 n, 281, 282, 327”; vii, 
27 n, 28”, 279N, 297 %, 306, 308, 
309, 316”, 319”, 320, 3267; 
Rog. de, vi, 266, 267, 282; 
Sibyl de, vii, 212”; Will., vii, 
200n, 212”, 278 Nn, 279, 319%, 
323 2; fam., vii, 227 

een Hall (Pleasington), vi, 
26 

Pleasington Moor, vi, 266 

Plesington, Plesinton, Plessington, 
Plesyngton, see Pleasington 

Pleyndamours, Alice, vii, 16”; 
Rich., vii, 16 7 

Plowden, Chas., vii, 13 

Pluket (Floket), Ad., vi, 57”, 71”, 
q7zn; Alice, vi, 73”; Hen., vi, 
7in, 72; Hugh, vi, 60, 71 n, 
72n; Will., vi, 60”, 71”, 72” 

Plumb, Cecily, vii, 52 » ; Maud, vii, 
52; Rob., vii, 52” 

Plumpton, Gt. and Little (Westby 
with Plumptons), vii, 118”, 1617, 
162 n, 163 , 174, 175, 177, 282 n; 
man., vii, 175, 286” 

Plumpton, Alice de, vii, 4; Emma 
de, vii, 4; Joan de, vii, 175”; 
John, vii, 170, 175”; Thos. 
de, vii, 170”; Walt. de, vii, 
175”; Sir Will. de, vii, 4; Will. 
de, vii, 175 ” 

Plumton, Plunton, see Plumpton 

io Brethren, vii, 171, 237, 

Pocklington, Hugh de, vi, 299; 
Rob. de, vii, 41, 52” 

Poitou, Rich., ct. of, vii, 146”; 
Rog., ct. of, vi, 65, 86, 162, 232; 
vu, 2, 27, 45, 72, 82, 83, 92, 145, 
157, 184, 222, 226, 256, 285 


INDEX 


Pole, Chas., vi, 317; John, vii, 
113”; Margery (del), vii, 111 7, 
113”; Will. (del), vii, x11», 
113” 

Polie, see Pelle 

Pollard, Anne, vi, 456; Edm., vi, 
142; Geo., vi, 456, 512 n; Hen., 
vi, 547; Jas., vi, 489; John, 
Vl, 512 n, 545”; Ralph, vi, 342; 
Rich., vi, 434”, 447, 468n, 
557; Thos., vi, 546”; Tim., vii, 
218; Will, vi, 142, 468 », 471, 
512”; —, vi, 9on 

Pollington, Sir Thos. de, vi, 305 1; 
Will. de, vi, 305 

Polton, see Poulton 

Ponings, Mich., vi, ror n 

Pontchardon, Beatrice de, vi, 326, 
388, 396; John de, vi, 326, 388, 
396; Loretta de, vii, 321; Rich. 
de, vi, 326, 327, 388, 396, 3977; 
vii, 321 

Pontefract Priory (Yorks), vi, 355 7, 
356, 417, 534, 538, 546, 547; 
Geoff., prior of, vi, 355  ; Steph., 
prior of, vi, 546”; Will. prior 
of, vi, 546”, 547” 

Ponthalgh (Church), vi, 345, 346, 
347”, 399; man., vi, 400, 401, 
401 n; mill., vi, 4o1n 

Pool, the (Layton), vii, 242, 248 

Poole (Pool), Ad. de, vii, 1701; 
Alan de, vii, 170”; Geoff. de, 
vi, 170%”; Hen. de, vi, 1127; 
Jas., vii, 275; Maud (de, del), 
vi, 103 ”; vii, 170 ”; Sim. de, vi, 
103 ; Will. de, vii, 168, 256 

Pool field (Freckleton), vii, 170 7 

Pool Foot (Singleton), vii, 183, 232 

Poolhouse (Marton), vii, 242 ” 

Poolhouses (Warton), vii, 163 ” 

Poope oxgang (Padiham), vi, 494” 

Poor Fields (Gt. Marsden), vi, 536 

Pope, Janet, vii, 213 2; Rich., vii, 
2137” 

Popeley, Eliz., vi, 555”; Isabel, 
vi, 528”, 543; John, vi, 528%, 
543; Marg., vi, 553; Will., vi, 
553” 

Porritt, W. J., vii, 218” 

Porta, fam., see Yates 

Porte, John, vii, 317” 

Porter, Hen., vi, 107; Jas., vii, 
150”; John, vii, 158”; Jos., vi, 
442; Marg., vii, 136%; Martha, 
vi, 153”; Rich., vi, 153 ”, 177; 
Rob., vii, 158”; Will. B., vii, 
2677 

Porter’s Harlow (Little Eccleston), 
vii, I50” 

Portfield (Whalley), vi, 381, 382 7, 
383 

Portsmouth (Cliviger), 


see Corn- 

holme 

Portsmouth, John Vertue, bp. of, 
vii, I2 

Postlethwaite, John, vii, 175”; 
—, vi, 416 

Poterton, Ad. de, vi, 546” 

Pothou (Potthow), John de, vi, 


481 ”, 545, 546”; Rosamund de, 
vi, 545, 546; Will. de, vi, 545 
Potter, Jas., vii, 335; John, vi, 242 
Potterford (Potterforth) (Whalley), 
vi, 382 ”, 412” 

Potter Ridding (Billington), vi, 
326 2 

Pottery, Rom., vi, 289, 442 ” 

Potthow, see Pothou 

Pouel, Paulinus de, vi, 345 ” 

Poulet, see Paulet 

Poulton, Little, 
2277” 

Poulton, Ad. de, vii, 223 ”, 226”; 
Agnes (de), vii, 226, 227”; 


403 


vii, 225, 226”, 


Poulton (covt.) 
Alice de, vii, 226 n, 227; Avice 
de, vii, 226; Beatrice de, vii, 
226; Chris., vii, 331”; Hen. 
(de), vii, 226, 331%; Jas. de, 
vii, 226, 227”; John de, vii, 
226, 227 2, 228 n, 2607; Nich. 
de, vii, 227”; Rich. de, vii, 
226 n, 2277; Rob. (de), vii, 223 7, 
226 n, 227”; Rog. de, vii, 226 n, 
227; Thos. de, vii, 2267; 
Waldeve (Waltheof) de, vi, 154; 
vil, 227”, 228; Walt. de, vii, 
227n; Will. de, vi, 154; vii, 


2330 

Poulton-le-Fylde (Poulton), vii, 68, 
69, 71, 137%, 156”, 219-28; 
adv., vii, 222, 248; char., vii, 
225; ch., vii, 83, 220; cross, 
vil, 225; mkts. and fairs, vii, 
225, 238%; Nonconf., vii, 228 ; 
Rom. Cath., vii, 228; Rom. 
rem., vii, 219”; sch., vii, 225; 
taxes, vii, 219 

Powell, Hen., vii, 245; Thos., vi, 7 

Powys, Hen. L., vi, 106” 

Praers, Ad. de, vi, 295; Margery 
de, vi, 345; Maud de, vi, 347; 
Rob. de, vi, 345 ; Will. de, vi, 295 

Pratesclogh (Studlehurst), vi, 324 ” 

Prees, man., see Preese 

Prees, Alice de, vii, 1777; Amery 
de, vii, 177”; Austin de, vii, 


177”; Edm. de, vii, 177”; 
John de, vii, 177”; Margery de, 
vii, 166m, 173”, 177, 177”; 


Nich. de, vii, 177”; Rob. (de), 
vii, 166 n, 177”, 178; Will. de, 
vi, 72”; vii, 166, 167”, 177% 

Preesall (Preesall-with-Hackinsall) , 
vii, 68, 173 ”, 252, 256-60, 332; 
Nonconf., vii, 260 

Preesall (Preseeve), Aline de, vii, 
256”; Anabil de, vii, 157%, 
256; John, vii, 265; Maud de, 
vii, 257, 260”; Sabina de, vii, 
256 n, 260; Will. de, vii, 157”, 
256n 

Preesall Park (Preesall), vii, 260 

Preese (Preez, Pres) (Weeton-with- 
Preese), vi, 58  ; vii, 166, 176-8 

Prehistoric remains, vi, 349, 442 ; 
vii, 2 

Presbyterians, vi, 148, 178, 248, 
251, 275, 280, 283, 298, 299, 387 ; 
vii, 43, 67, 104, 115, 179, 201, 213 

Prescott (Prescot), Alex., vi, 186-7 ; 
Edm. de, vi, 228%; Edw., 
vi, 202; Geoff., vi, 132; Isabel 
de, vi, 224, 228; Jas. de, vi, 
228n; Joan, vi, 180%; John, vi, 
199”; Marg., vi, 228”; Rich., 
vi, 180, 200 n, 228; Rob. (de), 
vi, 199%”, 211, 224”, 228n; 
Thos., vi, 167; Will., vi, 187 ; 
fam., vi, 182 

Prese, see Preese 

Preseeve, Presehou, Presho, Pres- 
hou, Presoude, Presoure, Pres- 
sore, Pressouede, Presthowe, see 
Preesall 

Prestoft (Westby-with-Plumptons), 
vii, 175 ” 

Preston, vi, 52, 56, 393%, 418, 
492 ; vii, 36, 45, 61, 68, 68”, 69, 
71, 72-105, 106, 113 ”, 114”, 115, 
116”, 118”, 121”, 205, 211 n, 
309 7, 321 2; adv., vi, 41; Vil, 
82; banks, vii, 91 » ; bridges, vii, 
75 2, 78, 91, 99”; chants., vii, 87, 
88, 89; chap., vii, 81; char., 
vii, 77”, 89, 300; charters, vii, 
93”; ch. vii, 81, 85, 103, 
111 2; civil war, vii, 75-6 ; court, 
vii, 74; cross, vii, 78”, 917”; 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Preston (cont. ) 

custumal, vii, 93; dock, vi, 557; 

vii, 129; friars, Vii, 73. 1637; 

guilds, vii, 73, 74, 95; ind., 
vii, 73, 78, 91, 92 ; Imms, vii, 89 ”, 
1022; James I at, vii, 75; leper 
hosp., ‘ii, 73,97; libraries, vii, 80, 
96”; man., vil, 92; mkts. and fairs, 
vu, 72, 7 91, 92 7, 93, 95, 9%, 
967, 97%; mills, vil, 79", 927, 
94", 100”, IOI RN, 1027; moot 
hall, vii, 94, 94; Nonconf., vi 
417; vil, 103; pks., vii, 91, 96, 
97 #, 1153 pari. rep:, vu, 72, 
78 7 ; place-names, vil, 79 ", 97 7, 
99 7; pretors, vil, 94; races, vii, 
g7”; Ribble fishery, vii, 93; Rom. 
Cath., vii, 104; schs., vi, 487; 


vii, £8, &9, 89%, 91, 96; seal, 
vii, 94”; stallingirs, vu, 73; 
voluntcers, vii, 78; wards, vil, 
95-6; weils, vil, 917, 06 a 
workhcuse, vii, 97 

Preston, fre (Idship.), vu, 27, 127, 


167, 171, 175, 179, 191, 276, 320, 


325 

Preston, Ad. de (of), vi, 293, 302 7, 
471; vu, 50, 79, 98n, 997, 
100 n, 134”, 212 n, 283 n; Agnes 
de, vil, 99 » ; Albred de, vii, 99 ”, 


100 »; Albric de, vii, 99 x; Alex. 
de, vii, 92”, ggn; ‘Alice de, vi, 
1I7Z HN, 293; vn, ban, 98n, 99%, 
283%; Amery de, wil, 997 : 
Amota de, vil, gon; Anne, vi, 
378, 412"; Anot de, vii, 98 nN; 
Avice de, vil, 98”, 99n, 134%, 
160n; Award de, vii, 99”; 
Bald. de, vii, 94”, 98, 116%, 


1347; Beatrice, Vii, 154; Cecily 
de, vii, 997”; Christiana de, vii, 

997; Sir Chris., vii, 79”; Chris. 
(de), vi, 9”; sai: 99n; Eleanor 
de, vi, 197; Eliz., vii, 211”; 
Ellen de, vii, 98”, 99n, 160”; 
Eva de, vil, 98”; Fulk de, vii, 
99n; Geoff. (de, of), vi, 302 7 ; 
vii, 98, 992; Geo., vil, 99 7, 
126", 213M, 309, 323, 3237; 
Hen. (de), vi, 14%; vii, 507, 
98, 99n, 100n, 116%, 133%, 
200 n, 213»; Hugh de, vii, 79", 
98n, 997, 100n, 283; Isalel, 
vil, 99”, IoI n; Joan, vii, 259"; 
John (de), vii, 48, 50, 9g #, 
100 M, LOI M, ILI #, 212 N, 320Nn; 
Jordan de, vii, 62”; Ketel de, 
vii, 99 n; Lawr., vi, 74; Vii, 154; 
Mabel, vii, 258, 259»; Malbe de, 
vii,9ggn; Marg. de, vii, 99%, 309”, 
3102; Margery de, vii, 50%, 
99%, 1007; Maud de, vii, 79 2, 
982, 99, IOOM, 1332; Nich. 
of, vi, 302”; vil, 927, 94%, 
98x, 99%, IoOn, IOI; Pain 
de, vil, 99 x; Paul (Paulin) (de), 
vii, 98 1, 99 n, 100M, I01 7, 
133 7, 283; Phil. de, vii, 79 #, 
987, 99"; Ralph de, vii, 99”, 
100 2, 1162; Reg., vii, 258; 

Rich. (de), vii, 98», 99, 101 n, 
105%, 211", 297, 321%”; Sir 
Rob., vii, 99; Rob. (de), vi, 14”; 
vii, 507, 79, 84, 98", O97”, 


100, 105, 116”, 212; Rog. 
d@,. 94, 203, 495 nj Vil, -7o-n; 
98 nN, 99N, 134”, I160n; Sim. 
de, vi, 214”; Vil, 53%, I0oon; 
Steph. de, vii, 98”; Suard de, 
vu, 98; Thos., vi, 378»; vii, 
120m, 133m”, 211, 259; Uctred 


de, vii, 99 n ; Walt. (de), vii, 79 , 
309 n, 310”; Wilfrid, vii, 2597; 
Will. (de), vi, 60 2, 197 2, 378 2, 
450) 4752s Val, 19) 62-0, 54, F941, 


Preston (cont.) 
98 n, 99", I100N, IOI N, 107%, 
134”, 223, 283”; Wimark de, 
vii, 99"; —, vii, 98”; fam., vii, 
3n 
Prestone, see Preston 
Preston-Holt, Thos., vi, 378 
Preston Marsh, vu, 77 », 90”, 97 ”, 
131 
Preston Moor, vii, 92", 93" 
Prestune, see Preston 


Pretors, vi, 367; vu, 94 
Price, Fran., vi, 242; John, vi, 
181 


Prichard, Chas. C., vi, 359 
Priding (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 290 
Priest Chamber (Padiham), vi, 
4940 
Priestfield (Colne), vi, 524, 527 ” 
Priestfield (Euxton), vi, 20” 
Priestfield (Wrightington), vi, 174 4 
Priestlache, Ad. de, vi, 347 
Priestland (Wiswell), vi, 397” 
Priestley, Rob., vi, 436” 
Priestmeadow (Ribchester), vii, 43 
Priestpot (Tarnacre), vii, 271” 
Priestridding (Claughton), vu, 325”, 
32607 
Priest’s House, see Merrick’s Hall 
Prilleston (Norf.), vi, 227" 
Primet Bridge (Colne), vi, 523, 539, 
530 
Primett, Thos., vii, 149, 218 72 
Primitive Ep‘scopalians, vii, 104 
Primitive Methodists, see Methodists 
Primote Bridge, see Primet Bridge 
Primrose (Livesey), vi, 284 7 


Primrose, Cecily, vi, 952; Will., 
vi, 957 

Primrose Syke (Higher Booths), 
Vi, 434% 

Prior, Alice, vi, 154.1; Rich., vi, 
1542 


Prior Park College (Bath), vi, 290 

Prior’s Wood (Parbold), vi, 180 2 

Priory, the (Pleasington), vi, 269 1 

Proctor (Procter), Ad. (the), vi, 
547, 548; Eliz., vi, 170”; vii, 
193”, 194, 194, 322, Grace, 
vi, 504, 547; Joan, vi, 547; 
Josiah, vi, 5047; Percival, vi, 
547; Rich., vi, 547; Rob., vi, 
23; Thos., vi, 1707, 504; vii, 
194, 1947, 198”, 322”; Will, 
vi, 77 2; Will. G., vi, 128 

Proden (Pruden), Edm., vii, 212 7 ; 
Hen., vii, 212 ” ; John, vii, 212 7 ; 
Rob., vii, 212 

Prospect Hill (Higher Walton), vi, 
289 

Proud Bridge 
144”, 166% 

Pruden, see Proden 

Puddington Hall (Chesh.), vii, 320 

Pudscy (Pudsay), Isabel, vii, 270 ; 
John (de), vi, 265; vii, 270; 
Sir Ralph, vi, 394”; Rowland, 
v1, 394; —, V1, 374 ”, 394 

Pughull, le (Sunderland), vi, 318 

Pukenhale (Yorks), vi, 304” 

Pulford, Will., vi, 290 

Pulforth (Colne), vi, 525” 

Pulpits, vi, 152, 184, 296, 29%, 
448, 449, 533, 557; vii, 61, 81, 
I7I, 216, 295 

Pulton, Pultune, see Poulton 

Purbrick, Edw., vii, 13 

ee Geo., vi, 77”; Knightley, 
vi, 59 

Purmanhill (Marsden), vi, 538” 


(Freckleton), vii, 


Pye, Christiana, vii, 4”; John, 
vii, 2997; Will, vii, 4n; fam., 
vil, yon 


Pylin, Pylling, see Pilling 
Pylkinton, see Pilkington 


404 


Pym, Rev. Walt. R., bp., vii, 217, 
217” 

Pyncombe, Mrs., 

Pynde, Rich., 


» V1, 343 
vi, 59” 


Quaker Fold (Yate and Pickup 
Bank), vi, 280 

Quakers, see Friends, Soc. of 

Quakers’ bridge (Reedley), vi, 490, 


537 

Quarlous, see Wharles 

Quarries, vi, 345, 361, 372, 427, 441, 

487, 492, 537, 544, 548; Vu, 51 

Quartley, Harrictt J., vii, 44", 219 ; 
Jas., vii, 43 

Quatholme, see \Wheatholme 

Quelton, see Wheelton 

Quenilda (Gunilda), vi, 499”; 
vil, 159”, I160n, 166n, 180n, 
249”; d. of Rich., vii, 285” 

Querderay (Querderey), Ad., vi, 
365 1, 393; Hugh, vi, 393"; 
Isold, vi, 393%; John, vi, 365, 
393; Rob., vi, 308n, 3937; 
Will, vi, 393 ” 

Quernmore, vii, 120 ”, 139 m, 317 

Queteley, see Wheatley 

Quilton, see Wheclton 

Quinacre (Preston), vii, 99 ” 

Quinschalcishurede (Wecton-with- 
Preese), vii, 176” 

Quipp, John, vi, 431 

Quitacres (Clayton-le-Moors), vi, 


417 
Quithalc, Quithalwe, see Whithalgh 
Quittar fall, see Whitecarr fall 
Quytyngham, see Whittingham 
Qwalley, see Whalley 


Raa ditch (Ribby-with-Wrea), vii, 
157” 

Rabis (Longton), vi, 72” 

Raby, Avice de, vi, 295; Jas., vil, 
272; Rich., vii, 265 

Racarr (Ribby-with-Wrea), vu, 
158%” 

Radburn (Brindle), vi, 75 

Radchapman, Anota de, vi, 393"; 
Avice, vi, 393 ”; Rog., vi, 393 

Radcliffe (Radeclive), Ad. de, vi, 
264, 205, 400 N, 401 M, 405 N, 400, 
408; Agnes (de), vi, 376, 400 n, 
401 2, 402”, 4oOn, 559”; Sir 
Alex., vi, 252, 282m, 285n; 
Alex., vi, 281, 282, 447, 447%, 
51on; Alice (de), vi, 1217, 
364 N, 367, 400 ; Vil, 274 7, 307 2; 
Lady Anne, vi, 281”, 4721; 
Anne, vi, 63, 154, 215, 316, 
459 2; vii, 275, 307; Cecily (de), 
Vi, 63, 245, 265”, 281, 307, 
401”, 4o2n; Chas., vi, 367%, 
379, 379, 407, 409, 5557; 
Christiana de, vi, 401”, 402; 
Chris. de, vi, 514; Edm., vi, 
163”; Edm. S., vi, 452; Edw., 
vi, 409; Vii, 537, 63 2, 307"; 
Eliz., vi, 369 n, 370, 394"; Vu, 
210n; Ellen, vi, 195 ”, 315, 314, 


4062; vii, 307”; Frances, v3, 
510n; Geo., vi, 160, 304"; 
Hen., vi, 376 N, 379, 405, 407: 


vil, 537; Hugh, vi, 60n; vi, 
25 n, 30607; Isabel (de), vi,105 7, 


154, 405”; vii, 275, "306 1 ; 
Rev. Jas., vii, 195”; Jas., vi, 
273, 538; vii, 205; Joan (de), 


Vi, 254, 292, 305", 327M, 337, 
3453 Vil, 306, 307; Sir John, 
vi, 215, 229, 281; vii, 113”, 
200 n; John (de), vi, 58 2, 182 n, 
254, 204, 281, 282 n, 327 #, 345, 


Radcliffe (cont.) 
347, 376", 405, 405”, 406n, 
407, 412", 416, 420, 488, 516; 
vii, 307 %; Joshua, vi, 375, 376; 
Kath. (de), vi, 163 ”, 246, 321; 
vii, 201 », 274 ”, 309; Marg. (de), 
vi, 319, 347, 406%, 420, 553”; 
vil, 307; Margery (de), vi, 194, 
194”, 264; Mary, vi, 285, 286, 
370"; Maud, vi, 163”, 528-9; 
Sir Nich., vi, 538; Orme de, vi, 
253; Pet. (de), vi, oo ”, 4o1 n, 
; vii, 210”; Sir Ralph 
(de), vi, 150m”, 163m”, 245; 
Ralph, vi, 10g”, 150”, 163 n; 
vii, 51, 53”, 306”; Sir Rich. 
(de), vi, 364”, 511”, 515, 538, 
549; vii, 306", 307%; Rich. 
(de), vi, 102 m, 104 ”, 109 N, 121 n, 
158, 194, 254, 259, 204, 281, 316, 
328, 345, 364%, 369, 376, 
394%, 402 2, 405, 406, 407, 408, 
512u, 514, 539, 553%, 555%, 
559%; Vii, 139 2, 306, 307, 309 ; 
. Rob. (de), vi, 153 ”, 154 , 163 ”, 
245, 265, 281, 321, 379 2, 405%, 
406 n, 408; vii, 306; Rog. (de), 
vi, 265, 281, goon, 4oI n, 406 ; 
vii, 307”; Savill, vi, 376 , 394 ; 
Sibyl de, vi, 254; Sir Thos. (de), 
vi, 259, 364”, 376”, 5143 Vil, 
274, 303, 306”, 307; Thos. 
(de), vi, 104 7, 188, 194 7, 305 2, 
315, 316n, 376", 394”, 4067, 
438m, 490, 514, 529, 538, 5557; 
vil, 70, 107m, I18H, 125”, 
169 n, 185, 199”, 233%, 275, 
281 n, 287, 306, 307; Sir 
Will., vi, 195 ”, 472 »; Will. (de), 
vi, 105”, 154”, I60n, 163”, 
237, 245, 259, 264, 285, 286, 
292, 316, 321, 376, 402 m, 405 x, 
408, 409 2, 459 2, 514, 539, 553 75 
559”; Vil, 120”, 207%, 306, 
307; Winhaue de, vi, 2537; 
Capt., vii, 75; —, vi, 3965 vii, 
281 n, 283 n, 287 n, 514, 5247; 
fam., vi, 95, 219, 370, 373, 425, 
470; vii, 52, 114, 189 7, 193 2, 
254 2, 325 N, 331 n 
Radfield Fold (Over Darwen), vi, 
270 
Radholme Laund (Yorks), vii, 156 ” 
Radley, Will., vi, 213, 215 
Radwell ford (Billington), vi, 330 7 ; 
vii, 13 2 
Ragh, Rob., vii, 47 7 
Raghanald, vii, 285 
Raholme (Clifton-with-Salwick), vii, 
163 7” 
Raikes Hall (Blackpool), vii, 243 
Rainford, Agnes de, vii, 2887; 
John de, vi, 7%; vii, 288”; 
Rob. de, vii, 288 
Rainshalgh (Newsham), vii, 288 1 
Rakedanclough (Rakedenescliff), 
(Dutton), vii, 56 
Ralee, see Rolegh 
Ralph, vi, 1, 65, 374”, 509; vii, 
198”, 199”; the pretor, vi, 
367 ; rector of Mitton, vii, 13”; 
the reeve, vi, 365”; vii, 947; 
the smith, vi, 11; the tailor, 
vil, 133” 
- Rama, Chas. Walmesley, bp. of, vi, 
192 
Rammes-holm (Sunderland), vi, 318 
Ramsbottom, Ad., vi, 436 m ; Chris., 
vl, 436”; Edm., vi, 436, 4387; 
Hen., vi, 432 n, 440”; John, vi, 
436”; Nich., vi, 438”; Oliver, 
vi, 436; Otwell, vi, 438 2; Thur- 
stan, vi, 436”, 438”; Will. H., 
Vii, 291 
Ramsclough (Chipping), vii, 34 2 


INDEX 


Ramsden, Will., vi, 472 

Ramsgreave, vi, 235, 251, 360; 
Nonconf., vi, 252 

Ramsgreave, forest, vi, 232 

Ramsgreave Heights, vi, 260 

Ramsgreen (Ramsgreave), vi, 252 1 

Ranchil, vii, 285 » 

Randle (Ranullf), vi, 332; vii, 264 

Randolph, Rob., vii, 114 ” 

Ranfurthe, Nich., vi, 361 

Rankin, Rob., vi, 125 

Rann (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 405 

Ranulf, see Randle 

Rappock Lane (Habergham Eaves), 
vi, 468 1 

Rasaker, see Roseacre 

Ratcliffe Hall (Upper Rawcliffe- 
with-Tarnacre), vil, 271 ” 

Ratonraw (Goosnargh-with-News- 
ham), vii, 193” 

Ratonraw Green 
194” 

Ratten (Ratton) Clough (Trawden), 
vi, 548, 551 

Raun (Greenhalgh-with-Thistleton), 
vii, 179 2 

Rauthmell, Rich., vii, 190; fam 
vi, 380 » 

Raven, John S., vii, 81; 
Thos., vii, 81 

Ravenhacclough (Alston-with- 
Hothersall), vii, 66 

Raven House (Read), vi, 506 7 

Ravenkel (Fulwood), vii, 137 ” 

Ravenmeols, see Ravensmeols 

Ravenridding (Winkley), vii, 13 7 

Ravensacre (Eccleston), vi, 165 7 

Raven’s Clough (Old Laund Booth), 
vi, 522 

Ravensden (Simonstone), vi, 498 

Ravensden, John de, vi, 4997; 
Rich. de, vi, 499 7; Rob. de, vi, 


(Standish), vi, 


” 


Rev. 


499 n 

Ravensdenfield (Read), vi, 497”, 
503 2 

Ravenshaw, Agnes de, vii, 53%; 
Alice de, vii, 30  ; Christiana de, 
vil, 53”; Ellen de, vii, 537; 
Isabel de, vii, 53 2; John de, vii, 
53”; Marg. de, vii, 53”; 
Steph. de, vii, 30”; Will. de, 
vii, 30 n, 209” 

Ravenshawhalgh, see Rainshalgh 

Ravensholme (Downham), vi, 555, 
556” 

Ravensholme, Margery de, vi, 559”; 
Rich. de, vi, 559”; Thos. de, 
vi, 555 = 

Ravensmeols (Ravenmeols), vii, 
130 1, 133 %, 229%, 3137 

Raw, see Rawe and Raws 

Rawcliffe, Middle, man. (Out Raw- 
cliffe), vii, 273 

Rawcliffe, Old Upper (Upper Raw- 
cliffe), vii, 272 ” 

Rawcliffe (Out), vii, 176 ”, 177, 260, 
261n, 264", 273-6, 331%; 
chant., vii, 275”; ch., vii, 276; 
man., vii, 183”, 273, 274”; 
mill, vii, 273; Nonconf., vii, 
276; Rom. Cath., vii, 276 

Rawcliffe, Upper (Upper Rawcliffe- 
with-Tarnacre), vil, 155%, 260, 
261 n, 264, 267-73, 2747, 278, 
279, 288n, 302 ”, 332; ch., vii, 
273; mans., vii, 267; mill, vii, 
268; sch., vii, 273 

Rawcliffe (Romeclive, Roueclive), 
Alan de, vii, 271”; Augustus 
W., vi, 134; Hen., vi, 133, 144, 
167; John de, vii, 268; Rich. 
de, vii, 268”, 271”; Samson, 
vii, 18”; Sim. de, vii, 2717”; 
Thos. de, vii, 204; Will. de, vii, 
268 n, 271 Nn; —, Vi, 512” 


405 


Rawcliffe Hall (Out Rawcliffe), vii, 
270 

Rawcliffe Hospital (Chorley), vi, 
144 

Rawcliffe Moss, vii, 267, 322 ” 

Rawecliff field (Hutton), vi, 69 7 

Rawdon, Jas. H., vii, 87 

Rawe (Raw), Edm., vii, 181 7; 
Hen., vi, 155, 166; Nich., vi, 
205”; fam., vi, 164; see also 
Raws 

Rawflatting (Clitheroe), vi, 393 

Rawlinson, John, vi, 17”; Sir 
Rob., vi, 130; Thos., vi, 177; 
see also Rowlinson 

Rawmoors (Preston), 
102” 

Raws, Rev. John, vi, 452; see also 
Rawe 

Rawstorne (Rostornc), Agnes, vii, 
1z0n; Alice, vi, 68”; Rev. 
Atherton G., vi, 89, 360; Edm., 
vi, 438; Edw., vi, 68, 69 2, 371, 
428n, 436n, 438; vii, 2557; 
Isabella, vi, 68 x; Jane, vii, 120; 
Lawr., vi, 55, 59%”, 62, 68, 69, 
74,174 2, 202 N, 436”; Vii, 120; 
Margery, vii, 82; Rev. Rob. A., 


vii, 79%, 


vi, 54, 55, 74, 319; Will. vi, 
68x”; vii, 25, 135”; Will. E., 
vi, 55; —, archdeacon, vii, 105 ”; 
Capt., vii, 75; —, vi, 430; fam., 


vi, 432; vii, 133” 

Rawtenstall, vi, 233”, 350, 434, 
435, 436, 479; ch., vi, 436; fair, 
vi, 436; Nonconf., vi, 436; 
Rom. Cath., vi, 436 : 

Raysakur, see Roseacre 

Read (Reade), vi, 349, 356”, 357, 
381, 420", 493, 497%, 503-7, 
513; ch., vi, 507; cotton manuf., 
vi, 503; man., vi, 232, 233%, 
376, 498 n, 503”; Rom. Cath., 
vi, 507; Rom. rd., vi, 503 

Read (Reade), Ad. de, vi, 5042, 
506 n; Alan de, vi, 497 ”, 506 1 ; 
Alex. de, vi, 505 ”, 506”; Alice 
de, vi, 503 7, 505 ”, 506 ”, 507 7 ; 
Ellis de, vi, 503 ”, 506 2, 5071: ; 
Gamel de, vi, 503; Hen. de, vi, 
503, 506”; Hugh de, vi, 5057; 
John de (of), vi, 503, 503 ”, 506 n, 
507”; vii, 15 2; Jordan de, vi, 
503”; Matth. de, vi, 5067; 
Rich. (de), vi, 497%; vii, 15 2, 
18; Rob. (de), vi, 506”; vii, 
15 2, 18, 58 2; Rog. de, vi, 504 , 
506”; Siegrith de, vi, 5057; 
Sim. de, vi, 503”, 506%”, 507; 
Thos. de (of), vi, 374”, 503%, 
506 ”; Will. de, vi, 506 2, 507 

Read Hall (Read), vi, 505 

Read Moor, vi, 505, 514 

Rebanks, Thos., vi, 52 

Red Bank (Chorley), vi, 129 

Redbrok, see Dean, brook 

Redcarr (Marton), vii, 240 ” 

Redcarrfurlong (Warton), vii, 171 

Redde-lumme (Eccleshill), vi, 279 7 

Redding, see Riding 

Red Earth (Yate Bank), vi, 280 

Redeford, see Rediford 

Rede Hallows, see Reedley Hallows 

Redelache (Claughton), vii, 330” 

Redelegh-hallows, see Reedley Hal- 
lows 

Redeley, see’ Ridley 

Redeshaw (Colne), vi, 524 ” 

Redevalys (Redyvals), Rich. de, 
vi, 266 

Redferne, Anne, vi, 515; Thos., 
vi, 515 

Redhalowes, see Reedley Hallows 

Rediate, Will., vii, 210 » 

Redicarr (Cliviger), vi, 482" 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Rediford (Redeford), Ad. de, vii, 
200 n; Joan de, vii, 288"; John 
de, vii, 288”; Rich. de, vii, 
283 n; Rob. de, vii, 288 » ; Will. 
de, vii, 200 n, 288 n 

Redihalgh, see Ridihalgh 

Redish (Redissh), Joan, vi, 267%, 
268; John, vi, 268; Will. de, 
vi, 267 n, 268 

Redisnape (Dutton), vii, 54, 587 

Redlaihalghes, see Reedley Hallows 

Redlam (Witton), vi, 265 

Red Lee (Tockholes), vi, 283 » 

Redleghs (Hoghton), vi, 37 » 

Redlinch (Warton), vii, 172 # 

Redman, Rich., vi, 298, 299 

Redmayne, Matth. de, vi, 1547; 
vii, 63 »; Norman de, vii, 71 7 

Redmeris (Over Darwen), vi, 272 3 

Red Moss (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Red Scar (Grimsargh), vii, 108, 109 

Redyvals, see Redevalys 

Reedheadfurlong (Longton), vi, 71 7 

Reedley, vi, 430, 511 

Reedley Hallows (Reedley Hallows, 
Filly Close, and New Laund 
Booth), vi, 230”, 233%, 349, 
441, 448, 482, 489-92, 514, 
517, 536; mill, vi, 490 

Reedybutt Dyke (Wymondhouses), 
Vi, 394 22 

Reedyford (Marsden), vi, 536, 540 

Reedyford House (Marsden), vi, 


540 

Reedyfurlong (Habergham Eaves), 
vi, 455 % 

Reedysnape, see Redisnape 

Reeve, Thos., vii, 44, 59%; —, Vi, 
438 n 

Reformed Episcopal Church, vi, 
220 

Reines, Dorothy, vii, 327 »; Capt. 
John, vii, 327 » 

Reinfred, vii, 173 7, 296 n, 300 

Relph, Isaac, vii, 43 

Remingdon, brook, vi, 375 

Remington, Jas., vii, 26 7 

Remisgrene (Lea), vii, 131 7 

Reseditch (Hothersall), vii, 63 1 

Restinglaw (Carleton), vii, 228 

Reued, Reuet, Reuid, see Read 

Revidge Moor (Blackburn), vi, 
238 n, 244, 246, 266 

Revoe (Marton), vii, 239 

Reyner, vi, 456 7 

Reynolds, John, hie 201 

Rhodes (Ikoades) , Jos., Vil, 205; 
Rob., vii, 36; see also Rodes 

Ribbecestre, Ribbelcestre, see Rib- 
chester 

Ribbelton, see Ribbleton 

Ribble, riv., vi, 39 2, 56”, 111, 231, 
259, 289; vil, 36, 45, 54,57", 58n, 
61, 62, 64", 65, 65", 68, 70, 
129, 132”, 133, 134”, 161, 
In2 nm, 163”, 165, 166, 167, 171, 
173%; bridges, vi, 58%, 289, 
290, 299 ; Vil, 72, 75 71, 115; ferry, 
vi, 61 n 

Ribblehill (Clitheroe), vi, 368 

Ribble Navigation Co., vi, 111 

Ribblescales, fam., see Ribbleton 
and Scales 

Ribblesdale, Thos., Ld., vi, 356” 

Ribbleton, vii, 72, 73”, 76, 79, 
80, 83 2, QI 2, 105-8, II5, 117”, 
133”, 137, 308, 309; chap., vii, 
877; ‘char., vii, 90; cbh., vil, 108: 
crosses, vii, I05; Man., vii, 105; 
mill., vii, 106, 107; Rom. Cath., 
Vil, 75,77 %, 108 


Ribbleton, Ad. de, vii, 1077; 
Agnes de, vii, 107”; Alice de, 
vil, g9 2; Amabil de, vii, 997; 
Cecily de, vii, 98”; Helen de, 


Ribbleton (cont.) 
vii, 79 n ; Hen. de, vii, 105, 107 ”, 


t1om; Isolda de, vil, 111%; 
Lawr., vi, 39”; Maud de, vu, 
107”, 109”; Ralph de, vu, 


107 ”; Rich. de, vii, 79 ™, 100 n, 
111 x; Rob. de, vii, 98”, 107 7, 
1097, I10m, 1602; Rog. de, 
vii, Io7m, I11m; Sim. de, vu, 
997”, 107”; Tunnock de, vu, 
1o7”; Vivian de, vii, 1077; 
Will. de, vii, 100 , 107 ”, 109 », 
1112; see also Scales 

Ribbleton Hall (Ribbleton), vii, 
105, 106, 107 

cr mee (Ribbleton), vil, 


Ribbleton Moor, vii, 76, 90, 
108 
Ribbleton Scales, see Scales (Rib- 


105, 


bleton) 
Ribby (Ribby-with-Wrea), vii, 143, 
143%, 144, I44m, 146m, 150, 


157-8, 171m, 184, 197; ch., vii, 
158; mans., vii, 157; sch., vil, 158 

Ribby Moor, vii, 157 ” 

Ribchester, vi, 230, 
393", 481 2; vii, 19, 36-51, 68, 
69n, 71, I12n, Il4gn, 1207; 
adv., vii, 40; bridge, vii, 37, 543 
chant., Vil, 27, 397; char., vil, 
20%, 445 ch., vii, 37; cross, vii, 
(oan ‘fairs, ir 45; man,, vi, 232, 
233”; vii, 45, 50; Nonconf., 
vii, 51; Rom. Cath., vil, 51; 
Rom. rem., vii, 36, 45; sch., vii, 
44; sundial, vii, 40 

Ribchester, Ad. de, vii, 48, 50”, 
53; Agnes de, vii, 64; Alice 
de, vii, 48 2; Avice de, vii, 46”, 
54; Bern. de, vii, 50»; Cecily 
de, vii, 482; Diana, vil, 487; 
Ellis (de, of), vii, gon, 46n, 
48 n, os n, 52m, 54”; Geoff, 
vil, 630; Hawise de, vii, O4n; 
Hen. de, vii, 48.2, 64.7; Hugh de, 
vii, 46n; Isabel, vii, 48 n; John 
(de), vii, 482; Kath., vii, 481; 
Margery de, vii, 48”, 507; 
Maud de, vii, 48; Orm de, vii, 
462; Percival, vii, 482; Ralph 
de, vil, 49 2; Rich. de, vii, 46 7, 
48 n, 53; Rob. de, vii, 45, 47 2, 
48n, 50”, 52”, 54”, 572; 
Rog. de, vil, 46”, 48n, 547; 
Sim. de, vii, 46”, 48”, 64n; 
Thos. de, vii, 46, 49”; Uctred 
de, vii, 48; Warine, vii, 48”; 
Will. de, vii, 46”, 48, 57” 

Ribchester Eyes (Ribchester), vii, 
44% 

Ribelcastre, see Ribchester 

Ribilton, Ribleton, see Ribbleton 

Ribston preceptory (Yorks.), vii, 
59 2 

Rice, Rob. de, vii, 271 ”; Thos. de, 
vii, 271 ” 

Richard I, king of England, vii, 
3337 

Richard, king of the Romans, vii, 
146n 

Richard, vi, 
5052; vii, 


234, 380 ny, 


424", 475%, 503, 
572, 63”, II6n, 
160, 172”, 209”; the alum- 
nus, vi, 400”, 403”; the car- 
penter, vi, 66%, 176”: the 
chaplain, vi, 400”; the clerk, 
Vi, 552 ”, 553 ”; Vii, 132 n, 1807; 
the demand, vi, 117, 205”; 
vii, 180”, 226; the dispenser, 
vii, 284 2; the fuller, vi, 485 7; 
the greve, vi, 21”; the harper, 
vii, 167 2; the miller, vi, 957; 
vu, 130; the parker, vi, 457, 
469 7; vil, 193”; the physician, 


406 


Richard {cont.) 
vii, 92; (Little Richard), the 
priest, vil, 317"; the receiver, 
Vi, 305", 306, 371; rector 
of Eccleston, vi, 159; rector of 
Kirkham, vii, 145 7, 146, 179"; 
rector of Poulton, vii, 223; 
rector of Ribchester, Vil, 40; 
rector of Standish, vi, 188 : Prector 
of Tatham, vii, 330”; the reeve, 
vi, 444 "3 the serjvant, vi, 229"; 
the smith, vi, 15”, 92”; vii, 
35”; the tailor, vi, 504 

Richardson, Anne, vii, 288 » ; 
vil, 141"; Eliz., vii, 139; Sir 
Hen., vi, 35; Hen., vi, 35”; 
Isabel, vii, 288”; Janet, vii, 
139; John, vii, 156”, 2881; 
Kath., vi, 35»; Lawr., vii, 537; 


Ant., 


Nich., vi, 174"; Rich, vii, 312; 
Rob., vii, 205% R., Vii, 220 5 
Thos., vii, 75, 139 ”, 288 n, 
315, 323, 329; Walmesley, 
vi, 283; Will, vi, 35”, 371; 
vii, 139M, 224, 206m, 255 7, 
329%; —, V1, 547 

Richlie (Briercliffe), vi, 469 

Richmond, archds. of, vi, 76”; 
vil, 41”, 217", 292%”, 296n, 
309”; Hen. Walton, vi, 294; 
Honorius, vii, 222”; Rog., vii, 


217; Will. de Chimelli, vii, 263 
Richmond, Marg., ctss. of, vii, 230, 
303, 314; Hen., dk. of, vii, 301  ; 
earls of, vii, 306; Edm., vil, 303 
Richmond, Hen., vii, 298; Jas., 
vii, 32”; John, vii, 20; Rev. 
Legh, vii, 298; Rev. Rich., vii, 
298; Sarah, vii, 298; Silvester, 
vii, 296, 298 
Richmond’s Farm (Chipping), vii, 
262 
Rickards, Philip, vi, 307 ” 
Rickman, —, vi, 370” 
Riddell (Ridell), Steph., vii, 69 7 ; 
fam., vi, 176; vil, 62 ” 
Ridding (Bailey), vii, 18 
Ridding (Dinckley), vi, 337 
Ridding (Fishwick), vii, 116 7 
Ridding, Little (Read), vi, 503 » 
Ridding, fam., see Riding 
Riddings (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 407 7 
Riddings (Ribbleton), vii, 106 » 
Riddings, fam., see Riding 
Ridehalgh, see Ridihalgh 
Rideleys, see Ridley 
Ridell, see Riddell 
Ridgaling (Roughlee Booth), vi, 
519 
Ridge 
408 2 
Ridge End (Burnley), vi, 446 ”, 470 
Ridges (Shevington), vi, 201 
Ridihalgh, High (Briercliffe), vi, 


(Habergham Eaves), vi, 


470 

Ridihalgh (Redihalgh, Ridehalgh), 
Agnes de, vi, 470"; Chris., vi, 
470 Nn; Eliz., vi, 470; John, vi, 
447, 470, 470 n ; Lawr., vi, 470; 
Marg., vi, 470 » ; Nich., vi, 470 ; 
Rich., vi, 470 2, 471 2; Rob., vi, 
479; Steph. de, vi, 538 n; Will, 
de, vi, 470”; vi, 524” 

Ridihalgh Bouck. ’(Briercliffe), vi, 


47° 

idae. (Redding, Ridding, Rid- 
dings, Ridings, Ryding), Ad. del, 
vii, 116; Agnes, vi, 402 7; Bea- 
trice del, vii, 1167; Christiana 
del, vii, 116"; Eliz., vi, 407"; 
Ellen, vi, 407; Godith de, vii, 
14”; John (del), vi, 291, 296, 
407 n, 408; vii, 42; Margery 
del, vii, 17”; Ralph de, vi, 
387 n; Rich. (de, del, of), vi, 


Riding (cont.) 7 
296, 337, 393% 402%; VIL, 4n; 
Rob., vi, 407, 408 ; Rog. de (del), 
vi, 208 2; vii, 116 m ; Thos. (del), 
vi, 205”; Vi, 17”, I16n; 
Will. (del, of), vi, 296, 3375 vii, 
4n;—, VI, 407 7 

Riding House (Walton), vi, 296 

Ridlegh (Heath Charnock), vi, 216 » 

Ridley (Redeley, Rideleys, Ridleys), 
Ad, de, vi, 95”, 206”; vil, 
1977; Alice del (de), vi, 11, 
206 n; Cecily de, vi,95 #2; Hugh 
del, vi, 11”; John, vii, 107%, 
ro8”; Rich, vi, 81%”; vii, 
108 2; Will., vii, 75 

Ridscha-evese (Studlehurst), vi, 


3242 

» Rifford, Geoff. de, vii, 257; see 
also Rufford 

Rigbi, tnship., see Ribby 

Rigby (Shevington), vi, 202 n 

Rigbye (Rigby), Ad., vi, 160, 161, 
163; vii, 197”, 213”; Agnes, 
vi, 174; Alan de, vi, 174”; 
Sir Alex., vi, 212; Lt.-col. 
Alex., vii, 158m”, 197; Alex., 
vi, 2 2, 60, 99 , 132, 163 n, 170 n, 
174 2, 183, 200, 212, 219 n, 226 7, 
228 1, 229”; Vii, 75, 76, I4On, 
158, I9I, 197, 201, 203, 203 2, 
2042, 213, 222N, 224 MN, 226, 
226”, 227, 230, 249", 250n, 
2877, 324”; Alice, vii, 197”; 
Anne, vi, 158, 174; Baron, vii, 
2227: Chris., vi, 212”; 
Dorothy, vi, 200n; Edm. de, 
vi, 171m, 174m, 178"; Vu, 
168; Edw., vi, 2%, 80, 132, 
142, 143, 174 , 195, 200 7, 202 n, 
°205, 212, 224, 225, 228 n, 229 0, 
261”; vii, 83”, 159”, 1967, 
197, 249; Eleanor, vi, 158, 
180 n; Ellen, vi, 200 n; Geo., vi, 
65”; vii, 197”, 226”; Gilb., 
vi, 177; Grace, vii, 158 ”, 197 ”; 
Henrietta, vii, 89; Hen. de, 
vi, 174”; Hugh, vi, 181%, 
212"; vii, 133; Ibota de, vi, 
174”; Jas. vi, 199”, 4047; 
Jane, vi, 212”; vii, 249”; Joan 
(de), vi, 171 n, 212”; vii, 1687; 
Rev. John, vi, 174, 174”, 199 7, 
2007, 220”; vii, 197”; Maj. 
Jos., vii, 292; Jos., vii, 197”, 
226"; Kath. (de), vi, 99%, 
174”; Lucy, vi, 163%”; vii, 
226; Marg., vii, 158”; Mary, 
vi, 174”, 377"; Maud de, vi, 
174%; Nich. (de), vi, 19 2, 106, 
155, 158, 166”, 169, 170”, 174, 
174 2,°I175”, 177, 180”, 219”; 
Pet., vi,174.n; Ralph, vi, 1747; 
Rich. (de), vi, 174", 1927; 
Capt. Rigbye B., vi, 174; Rev. 
Rigbye B., vi, 158, 174; Rob. 
(de), vi, 174”, 200”; vii, 1577; 

og., vi, 2, 132; Sarah, vii, 

197”; Thos. (de), vi, 212%, 
377"; vii, 157%”, 197”, 203, 
224; Townley, vii, 156, 158”, 
197%; Will. (de), vi, 99 2, 160 », 
174”; vii, 65”; —, vii, 99”; 
fam., vi, 22, 98 

Rigby land (Wheelton), vi, 50 ” 

Rigby’s, tenement (Chorley), vi, 135 

Rigby’s Orchard (Mawdesley), vi, 
99” 

Riggebi, see Ribby 

Rigmaiden, Agnes de, vii, 316; 
Alice (de), vi, 469”; vii, 314 7, 
317”; Anilla de, vii, 3162; 
Anne (de), vii, 304”, 317”; 
Dorothy, vii, 327  ; Eleanor (de) 
vu, 317”; Eliz. de, vii, 316; 


INDEX 


Rigmaiden (cont.) 

Gilb. (de), vii, 317 R, 3257; 
Isabel, vii, 317 7; Isolda de, vii, 
TIO, 301, 309 n, 315, 325; Jas., 
vu, 317%; Joan de, vii, 303 x, 
316, 317 2; John (de), vii, r10 x», 
230, 270, 272m, 274%, 297%, 
299, 301, 302, 303, 303 2, 3047, 
306 n, 307 n, 308 n, 309 2, 311 11, 
314, 315, 316, 317, 319%, 321, 
325, 327m; Kath. de, vii, 317 7 ; 
Lettice de, vii, 316; Mabel, vii, 
3272; Marg. (de), vii, 299, 316, 
317, 327%; Margery, vii, 177"; 
Marmaduke de, vii, 305 7, 306, 
316; Mich., vii, 245 ; Nichola de, 
vii, I10, 325; Nich. de, vii, 217, 
319"; Pet. de, vii, 316; Rich. 
(de), vii, 299”, 316, 317%; 
Rog. de, vii, 316; Thos. (de), 
vi, 469 2; vii, 177 ", 229 2, 230, 
235%, 271, 272 2, 282, 302 n, 
303, 395, 306, 313”, 316, 317, 
319 ”, 321, 327 n; Walt. (de), vii, 
395 7, 307 , 315, 317; Will. de, 
vi, 458"; vil, 177 ”, 313 n, 316, 
317 %, 325 

Rigmaiden House (Claughton), vii, 
330" 

Rigodunum, vi, 289 

Rigshaw (Adlington), vi, 219” 

Rigson, Laur., vii, 238" 

Riley, Isabella, vi, 388; Pet., vi, 
336; Thos., vil, 245; see also 
Ryley 

Riley, see Ryley (Accrington) 

Riley Green (Hoghton), vi, 36 

Rilston, Sibyl de, vii, 57”; Will. 
de, vii, 57” 

Rimington (Downham), vi, 555” 

Rimington (Yorks.), vi, 258 

Rimington, Amery de, vii, 63”; 
Ellen de, vii, 156”; Hen. de, 
vii, 63 2; Margery de, vi, 388; 
Rich. (de), vi, 388; vii, 156” 

Ringing Hill cross (Barnacrc), vi, 
3157” 

Ringstones Camp (Worsthorne), vi, 

2 it 

Ringstonhalgh (Clayton-le-Moors), 
vi, 418 

Ringyard (Padiham), vi, 493 

Ringyard (Pendleton), vi, 393 2 

Ripon (Yorks.), vii, 72; Jas. 
Webber, dean of, vii, 148 7 

Ripon, Nich. de, vi, 180 # 

Rippon Park (Myerscough), vii, 
139” 

Rip Row (Brindle), vi, 32, 75 

Rise, Margery del, vii, 168 7; Rich. 
de, vii, 268 2; Rog. del, vii, 168 7, 
170”; Will. del, vii, 170” 

Risegreve (Staynall), vii, 252” 

Riseholme (Lincs.), vi, 304 ” 

Risen bridge (Risenebridge) (Par- 
bold), vi, 178 », 180 

Rishmelfield (Brockholes), vii, 112 7 

Rishton, vi, 235, 344-8, 376”, 421, 
426, 542; char., vi, 344; ch., vi, 
347; ind., vi, 345; man., vi, 345, 
400, 420, 422; mill, vi, 345”; 
Nonconf., vi, 348; Rom. Cath., 
vi, 348 

Rishton (Rixton, Ruxton, Ruys- 
ton), Ad. de, vi, 49 ”, 345, 347”, 
400”, 401”; Agnes, vi, 227 2, 
4022, 420; vii, 3237; Alice, 
vi, 401, 402%, 407%, 4207, 
470; Anne, vi, 346, 401, 407 1, 
420; Aymer, vi, 425”; Cecily 
de, vi, 400”; Christabel, vi, 
402 1; Degre, vi, 420; Dorothy, 
vi, 401”, 403; Edith de, vi, 
345 2; Edm., vi, 407 ”, 425, 489; 
Edw., vi, 22 ”, 346, 404%, 417, 


407 


Rishton (cont,) 
420; vii, 283; Eleanor, vi, 
3402; vil, 89 n, 275; Eliz., vi, 
218”, 346, 401 n, 402”, 4077, 
4087, 458; Ellen, vi, 401 2, 407 n, 
420, 513 n; Frances, vi, 346; Rev. 
Geoff., vi, 318; Geoff., vi, 407 », 
425”; Geo., vi, 426; Gilb. (de), 
V1, 345, 347 2%, 397 %, 400, 402 n, 
403, 407, 425”, 437, 506%, 
507; Grace, vi, 4252; Hen. 
(de), vi, 49 n, 218 N, 227 N, 243, 
339, 345, 347, 347%, 400, 401, 
402, 407, 410, 4I4n, 418, 
420, 470; vii, 79, 89%, 275, 
323”; H., vi, 426; Isabel, vi, 
407 1, 418, 425, 458; Jas., vi, 
340; Jane, vi, 4o7n, 425n; 
Joan de, vi, 420; John, vi, 8, 346, 
401 2, 408 n, 420, 425”; Kath., 
vi, 236%, 346; Mabel de, vi, 
345, goon, gorm; Marg. (de), 
V1, 22 N, 335%, 347, 402 N, 407 N, 
410 n, 418, 420; vii, 79, 323; 
Mary, vi, 407 2; Nich. (de), vi, 
8, 340, 345, 347, 401 2, 407, 
408 2, 420, 425, 425”, 5077, 
518; vii, 323%”; Ralph (de), 
vi, 346, 346%, 347, 400, 4oI, 
402 H, 403, 403 ”, 407, 408, 420, 
422, 425%, 494", 507; vii, 
323”; Reg., vi, 420”; Rich. 
347, 364, 400, 401, 402", 407, 
410, 414 7, 418, 419, 420, 507 x ; 
vii, 275 2, 323; Rob. (de), vi, 
218 n, 345, 346 ”, 347, 362, 306 n, 
400, 4027, 40371, 407”, 408n, 
4257, 447%”, 488, 488; Rog. 
(de), vi, 346, 346, 347, 3647, 
400, 401, 402 2, 405 n, 420, 424n ; 
Susan, vi, 407; Thos., vi, 3357, 
401”; Thurstan, vi, 400; Uc- 
tred de, vi, 347; Will. (de), vi, 
62, 79, 243 7, 346, 346 %, 401, 407, 
408, 420, 425, 458; vii, 89»; see 
also Rushton. 

Rishton Hall (Rishton), vi, 346 

Rishton Height, vi, 344 

Rishton Moor, vi, 345 

Rishton’s Place (Haslingden), vi, 
430 2 

Rishton Thorns (Barrowford), vi, 
542, 543, 547 2; Man., vi, 233 2 

Rishworth, Ellen, vi, 547”; John, 
vi, 530; Thos., vi, 530, 547 ” 

Risley, Ad. de, vi, 24 ”, 71 »; Alice 
de, vi, 71”; Ellen de, vi, 71 7 ; 
Geoff. de, vi, 70”, 71 2; Gilb. 
de, vi, 70, 71”; John, vi, 71 7 ; 
Margery de, vi, 71 7; Maud de, 
vi, 71”; vii, 116”; Nich., vi, 
qin; Pet. de, vi, 24, 70, 71 7, 
73”; Vil, 116”; Ralph de, vi, 
71 2; Rob. de, vi, 71 »; Thos. de, 
vi, 71m; Will. de, vi, 71 7 

Risserasse, Emma, vi, 225 2; Rob., 
vi, 225 7” 

Risshequam (Gt. Harwood), vi, 
338 2 

Rissheton, see Rishton 

Ritherham, Ritherholme, see Cleve- 
leys 

Rivington, vi, 474 2 ; sch., vi, 191” 

Rivington, Ad. de, vi, 49”; 
Clemence, vi, 222”; Jas., vi, 
22; John, vi, 22”, 222n; 
Rob. de, vi, 49”; Thos. (de), vi, 
222”, 4741 

Rixton, see Rishton 

Ro, the (Penwortham), vi, 58 7 

Roacher Bridge (Samlesbury), vi, 
303, 310 : 

Roacher Hall (Samlesbury), vi, 
310 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Roades, see Rhodes and Rodes 

Robard, Robart, fam., see Roberts 

Roberd ruding (Pleasington), vi. 
2671 

Roberhagh (Ribch<ster), vii, 62 


Robert, vi, 1, 4007, 457, 480, 
497; VU, 32, 457, 63, 65, 
74, 54, 92m, 132, 134, 1697, 


173 2, 1807, 181 n, 199 n, 2300, 
2557, 2802; abbot of Cocker- 
sand, vii, 97; the chaplain, vu, 
231”; chaplain of Eccleston, 
vi, 176m”; the chapman, Vi, 
474”; the clerk, vii, 297 »; the 
clerk of Kirkham, vii, 1802; 
the clerk of Ulverston, vii, 180 n; 
the cook, vii, 189”; the cook- 
son, vi, 66”; the corviser, vil, 
134”; dean of Whalley, vi, 457; 
the dispenser, vi, 25  ; the ferry- 
man, vi, 61%; the forester, vi, 
162”; vil, 169”; the graveson, 
Vii, 13323 the greve, vi, 217; 
the harper, vii, 107m”; the 
hunter, vi, 479; the mercer, vii, 
134”; the miller, vii, 268; the 
physician, vi, 77; the porter, 
vi, 362”; the potter, vi, 967; 
rector of Chipping, vii, 24; 
rector of Garstang, vii, 182%, 
192, 297; rector of Rochdale, 
vi, 79”; rector of Standish, vi, 
357”; the savage, vi, 2074; 
the serjeant, vi, 24”, 1367, 
193 ”; the smith, vi, 15 ”, 304", 
443; son of the chaplain, vw, 
96 1; son of the priest, vi, 92”; 
the spicer, vi, 15; the tailor, 
vi, 227; vil, 99”, 134” 
Robert, fam., see Roberts 
Robert Lathe (Trawden), vi, 551 
Robert Lye (Twiston), vi, 559” 
Roberts (Robard, Robart, Robert), 


Agnes, vi, 476; Jas., vi, 440; 
John, vi, 269m, 477%, 4947, 
499, 499”; Lawr., vi, 536%, 
545, 5472; Marg., vi, 547.75 
Nich., vi, 499 ”% ; Rog., vi, 546%, 
549; Will, vi, 476 2, 499; —, 
vi, 499 


Robert’s-croft (Chipping), vii, 29 7; 

Robertshaw, Alice, vi, 438 #2; Thos., 
vi, 435”; Will. E., vi, 470; —, 
vi, 471” 

Robertshurst (Goosnargh), vii, 192 ” 

Robfield (Wrightington), vi, 175 7 

Robin Cross (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Robin Hood (Wrightington), vi, 
169 

Robin Hood’s cross 
vi, 95 

Robinson, Agnes, vi, 521; Alice, 
VI, 217, 365m, 521; Anne, vi, 
545; Bertram, vi, 520; Chris., 
vi, 4687, 519, 527”, 5427; 
Edm., vi, Moe ie 447 2, 468 7, 
4ytn, 473, 492, 515, 516, 517, 
S2t3 "Mai. Edw. Wy 2d; 14;. 2120) 5 
vli, I44"; Edw. ¢ Ml, 28, 21 2, 
I40 72, 167%, 470 ie Ny. L265 
149 2, 213m; Eleanor, vi, 218; 
Eliz., vi, 366 1, 468 ; vii, 1527; 
Ellis, vi, 515; Fran., vi, 539; 
Ey .D,,.-vi,, 3624. Geo., “Vy. 1073 
Rev. Gilmour, vi, 283, 284; 
Hen., vi, 251, 494; Isabel, vi, 
467%, 471 25 Jas., vi, 416, 515 4, 
520%, 535.2, 542M, 543, 5457; 
Vil; 2423 Jane, v1, 212; Joan, 
vi, 412”; John, vi, 18, 217 
28n, 118, 408 n, 4122, 4677, 
403 2, 473-2, 492", 493, 494%, 


(Mawilesley), 


5U5. 517, 519, 520, 521, 522, 
533", 544, 5467; vii, I21 7, 
126”, 213”; Lawr., vi, 539, 


Robinson (cont.) 


542", 543, 551; Lucy, ve, 2In; 
Miles, vi, 520 2; Nich., vi, 520, 
5247; Pete Vi 5207; eee . WA, 
520; Rainbrown, vii, 1520: 
Rich., vi, 21”, 515, 521, 527; 
vu, 23; Rich. B., vii, 218; Sam., 
Vi 2185 Sarah, vi, 5592; 
Susanna C., vi, 372; Thos., vi, 
21 it, 55, 269, 366, 468 i, 
493, 494 2, 515, 519, 520, 521 2; 
vii, 188, 265; Will, vi, 519; 
Mrs., vi, 519; —, vi, 250 n 


Rocarr (Hutton), vi, 68 7 

Rochdale, man., vi, 57 2 

Roche (Roches), Adomar de la, vil, 
84; Amery des, vii, 23 ”, 84 

Rochester, Walker King, bp. of, vi, 
361; Walter de Merton, bp. of, 
vii, 84 7 

Rockcliffe (Bacup), vi, 437, 439 

Rockcliffe Wood, vi, 438 

Rockley, Ellen de, vi , 228"; Hen, 
de, vi, 228 x ; Joan de, vi, 228 n 


Roddlesden (Hoghton), ML, 37h 
38 32 

Roddlesworth (Withnell), vi, 3, 37, 
39,47. 58m ; 

Roddlesworth, riv., vi, 269, 280, 
284 


Roddlesworth, fam., vi, 47 

Rodeclif, see Rawcliffe 

Rodes (Chatburn), vi, 372 7 

Rodes (Church), vi, 400 7, 402 ” 

Rodes, the (Simonstone), vi, 497 * 

Rodes, Ad. del (de), vi, 376 ”, 400 7, 
402”; Alan de, vi, 400 », 402 77 ; 
Alex. de, vi, 402”; Alice, vu, 


49n; Edw., vii, 34 2; Eliz., vii, 
357, 288; Fran. vii, 442: 
John, vi, 260; vil, 34%, 35, 
35 1 30. 50; 55 23 Marg. vii, 
502; Rich. de, vi, 402 7; Rog. 
o vi, 376 n, yo2 nN; Steph. del, 

, 376 2, 402 2; Thos. ., vii, 32, 


bee Wiul. de, vi, 492 7; vii, 36; 
see also Rhodes 

Rodes Mill (Ribchester), vii, 50 

Rodgett, Miles, vi, 300 

Roe, see Rowe 

Roecroft’s cross (Ulnes Walton), vi 
1oS 

Roger, vi, 1, 511; vii, 94”, 13072, 
132 7, 159, 173”, 180”, 2147, 
217, 273", 283”, 289, 3317; 
abbot of Cockersand, vii, 297 7”; 
archd. of Richmond, vii, 217”; 
chaplain of Lytham, vii, 171 7; 
the clerk, vii, 116”, 117; ct. of 
Poitou, vi, 86, 158; vii, 52; the 
pretor, vii, 94 7; the priest, vi, 
62; vil, 2162; the prior, vii, 
229”; rector of Blackburn, 
vi, 239, 240, 253m”, 266, 282, 
287, 405; rector of Chipping, 
vil, 24; rector of Poulton, vii, 
223 ; rector of Whalley, vi, 556”; 


the reeve, vii, 94 7 ; the tailor, vii, 


99”; the ward, vi, 15 7 

Rogers, John, vi, 426 

Rogerson, Geo., vii, 89”, 981, 
121 1; Jas., vii, 113 »; Thos., vii, 
127”; Will, vii, 66 

Rogerson Dyke (Worsthorne-with- 
Hurstwood), vi, 477 ” 

Rogerson House (Haighton), vi, 
48 1 ; vii, 126” 

Rogerthorpe, man. (Yorks), vi, 314 

Roghforth, see Rufford 

Rohall (Catterall), vii, 320 

Rokeby, Amabel de, vi, 258 

Rolegh (Penwortham), vi, 60 7 

Romaine, John, vii, 296 

Roman Catholics, vi, 17, 23, 32, 36, 
49, 81, 96, 74, 100, 178, 199, 222, 


408 


Roman Catholics (cont.) 
249, 269, 275, 278, 250, 298, 300, 
313, 319, 325, 334, 344, 348, 372, 
380, 399, 409, 423, 427, 436, 441, 
453, 468, 490, 507, 512, 513, $36, 
541, S445 V1, 19, 32, 30, 51, 54, 
67, 74, 77. 104, 105, 108, 115, 117, 
119, 120, 121M, 124, 137, 139n, 
153, 171, 175, 188, 205, 213, 219, 
237, 251, 276, 279, 282, 245, 291, 
299, 304, 305 , 310, 312, 320, 335 

Roman remains, vi, 25%, 260, 278, 
289, 336, 499, 474, 479, 523; vii, 
3%, 37. 45, 291 

Roman roads, vi, 10, 257, 269, 276, 
278, 319, 325, 339, 349, 442", 
vu, 108 

Romecliue, see Rawcliffe 

Romisike (Wilpshire), vi, 335 7 

Roo, Rich., see Rowall 

Roodhams, man., vi, 233 

Roos, Roesia de, vi, 315; Thos. 
de, vi, 315; see also Ros, Ross, 
Rous, Rus 

Ros, Ailsi de, vii, 179"; Marg. de, 
vii, 301; Rob. de, vii, 301; 
Walt. de, vii, 179m”; see also 
Ross, Roos, Rous, Rus 

Roscaldcarrfield (Gt. Eccleston), vii, 
277n 

Roscoe (Roscow), Baxter, vi, 216 7 ; 
Helena, vi, 2162; Will., vi, 37, 
22 

Roscoe Low (Anderton), vi, 220 

Roscow, see Roscoe 

Rose, Eliz., vi, 113”; Ralph, vi, 
113 2; Will, vii, loon 

Roseacre (Treales, Roseacre and 
Wharles), vii, 150, 154 2, 178-89 

Rose Grove (Burnley), vi, 447 

Roseriis (Roseys), Aubrey de, vii, 
8 


4 

Roside, brook, vi, 249 

Roshale, see Rossall 

Roskald (Longton), vi, 72 ” 

Rosnyt (Nateby), vii, 308 1 

Ross, Harriet S., vi, 529; see also 
Ros, Roos, Rous, Rus 

Rossall (Thornton), vii, 231, 235, 
246, 279; grange, vii, 2357, 
236; sch., vii, 219, 232; sub- 
merged forest, vii, 232 

Rossall, Ad. de, vi, 11 »; Alice de, 
vi, 11”; Rich., vii, 231” 

Rosselin, vii, 45 7 

Rossendale, forest, vi, 232, 233%, 
273, 280, 349, 355”, 361m, 428, 
479, 514; chap., vi, 517 

Rossendale, Alice de, vi, 538; Jas. 
de, vi, 538; Joan de, vi, 538; 
John de, vi, 538 

Rostorne, see Rawstorne 

Rosworm, —, vii, 75 

Rotheclif, see Rawcliffe 

Rothelan, Cecily, vi, 393 »; Hugh, 
vi, 393 ”; Isold, vi, 393 2 

Rothelesword, Rothelisworth, 
Rothesword, see Roddlesworth 

Rotherham Top, vi, 32 

Rothwell, masses. de, vii, 56; Rich. 
R., vi, 150” 

Rothwell, Ellis, vi, 438”; Hen., vi, 
147; Rev. Jas., vi, 150%”; Jas., 
vi, 152; vil, 56, 120; Mary, vi, 
1502; Rev. Nath., vi, 344: 
Nath., vi, 8n; Ralph, vi, 150”; 
Rev. Rich., vi, 150; Rich., vi, 
147; Rich. oR; vi, 150; vii, 107; ; 
Will, vi, 8, 274, 280 2, 431 n; 
—, vi, 67, 431 

Rottanstall, see Rawtenstall 

Rouecliue, see Rawcliffe 

Rough, Edm., vi, 516 

Roughfall, Rich., vii, 57 # 

Roughford, see Rufford 


Roughlee, Nether and Over (Rough- 
lee Booth), vi, 233 ”, 519, 520 
Roughlee Booth, vi, 349, 519-20; 
cotton manuf., vi, 519 ; Nonconf., 

vi, 520; witchcraft, vi, 520 

Roughlee Hall (Roughlee Booth), 
vi, 520 

Roughlee Water, see White Hough 
Water 

Roughley (Alston with Hothersall), 
vil, 63 7 

Roulegh Clough (Harwood), vi, 339 

Round Hill (Trawden), vi, 552 

Round Meadow (Forton), vu, 299 

Rouneson, Muriel, vi, 182; Will., 
vi, 18” . 

Rounstallhey, see Rawtenstall 

Rounthwaite, F., vi, 495 

Rous, Alice le, vi, 400” ; Hugh le, 
vii, 241; Jordan le, vi, 375, 
514”; Ralph (le, de), vi, 364, 
375) 377, 395, 514M, 555, 558; 
vii, 2; Rich. le, vi, 400; vii, 
241; see also Roos, Ros, Ross, 
Rus 

Rousillon (Russelon, 
Guy de, vii, 40, 84 ” 

Routecliue, Routheclif, see Raw- 


Russilun), 


cliffe 
Rowall (Catterall), vii, 2487, 
302 #, 321 2, 323 . 


Rowall, Ad. de, vii, 326”; Alan 
de, vii, 272m, 324; Alice, vii, 
306”; Anne, vii, 306”; Chris- 
tiana de, vii, 306; Chris., vii, 
306; Edw., vii, 306”; Ellen, 
vii, 306»; Hen. (de), vii, 306”, 
323, 324”, 326m; Janet, vii, 
306”; Joan, vii, 306”; John, 
vii, 305”; Maud de, vii, 3247; 
Sir Otto de, vii, 273”; Ralph 
de, vii, 324”; Rich. (de), vii, 
306 n, 323”; Rog. de, vu, 272, 
324%; Thos. de, vii, 3237; 
Thos. H. de, vii, 306 » ; Will. de, 
vii, 323” 

Rowbottom, John, vii, 78” 

Rowe (Roe), Alice del, vi, 110”; 
Hen., vi, 95 , 166”; Hugh, vi, 
493, 494%; John, vi, 1637, 1662, 
493, 494”; Rev. Rich., vi, 153; 
Thos., vii, 275, 276; Will. del, vi, 
lion; fam., vii, 263; see also 
Wroe 

Rowe Moor (Eccleston), vi, 165 ” 

Rowington, Matilda de, vi, 270”; 
Rog. de, vi, 270” 

Rowley, man. (Worsthorne), vi, 
475 ; coal mine, vi, 474 

Rowley (Ruelay), Ad. de, vi, 473 7, 
476; Gilb. de, vi, 473 2, 476"; 
Jos., vii, 255 

Rowley Fold (Samlesbury), vi, 303 

Rowley Hall (Worsthorne), vi, 476 

Rowlinson, Alice, vi, 9”; see also 
Rawlinson 

Rowtonstall, see Rawtenstall 

Royle (Burnley), vi, 445, 452, 491 

Royle Hall (Burnley), vi, 446 

Roys, Will. de C., vi, 7 

Royston, Anne, vi, 415; Thos., vi, 


415 

Rubie, Rev. Alf. E., vi, 435 

Rucditch (Warton), vii, 172 ” 

Ruchford, see Rufford 

Rudd, Ad., vi, 474”, 476; Alice, 
vi, 474 ”; John, vi, 474 ”; Rich., 
V1, 474” 

Ruddegate (Ribchester), vii, 46 

Ruddelache (Lower Darwen), vi,276 

Rudgelie, see Richlie 

Rudhall, Abel, vi, 239; vii, 221, 
263 ; Abra., vi, 54, 158 ; vii, 203 ; 
A., vi, 186; John, vi, 85; —, 
vii, 82 


7 


INDEX 


Ruelay, fam., see Rowley 

Ruelay Clough (Clayton-le-Dale), 
vi, 258 

Rufford, vi, 1, 81, 86, 119-28; 
adv., vi, 127; chant., vii, 2277; 
chap., vi, 89; vii, 183 2; char., 
vi, 90 ”, 128; ch., vi, 126; man., 
vi, 120; mkts. and fairs, vi, 120, 
121; Nonconf., vi, 128; sch., vi, 
127, 128, 128 

Rufford, Ad. de, vii, 97 2; Alice de, 
vii, 97”; John de, vi, 12117; 
Rob. de, vi, 121 ~; Will. de, vi, 
92 1; see also Rifford 

Rutford Hall (Rufford), vi, 126 

Rufford Old Hall (Rufford), vi, 123 

Rufus, Rich., vii, 97” 

Ruggeby, see Ribby 

Rughelegh, see Roughlee Booth 

Rughford, see Rufford 

Rughlegh, see Roughlee Booth 

Ruhlicruydic (Eccleshill), vi, 279 2 

Ruller, John, vi, 119” 

Runcorn Priory (Chesh.), vii, 238 

Runshaw (Euxton), vi, 18, 21 

Runshaw Hall (Euxton), vi, 21 

Rupert, prince, vi, 236, 361; vii, 
76, 152m, 211 n, 317 

Rus, Rich. le, vii, 264; see also 
Roos, Ros, Ross, Rous 

Rushall, see Rossall 

Rushingbrook Carr (Brockhall), vi, 
330” 

Rushton (Ruxton, Ruyston), Alice, 
vi, 285; Eliz., vu, 18; Ellen, 
vil, 17 ”; Geoff., vi, 447; Jas., 
vi, 285; Jas. L., vii, 318; Rev. 
John, vi, 242, 248, 334, 517, 518; 
Rev. John A., vi, 319; Nich., vi, 
250; Rob., vii, 17”; Susan, vi, 
250; Thos. H., vii, 318; —, vi, 
252"; vil, 319; see also Rishton 

Rushton Thornes, see Rishton 
Thorns 

Rushworth, Agnes, vi, 528 n, 546”; 
Alex., vi, 528”; Ellen, vi, 419; 
Joan, vi, 546; John, vi, 528”, 
529, 534 ”, 546; Rob., vi, 419 

Rushy heys (Preston), vii, 102 ” 

Ruskin, John, vi, 373”; Mary, vi, 


517 

Russell (Russel), Ad., vii, 99%, 
Io1n; Cecily, vii, 288”; Giles, 
vii, 307”; Hen., vi, 204; vii, 
288n; Marg., vi, 204”; Maud, 
vii, 99”; Milcham, vii, 3077”; 
Rich., vii, 101m, 175”, 198n, 
240”, 288”; Rog., vii, 997; 
Will, vi, 18”; vii, 198”, 242; 
fam., vii, 97 ” 

Russelon, Guy de, see Rousillon 

Russilache (Lea), vii, 131 ” 

Russilache on Kempcroft (Hogh- 
ton), vi, 37 ” 

Russilun, Guy de, see Rousillon 

Russinol, Pet., vii, 84 

Rustie Bank (New Laund), vi, 492 

Rutheditch (Freckleton), vii, 170 ” 

Ruthesyke (Greenhalgh), vii, 180 # 

Rutter, Alex., vi, 99”; Eliz., vi, 
100; Hen., vi, 114”; Jas., vi, 
111 ; Joan, vi, 99 ”, 167”; John, 
vi, 99”, 217”; Mich., vi, 967”; 
Nich., vi, 167”; Rich., vi, 99”, 
Ioon, 166%, 196”; Rob., vi, 
167”; Thos., vi, toon; Will, 
vi, 167 ” 

Ruxton, Ruyston, see Rishton and 
Rushton 

Ryall (Tockholes), vi, 283 ” 

Rybchestre, see Ribchester 

Rybelton, see Ribbleton 

Rycroft, Ellen, vi, 545”; Hen., 
vi, 55, 545”; Lydia, vi, 224; 
Rich., vi, 545 2; Will., vi, 536 


409 


Ryder, Ralph, vi, 369 ” 

Ryding, fam., see Riding 

Ryecroft (Bispham), vi, ror ” 

Rye Hill (Habergham Eaves), vi, 
450 

Rye Hill (Haslingden), vi, 427 

Rygeby, see Ribby 

Ryheads (Goosnargh), vii, 218 » 

Ryhil ditch (Tockholes), vi, 281 2 

Ryland (Rylands), Thos. de, vi, 
467 ; Will. de, vi, 443, 467, 469 ” 

Ryland Hall (Habergham Eaves), 
vi, 467 

Ryley, High (Accrington), vi, 423, 
425 

Ryley, Agnes, vi, 9”; Alex., vi, 
425"; Beatrice, vi, 408 ” ; Chas., 
vi, 447 ”, 408 n ; Chris., vi, 425 ” ; 
Denis, vi, 425; Edw., vi, 4257; 
Eliz., vi, 467”, 512”; Ellen, 
vi, 559”; Emota, vi, 512”; 
Geo., vi, 425 2; Hen., vi, 280n, 
494", 512”; Hugh, vi, 512”; 
Jas., vi, 147; John, vi, 88, 1477, 
377%, 425, 444”, 512"; Marg., 
vi, 377”; Mary, vi, 452; Piers, 
vi, 425”; Randle, vi, 467”; 
Rich., vi, 408”; Rob. (de), vi, 
424, 425; Thos., vi, 367, 408 n, 
425, 447, 452, 494%, 512”, 
513”, 554, 559”; Vii, 162 n, 
165; Vincent, vi, 512”; Will., 
Vi, 424, 425; fam., vi, 41I ”, 511; 
see also Riley 

Ryley Carr (Accrington), vi, 424 

Ryley Clough (Shevington), vi, 
200 ” 

Ryley Place (Accrington), vi, 425” 

Rymer, Thos., vii, 49; T. H., vii, 


49 
Rymor’s lees (Rymor’s 
(Wrightington), vi, 175 ” 
Ryngherd, le (Mellor), vi, 263 ” 
Rysshton, Ryston, see Rishton 


riding) 


Sabden, vi, 375 ”, 392, 492%, 493, 
503, 512, 513, 514; bridge, vi, 
513”; ch. vi, 514; cotton 
manuf., vi, 513 

Sabden, brook, vi, 375 ”, 392, 515 

Sabden Hall (Goldshaw Booth), vi, 
514” 

Sabden Hey (Sabden), vi, 233 ”, 514 

Sabsal (Huncoat), vi, 410” 

Saddle Fell (Chipping), vii, 26 

Sadler, Windham W., vi, 399 

Sagar (Sager, Sagers, Sagher), Alice, 
vi, 453”; Anne, vi, 539 ”; Chas., 
vi, 248, 275; Edw., vi, 498”; 
Ellen, vi, 457”; Jas., vi, 447”; 
John, vi, 457”, 468%, 539%; 
Rev. Oates, vi, 453; Rich., vi, 
494 7, 528, 539, 539 %; Rob. (le), 
vi, 453 2, 499; Vii, 107 2; Steph., 
vi, 539”; Thos., vi, 490; Will., 
vi, 471, 531 ”, 539 ; fam., vi, 456; 
see also Segar : 

Sagar Holme (Newchurch-in-Ros- 
sendale), vi, 437 

Sailebury, see Salesbury 

St. Anne’s-on-the-Sea, vii, 213, 214; 
ch., vii, 218; Rom. Cath., vii, 


21 

St. hee Well (Goosnargh), vii, 
191, 199 

St. Asaph, Hen. Standish, bp. of, 
vi, 188” = 

St. Cuthbert’s College (Ushaw), vii, 
207 n, 237 

St. Edmund’s College (Ware), vil, 


237 
St. John Baptist’s Hospital (Ches.) 
vii, 229; Rog., prior of, vii, 229” 


52 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


St. John of Jerusalem, order of, see 
Hospitallers 

St. John’s Weind (Preston), vii, 79 ” 

St. John’s Well (Dutton), vii, 54 

St. Joseph’s Orphanage (Preston), 
vil, 89 n, 105 

St. Leonard’s Hospital (York), vu, 


58 

St. Martin’s Abbey (Sées), vi, 86, 
158, 159”; vil, 52, 83, 84”, 145, 
184", 222, 226, 246, 256, 285 


St. Mary Magdalene’ s College 
(Shrewsbury), vii, 263 
St. Mary Magdalene’ s Hospital 


(Preston), vii, 134 

St. Mary’s Croft (Goosnargh), vii, 
201” 

St. Mary’s Priory (Lancaster), see 
Lancaster Priory 

St. Michael-on-Wyre, vii, 41 ”, 68, 


71, 138, 178, 184, 260-7, 270, 
300; adv., vii, 263; chant., vii, 
261, 262, 266; char., vii, 266 : 


Nonconf., vii, 266; Rom. Cath., 
vil, 266 ; sch., vii, 266 

St. Michael's Hall (Tarnacre), vii, 
267, 272 

St. Nicholas’ Hospital (Clitheroe), 

St. Oswald of Nostell, 
Nostell Priory 

St. Paul, fam., sec St. Pol 

St. Paulinus’ cross (Longridge Fell), 
vi,2n" 

St. Pol (St. Paul), Isabel de, vii, 
302 n; Mary de, vii,, 302", 303” 

St. Saviour’s Hospital (Dutton), vu, 
53, 59,6057 

St. Stephen's (Westminster), 
Slake, dean of, vi, 87 ” 

St. Stephen's Cross (Preston), vii, 
gin 

Saints’ Well (Colne), 
the 

St. Werburgh’s Abbey (Ches.), vi, 
120; Hugh, abbot of, vi, 1z0n 


priory, see 


Nich, 


see Hullown, 


Salcockson, John, vi, 11; Rob., 
vi, Ii” 

Sal (Sayle), Cecily de la, vii, 24", 
29m; Chris., vii, 308”; John, 


vii, 308 n ; Margery de, vii, 272; 
Rich. de, vii, 272”; Thos. R., 
vi, 242; Will. de la, vii, 242, 
29m; Mrs., vi, 180; vii, 149" 

Salesbury, vi, 235, 252-7, 393”; 
vil, 59”; char., vi, 244; ch., vi, 
257; man., vi, 232, 252; vii, 
326; Rom. rem., vi, 256; 
sch., vi, 257 

Salesbury, Ad. de, vi, 238m, 240, 
253", 330”; Agnes de, vi, 253, 
330"; Alice de, vi, 253, 330”; 
Avice de, vi, 253; Cecily de, vi, 


253; Dionisia (Diana), de, vi, 
253; Gilb. de, vi, 238%, ae 
330"; Hugh de, vi, 253; vii 


33; John de, vi, 253, 2540; ‘| 
Margery de, vi, 253; Matilda de, 
vi, 253; Ralph de, vi, 253; Ranulf 
de, vi. 253; Rich. de, vi, 253; 
Rob. de, vii, 32”; Rog., vii, 50n; 
Sibyl de, vi, 2547; Siward de, 
Vi, 25385 Thos. de, vii, 32”; 
Waldeve de, vi, 252, 253; Will. 
de, vi, 253”; Winhaue de, vi, 
253”; see also Salisbury 

Salesbury Hall (Salesbury), vi, 255 

Sale Wheel (Salesbury), vi, 255 

Salewic, see Salwick 

Salford, vi, 500” 

Salford, hund., bailiff of, vi, 276, 
279 

Salford, bps. of, vii, 
Bilsborrow, vii, 184; 
ner, vii, 44” 


51”; John 
Will. Tur- 


Salfordshire, Cecily de, vi, 224; 
Rich. de, vi, 224” 

Salghall, Rog. de, vi, 222"; Thos. 
de, v1, 222” 

Salisbury (Blackburn), see Salesbury 

Salisbury (Elston), vii, 115 

Salisbury, Rich., earl of, vii, 41”; 
Rob., earl of, vi1, 263 ” 

Salisbury, Anne, vii, 213 ”; Chris., 
vii, 213; Eliz., vii, 213; Jane, 
vii, 213”; Janet, vii, 213”; 
Rich., vii, 213 » ; Thos., vil, 213 ; 
see also Salesbury 

Salley, Hen., vi, 241 
Rog., vii, 94 ” 

Sallom, Anne, vi, 
260; John, vi, 
V1, 317 

Saltcotes (Lytham), vii, 214 

Saltemyre (Little Harwood), vi, 
2497 

Salterford (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Salterford, Rob. de, vi, 482 » 

Salter Syke (Colne), vi, 523 


; Rob., vi, 241; 


196”; Dav., vi, 
190”; Thos., 


Salthill, man. (Chtheroe), vi, 364, 
365 nm, 306 
Salthillhey Park (Clitheroe), vi, 


3057 
Salthill moor (Clitheroe), vi, 361 n, 
3647 
Salthill wood (Clitheroe), vi, 367 
Saltholmpool (Rossall), vu, 235 n 
Salthouse, John, vii, 247 n; Rich., 
vu, 216”; Will., vii, 2477” 
Saltisflat (Chatburn), vi, 373 ” 
Salt-making, vi, 113; vii, 214, 232 
Saltonstall, Will., vi, 408 2 
Salt pit (Mawdesley), vi, 97 
Saltweller, fam., vii, 174 ” 
Salvage, Rich., vi, 126 
Salvata, ct. of, see Savoy, Thos., 
ct. of 
Salvation Army, vi, 248, 275, 372, 
427) 447, 4535 Vil, 237, 251 ; 
Salvin, Ant., vi, 14; Dorothy, vi, 


223"; WilL, vi, 223” 

Salwick (Clifton-with-Salwick), vu, 
143, 146, 149m, 157”, IO1-5; 
man., vi, 161 


Salwick Waste 
wick), vil, 165 

Samaria, Jas. Sharples, bp. of, vi, 
24Q9n 

Samlesbury, vi, 235, 249 ”, 303-13, 
422; vil, 49m”, 62; adv., vi, 
312; char., vi, 313; ch., vi, 311; 
deer park, vi, 311; ind., Vi, 303; 
man., vi, 303, 421; Nonconf.,, vi, 
3134 "Rom. Cath., vi, 313 

Samiesbury, Ad. ‘de, vi, 3047; 
Avina de, vi, 304, 320; Bern. de, 
vi, 320 ; Cecily de, vi, 304, 312”; 
Eliz., vi, 304 ; Gilb. de, vi, 303 ”; 
Jas. de, vi, 304; John de, vi, 
279; Marg. de, vi, 303, 3047; 
Margery de, vi, 279, 304; vii, 
162"; Rob. de, vi, 304”; Rog. 
de, vi, 303; vii, 62 ; Sir Will. de, 
vi, 271; vii, 162”; Will. de, vi, 
270, 304, 312”, 320; vii, 62; 
fam., vi, 271 

Samlesbury Bottoms (Samlesbury), 
vi, 303 

Samlesbury Lower Hall (Samles- 
bury), vi, 310 

Samlesbury Old Hall (Samlesbury), 
Vi, 307 

Sampson, Will., vi, 280” 

Samson, vi, 397” 

Samsoncroft (Charnock Richard), 
vi, 207” 

Sancroft, Will., 
318; vii, 36 

Sancto Romano, Artaud de, vii, 146 

Sandeman, S., vii, 14 7 


410 


(Clifton-with-Sal- 


archbp., vi, 240, 


Sanderson, Jas., v1, 175; John, vii, 
242; Nich., vi, 242; Will, vii, 


63" 
Sandesforth (New Laund), vi, 492 
Sandford, Rev. —, vi, 343, 344 
Sandford’ Syke, vi, 524m, 525n, 


547 
Bane nolaas (Barnacre), vii, 
mill, vii, 392 , 303 
Sandibutts (Cottam), vil, 136 
Sandiford (Preesall), vii, 257 
Sandiford (Sunderland), vi, 317 
Sandirland field (Hambleton), vii, 
190 n 
Sands (Padiham), vi, 493 
Sandyclough (Goosnargh), vii, 198 » 
Sandyford Syke, Sandyforth Syke, 
see Sandford Syke 
Sandygate (Habergham Eaves), vi, 


318 ; 


454 

Sandy way (Dilworth), vii, 52 

Sankey, Clara, vi, 177; Ellen de, 
vi, 203 n; Hen., vi, 500 ” ; Jordan 
de, vi, 203”, 228”; Mary, vi, 
177”; Rich., vi, 167, 1777; 
Rob. de, vi, 203 »; Rog. (de), vi, 
167 n, 177 N, 203” 

Sansom, vi, 70” 

Sapcote, Isabel, vii, 324”; Rich., 
vil, 324 ” 

Sapedene, see Sabden 

Sapenden Haye, see Sabden Hey 

Sarscow (Eccleston), vi, 162, 164 

Satterill, see Souter Hill 

Sauener, John, vii, 160 , 216 

Saul (Saule), Chris., vii, 308”; 
John, vii, 308 » ; Rev. Thos., vii, 
205 

Saunders, Rev. Thos., vi, 440 

Saunder’s Bank (Burnley), vi, 447 

Savage, Anne, vi, 468”; Eliz., vi, 
292; Sir John, vi, 292; John, 
vi, 468 2; Rich., vii, 117 

Savick, brook, see Savock, brook 

Savigny Abbey (France), vii, 133 

Savile, Agnes Savile, Lady, vi, 315 

Savile (Savill, Saville), Anne, vi, 
545; Eliz., vi, 545, 546; Hen., vi, 
545; Vil, 311”; Joan, vi, 5467; 
Sir John, vi, 497 ”, 545; John, vi, 


315”, 546”; Rob., vi, 545, 
546 n; Sir Thos., vi, 545, 546”; 
Will., vi, 483 ” 

Savock, brook, vi, 229”; vii, 74, 
93”, 108, 124, 126 n, 129, 132 n, 
207 

Savock Hey (Comberhalgh), vii, 
2120” 


Savoy, Thos., ct. of, vii, 264” 

Savoy Hospital (London), vi, 161 n, 
19I n; vii, 89 n, 170 n, 227 n, 296, 
298, 310, 311 

Sawden, man., vi, 233” 

Sawley, John, vi, 358 

Sawley Abbey (Yorks.) ,vi, 252, 258, 
260, 314, 317, 320, 324”, 349, 
375, 378, 553”, 556; Vil, 20, 46, 
54 n, 58, 62 n, 97, 117; abbots of, 
vi, 358, 372 

Sawrey, Will., vii, 86 

Saxifield (Burnley), vi, 441, 443, 
447, 490 

Saxifield Dyke (Habergham Eaves), 
vi, 457” 

Saye, Ld., vi, 1619” 

Sayle, see Sale 

Sayselson, Agnes, vi, 200”; Rich., 
vi., 200 ”, 201 n 

Scabgill (Wyresdale), vii, 304 

Scaitcliffe (Accrington), vi, 423 

Scalebank (Lea), vii, 130” 

Scalecroft (Hothersall), vii, 63” 

Scales (Newton-with-Scales), vi. 
48 1; vii, 163 ”, 165-7 ; man., vil, 
166 


Scales (Ribbleton), vil, 93”, 105, 


107 7 

ah Ad. del, vii, 107 ” ; Gilb. de, 
vii, 130”; Rog. del, vii, 107 7; 
Will. del (de), vi, 60 ”; vil, 130; 
see also Ribbleton 

Scalingstud (Stalmine), vil, 252 

Scarbrough, Mary, vi, 472 ”; Nich., 
vi, 472; Pet., vi, 472” 

Scargill, Joan de, vi, 19; Rocsia 
(Rose) de, vi, 315; vii, 269; 
Sir Will, vi, 318; Will. de, vi, 
19 M, 314%, 315, 458 n; vil, 269 

Scarisbrick, vi, 90 ” 

Scarisbrick, Chas., vi, 172 ; Gilb. de, 
vi, 121 m, 267; vii, 13; Jas., vi, 
107", 174; Marg., vii, 183”; 
Matilda (Maud) de, vi, 267; vii, 
13; Thos., vi, 172 

Scarlett, Charlotte A., vi, 445; 
Gen. Sir Jas. Y., vi, 445, 450 

Scathe, Ad., vi, 68”; Alex., vi, 
68; Rich., vi, 68”; Rob., vi, 
68 n 

Schamelesbyre, 
see Samlesbury 

Schelf, Hen. de, vi, 469  ; Maud de, 
vi, 469 ” 

Schelflet, see Scholefield 

Schelylyngfeld (Walton), vi, 296 

Schepin, see Chipping 

Schernoc, see Charnock Richard 

Scheuynton, see Shevington 

Schingleton, see Singleton 

Schipingflat (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 
290 

Schlacter, see Slater 

Schofield, Rev. Dan., 
see also Scholefield 

Scholebank (Scolebank) (Padiham), 


Schampelesbyri, 


vii, 


256; 


V1. 493, 494 ” 
Scholefield (Scholfield) (Marsden), 


V1, 537 ; 
Scholefield (Scholfield), Edm., vi, 
496; John del, vi, 546; Rev. 
Jonathan, vi, 178, 181  ; Pet. de, 
vi, 546; Rich., vi, 436”; see 
also Schofield 
Schole ridding (Church), vi, 402 
Scholerodesyke (Cliviger), vi, 485 ” 
Scholes, Hen. del, vii, 57 x; Maud 
del, vii, 57”; Rev. Will. vi, 
313; —, vi, 205 ”; see also Scoles 
Scholesworth, see Shuttleworth 
Scholfley, Scholley, see Showley 
School Lane (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 
289 
Schorte Dene, see Shortdean 
Scireburne, see Shireburne 
Sclateclyff (Accrington), vi, 425 ” 
Sclater, see Slater 
Sclaterhill, vi, 233 7 
Scolebank, see Scholebank 
Scoles, J. J., vii, 19; fam., vi, 280; 
see also Scholes 
Scopham, Agnes de, vii, 28 
Scoring Moss (Bleasdale), vii, 
142” 
Scortefaldwrynges 
vii, 168 x 
Scorton (Nether Wyresdale), vii, 
"300 ; cross, vii, 300 ; Rom. Cath., 
vii, 304 ” ; sch., vii, 305 
Scorton Mill (Mawdesley), vi, 100 
Scorton Old Hall (Nether Wyres- 
dale), vii, 304 
Scotforth, vii, 301, 303”, 308, 
3312” 
Scotsholding (Bilsborrow), vii, 331 ” 
Scott, Ld. Hen., see Montagu, Ld. 
Scott, John H., vi, 467; Will., vi, 


(Freckleton), 


134%” 

oe Park (Habergham Eaves), vi, 
407 

Scoutlonglands (Marton), vii, 240” 


INDEX 


Scrivain (Scriptorius,’§ Scrivener), 
Amphelicia le, vii, 1292; Rich. 
le, vii, 129%; Rob., vii, 129”; 
Will. de, vii, 129 ” 

Scrop, Sir Geoff. le, vi, 327; Sir 
Hen. le, vi, 327; Thos. le, vi, 
327 

Scytholme 
274 Nn 

Seatnaze (Rossendale), vi 

Seaton, a John, ee pete 

Seatonheys, see Seatnaze 

Seckington, Rich., vii, 188 

Sedbergh, Alice de, vii, 33 

Seddon, John P., vi, 296 ; Will., vi, 


(Out Rawcliffe), 


vii, 


55 

Sedges (Newchurch-in-Rossendale), 
vi, 438 ” 

Sedgwick, Eliz., vii, 195; Geo., 
vil, 195 ” 

Sedill, Thos., vii, 43 2 

Seed, Ellen, vii, 50; Hen., vii, 
50”; John, vi, 269; vii, 50%, 
66”; Kath., vi, 269; Rob., vii, 
50”; Rog., vii, 50”; Thos., vi, 
267, 209; Will, vi, 269 

Seedall, Rich., vi, 301 

Seedcroft (Dutton), vii, 55 ” 

Seedhouse (Samlesbury), vi, 310 

Seed mylne (Pleasington), vi, 269 

Seed Park (Samlesbury), vi, 303 

Sées Abbey, see St. Martin’s Abbey, 
Sées 

Sefton fee, vi, 23 

Segar, Helen M. M., vi, 419; Mary, 
vi, 419 ”; Steph., vi, 442; Will. 
F., vi, 419 ”; see also Sagar 

Seinture, Ad. le, vii, 46 2; Diota le, 
vii, 46 ”; Rich. le, vii, 46 ” 

Sekemons (Studlehurst), vi, 324” 

Selby, man. (Yorks.), vi, 421 

Selby, Anne, vii, 333”; Thos., vii, 
333”; Will. de, vi, 358 

Selebrook (Goosnargh), vii, 199 % 

Selkirk, Thos., vi, 55 

Sellars, Mary, vi, 476; Thos., vi, 


BO ee oak ; 

Seller, Chris., vi, 383”; Edw., vi, 
354; John, vi, 358, 383 ”, 3977; 
Marg., vi, 383 2; Will., vi, 269%, 
383 n, 518; see also Celer 

Sellerdale, Will. de, vii, 223 

Selynhurst (Croston), vi, 92 7 

Seneintacks (Briercliffe), vi, 469 

Senesty (Bleasdale), vii, 141 ” 

Sep Clough (Habergham Eaves), vi, 
454 

Sephton, Hen., vi, 156” 

Serjeant (Serjant), Amabel le, vi, 
295; Hen., vi, 296; Humph., vi, 
17”; John (le), vi, 7, 62”; 
Kath., vi, 295 ; Leonard, vi, 295; 
Rich. (le), vi, 61, 295; Rob., 
vi, 17”; Thos., vi, 61 ” 

Serjeant’s messuage (Walton), vi, 
296 7 

Serjeantson, John, vi, 555”; Rich., 
vi, 555” 

Serlescalespool 
2717” 

Serlo, vi, 480” 

Settle (Yorks.), vii, 155 ” 

Seveton, Alice de, vi, 174”; Hen. 
de, vi, 174” 

Sewall, Nich., 
Sewell 

Sewall Syke (Preston), vii, 97 ” 

Sewell, F. H., vi, 153”; see also 
Sewall 

Sewinton, see Shevington 

Sexlondes ends (Salesbury), vi,253” 

Seymour, Lawr., vi, 110”; Mary, 
vi, 163, 164”; Sir Thos., vi, 
163”, 164”, 166m; vii, 1157; 
Thos., vi, 163 ” 


4Ul 


(Rawcliffe), vii, 


vii, 


13; 


see also . 


Shackleton (Shackleden, Shakle- 
ton), Geoff., vi, 530, 549”; Jas., 
Vi, 530, 549, 552; Rich., vi, 549; 
Thos., vi, 533” 

Shaffer (Chafiar, Shaffar), Emma, 
vii, 254”; Hugh, vil, 2547; 
John, vii, 254 ”; fam., vii, 227” 

Shaftoe, Capt., vii, 77 

Shagh, John del, vi, 282; Mary, 
vi, 282; Oliver del, vi, 282; see 
also Shawe 

Shakelden, see Shackleton 

Shakerley (Heapey), vi, 51 

Shakerley, Isabel, vi, 510 2; Rich. 
de, vi, 79 ; Rob., vi, 373 ”, 510”; 
Thos., vi, 510”; —, vi, 510 

Shakeshaft, Grace, vii, 207 ” 

Shakespear, Rev, Edw., vi, 8 

Shakleton, see Shackleton 

Shalcross, see Shawcross 

Shard bridge (Singleton), vii, 184, 
188 

Shard ferry (Hambleton), vii, 188 

Sharneyford (Bacup), vi, 437 

Sharoe (Broughton), vii, 117, 119, 
120”, 1218” 

Sharoe House 
120 

Sharp (Sharpe), Eliz., vi, 273, 274; 
John, vi, 521; vii, 66; Thos., vi, 
272; Will., vi, 416; vii, 141” 

Sharples, man. (Sharples), vi, 303 

Sharples, Ad. (de, del), vii, 157 7, 
158, I60”, 215”; Alex., vi, 
219”; Alice, vil, 170”; Anne, — 
vi, 219”; vii, 159”; Arth., vii, 
170”, 173”; Cuth., vil, 170%”, 
173 n, 185 ”; Dorothy, vii, 173 », 
190n; Edw., vii, 29”; Ellen, 
vil, 29”; Geo., vii, 170”; 
Gerard, vi, 269 ”; Hen. (de), vii, 
158”, 159”, 160”; Jas., Vi, 
249n; vii, 58”, 147, 158%, 
170”; John (de), vi, 103; vii, 
147", 157%, 160, 170M, 173%, 
215”; Maud, vii, 160”; Randle, 
vi, 237, 436”; Rich., vil. 190”; 
Rob., vi, 237 ”; Thos., vi, 269 7 ; 
vii, 160”; Will., vi, 100; vii, 
1587, 160”; fam., vi, 246 ”, 252 

Sharples House (Osbaldeston), vi, 


(Broughton), vii, 


2377 

Sharrock (Sherrock), Alice, vi, 
406 n ; Cecily, vi, 257; Isabel, vi, 
406”; Joan, vi, 406 »; John, vi, 
406 n; Kath., vi, 295 ; Lawr., vii, 
138; Rich., vi, 295; Will, vi, 
77", 295, 406; Will. G., vii, 


81; —, vi, 406; see also Shor- 
rock ; 
Sharrock’s Farm (Blackrod), vi, 


192” 

Shatterden, see Shetterton 

Shaw (Alston), vii, go ” 

Shaw, the (Barnside), vi, 547 ” 

Shaw, brook, vi, 340, 507 

Shaw, fam., see Shawe : 

Shawcliffe (Gt. Harwood), vi, 338 

Shaw Clough (Newchurch-in-Ros- 
sendale), vi, 438” 

Shawcross, John, vi, 283 

Shawe (Shaw), Ad. del, vi, 548; 
Alex., vii, 158”; Anne, vi, 216”; 
Cunliffe, vii, 185”; Edm., vi, 
438, 438”; vii, 204; Eliz., vi, 
216", 543”; Geo. vi, 191, 
2181; vii, 224; Hen., vi, 530, 
543, 546%”; Isabel, vii, 114; 
Jas., vi, 216", 318; Janet, vi, 
182 n; Joan, vii, 114 ; John (del), 
vi, IQI, 216”, 217, 237%, 281 n, 
282; vii, 114; Jos., vu, 174”; 
Kath., vi, 216, 217; Leonard, 
vi, 216; Marg., vii, 158%; 
Mary. vii, 158”; Pet., vi, 213, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Shawe (cont.) 

216; Rich., vii, 288 ; Rob. (del), 
vi, 189 n, 216 n, 260, 260 n, 251 N, 
282, 317, 337; vil, 158”, 224”; 
Sarah (Sally), vii, 197; Thos., 
vi, 216”, 296, 525; vil, 50; 

Will, vi, 71", 163”, 216"; vii, 
53, 62, 83», 87, 102 m, 109, "116, 
138%”, 174, 184, 188m, 195%, 
197”, 199, 203, 209n, 288 n; 

Will. ce, vi, 31"; Vii, 184, 184 n, 
185”; —, Vi, 524 nm, 5493 Vi, 
49”; fam., vi, 215; vii, 102, 
102” 

Shawfield, Nether and Over, mans., 
vi, 2337 

Shaw Fold (Eccleshill), vi, 279” 

Shaw Green (Euxton), vi, 18 

Shaw Hall (Leyland), vi, 13, 14 

Shaw Hall (Whittle), vi, 140 

Shaw H:ll (Whittle), vi, 32, 36 

Shawhouses (Whalley), vi, 381 

Shaw wood (Whalley), vi, 382" 

Shay, Ellen, vi, 81» 

Shayl, Rich., vi, 538 # 

Shedden, brook (Hurstwood), vi, 474 

Shedden Clough (Clivigcr), vi, 479 

Sheepflat Carr (Eccleston), vi, 165 ” 

Sheetacre, the (Cuerden), vi, 26" 

Sheffield, Rob., vi, 496 

Sheldesley, Phil. de, vi, 7on 

Shelfield (Gt. Marsden), vi, 536 

Shellard, Edw. H., vii, 82" 

Shelley, Frances, Lady, vii, 111, 
112m, 3223 Sir John, vi, 112" 

Shelton, ‘Alice: VI, O47; Mag, vii, 
184, 285; Rich., vi, by n 

Shelvock, Dorothy, vii, 230” 

Shepcote Clough (Clayton-le- 
Moors), v', 418% 

Shepherd (Sheppard), Agnes, vii, 
334; John, vii, 88; Kath., vi, 
217”; Marg., vi, 378”; Rich., 
vu, 80; Rob., vii, 201 ; Thos., vi, 

436 n; Vii, 1037; AY ill., ‘vii, 


2057” 

Shepherd hill (Claughton), vii, 
325m 

Sheppard, see Shepherd 

Sheppey, Nich. de, vi, 159 

Sherburne, Sir Edw., vii, 17; Rog., 
vi, 190 n; see also Shireburne 

Sherdley, Chas., vi, 66; Rev. 
Edw., vi, 343, 344; Edw., vi, 
73"; Hen., vi, 65”, Lon, 73, 
73"; Jas., vi, 65”; Joan, vi, 
73; John, vi, 737; Margery, May 
bb; Pet., vi, 73”; Ralph, vi, 
73”; Rich., vi, 24", 65", 737; 
Thos., vi, 70 n, 73,737 

Sherrington, John, Wd, 2350 

Sherrock, fam., see Sharrock and 
Shorrock 

Sherrs, brook, vi, 314” 

Shetterton (Shatterden), Bridg., v', 
154m; vil, 194”; Dan., vi 
154”; Sam., vii, I94n 

Shevington (Shcuynton), vi, 58 n, 
68 n, 182, 187 n, 199-203 ; char., 
vi, 191 m, 192; ch., vi, 203 ; man., 
vi, 199; Nonconf., vi, 203 

Shevington, Sir Ad. de, vii, 254; 
Ad. de, vi, 201 n, 202 n ; Avice de, 
vi, 201”; Cecily de, vi, 200”; 
Emma de, vii, 254; Hen. de, vi, 
200”, 201 n; Hugh de, vi, 201 n, 
202 n ; Nich. "de, vil, 201”; Rich. 
de, vi, 200 n, 201 n, 202 1: Sim. 
de, vi, 201; Spratel ng de, vi, 
202”; Thos. de, vi, 201”; WN). 
de, vi, 201 7; see also Shurving- 
ton 

Shevington Moor (Shevington), vi, 
199 

Shevinley (Standish), vi, 193 ” 


> 


Shevinley, Anabil de, vi, 193"; 
Hen. de, vi, 163” 

Sheyford (Gt. Harwood), vi, 340 

Shillito, Rev. W:ll., vin, 142, 204 

Bee erecas -cloch = (Studlehurst), 

324" 

shiz ppenley (Shipenley) (Ribches- 
ter), vil, 45, 48n 

Sh ppenley, Alice de, vi, 48m: 
Avice de, vii, 48n; Rog. de, vii, 
48 n; Thos. de, vu, 48 

Shipwaie, Lawr., vi, 183 » 

Shircliff (Cliviger), vi, 480 »: 

Shire, Beatrice del, vi, 216%; R.ch. 
del, vi, 216 

Shireburne (Scireburne), Agnes, vi, 
72, 420; Vi, 4n, 254"; Alex., 
vu, 28, 29"; Alice (de), vi, 71”, 
131, 276, 277, 366m, 397; vu, 3, 
4, 5, 17, 139%, 227, 230%, 
281; Anne, vi, 380”; vu, 5”, 
6 n, 131, 140 nN, 274 N, 275, 322; 
Dorothy, vi, 389”; vu, 1937, 
322; Edm., vii, 56; Edw., vii, 
28n, 56; Eliz., vi, 458; vil, 7, 
sgn; Ellen, vil, 30”, 107M; 
Emma de, vil, 4; Eva de, vii, 3 , 
229”, 230; Frances, vil, 29”; 
Grace, vil, 28 » ; Hen., vii, 6, 20, 
28 n, 32, 48, 107; Hugh, vi, 
G2 n, 143 m, 198; Vii, 5, 7, & 9, 
17, 18, 28, 44", 47, 50”, 55”, 
107 n, 189 n, 281 n, 332 »; Isabel, 
Vi, 444-7, 446, 4535 Vil, 5, 6, 28, 
33", 322; Ismania de, vii, 3; 
Jane, v), 306, 329; vil, 15”; 
Joan de, vii, 4, 5”, 306”; Sir 
John de, vi, 71”; vn, 3; Rev. 
John, vi, 8; John (de), vi, 80, 
151”; vi, 4,15, 18, 28 n, 29 n, 
44n, 560, 59n, CON, 106, 107, 
111”, 189, 189, 229%, 230, 
230n, 240n; Kath., vi, 6”, 
107 m, 111 ; Marg. de, vi, 71%, 
292; vi, 3", 4; Margery, vii, 
49n; xe vn, 6; Maud, vi, 18, 
285; Sr Nich., vi, 132 n, 149, 
334 ”, 380, 398, 399, 442; vii, 
759, TO, TY, 14; 18, 19, 20, 196, 
230 n, 289 n; Nich., vii,6,1507; 
Sr Rich. (de), vi, 2”, 16%, 72, 
73”, 132, 135, 140, 142, 143, 
Ib n, 195, 204 n, 213, 219 0, 277, 
306, 340%, 359m", 302, 304n, 
378 n, 380, 3977, 398, 308n, 
507 M, 524; V1, I, 3, 4%, 5, 7, 8, 
9, II, 14, 15, 17, 18, 28 n, 297, 
30, 35", 47, 49%, 55, 59 2, 70, 
126”, 131, 189, 190n, 208n, 
212, 230, 230, 274n, 282 n, 
288 n, 319n, 322”, 323; Rich. 
(de), vi, 2", 16 n, 35 n, 72, 727, 
73", 99", 132, I5In, 165n, 
200 nN, 202 N, 205, 206, 292, 292 n, 
337, 389, 379, 397, 398, 420, 444 n, 
446, 453, 499, 515, 519, 542, 549; 
Vi, 4,47, 5,6, 11,13”, 15,15 n, 
16, 17, 18, 19, 19 2, 29, 35, 48”, 
49, 49%, 50, 56, 58, 59, 59n, 
60n, 107”, I13M”, 131, 132%, 
163 n, 169 n, 189 n, 193 n, 194 n, 
199 7%, 200 n, 208 n, 212 n, 213%, 
227, 229, 247%, 254 Nn, 272N, 
281 n, 318, 329”; Rich. F., vii, 
6; Sr Rob. (de), vi, 151 , 276, 
277, 327”; vil, 3, 4”, 2270, 
272m; Rob. (de), vi, 71, 72 n, 
80 n, 131, 132, 194 n, ea. 3547, 
366 1, 389 m, 391, 397; Vii, 3, 4, 
5,15, 15, 17, 18, 28, 29 n, 307, 
32, 49 n, 168 n, 169 n, 189, 189 2, 
IGO, 190”, 230, 240n, 241 n, 
247, 2547, 278 n, 281 n, 2G62n, 
306 nm, 322, 323, 324”, 329n; 
Rog., vn, 5, 5”, 28, 31, 33%, 49, 


412 


Shirebume (cont.) 
49 ", 204"; Thos.,vi,72 1, 166m, 
329, 389"; vu, 5, 30m, 352, 
gin, 107, 113N, 121", 193 nN, 
200, 247 ", 322, 322"; Walt. de, 
vil, 229m, 247, 254"; WIL de, 
vu, 3, 4, 4m, 189, 189m, 2540; 
—, vn, 2; fam., vi, 39 2, 100M, 
374, 374%, 377%, 407, Vu, 27, 
63 n, 73 , 108, 153, 174", 181m, 
231 m, 284; see also Sherburne 

Shireburne almshouses (Aighton), 
vii, 20 

Shirlacres, Gilb., vi, 160 

Sholley, Hen. de, vi, 262 »; Will. de, 
vi, 262" 

Shore, Will., vi, 488-9 

Shore tenement (Briercliffe), v: 
q6gon 

Shorncton, see Shurvington 

Shorrock, Old, see Shorrock Green 

Shorrock (Shorock, Shorok), Agnes 
(de), vi, 22”; vii, 114m; Alce 
de, vi, 262; Eccles, vi, 282; 
Geoff., vi, 262 ; Hen. de, vi, 262 ; 
Jas., vi, 252 ; Rev. John, vi, 299, 
440 ; John (de), vi, 262, "208: 
vii, 114 2; Marg., vi, 262 n, 268 ; 
Mary, vi, 282; ; Ralph, vi, 237"; 
Rich. de, vi, 262 ; Rog. de, vi, 
262; Thos., vi, 22; Thurstan, vi, 
7: Will. (de), vi, 18, 262 ; see also 
Sharrock 

Shorrock Green (Mellor), vi, 262 

Shorrock Hey (Pleasington), vi, 
268, 288 

Short, Gabriel, vii, 136”; Hen., 
vii, 142 

Shortdean (Hapton), vi, 418m, 
510” 

Shorten, brook, vi, 411 

Shorton (Ribchester), vii, 48 

Shorueneton, see Shurvington 

Shower, —, vi, 524n 

Showley "(Clayton- -le-Dalc), vi, 
249M, 259, 421 ; Vil, 51, 307 

Showley, brook, vi, 249, 251, 258%, 
260, 203, 334 

Showley Fold (Clayton-le-Dale}, vi, 
257, 260 

Showley Hall (Clayton-le-Dale), vi, 
259 

Shrewsbury, Gilb., carl of, vii, 104 ” 

Shrewsbury Abbey, vii, 145, 151”, 
217; Rob., abbot of, vii, 223%, 
246 

Shurenetcen, Shurventon, see Shur- 
vington 

Shurvington (Shorncton, Shoruene- 
ton, Shureneton, Shurventon), 
Rob. de, vi, 164 »; Will. de, vi, 
163”, 164, 206n; see also 
Shevington 

Shuth, Thos., vi, 153 

Shuttleworth (Shuttellesworth) 
(Hapton), vi, 507; vii, 77; man., 
vi, 509; mill, vi, 510”; sundial, 

1, 511 

Shuttleworth, Ughtred J. Kay- 
Shuttleworth, Ld., vi, 280, 464 

Shuttleworth, Ad. de, vi, zo1”; 
Agnes de, vi, 328, 336, 463"; vil, 
18; Alice (de), vi, 387”, 504”, 
510 n; vii, 182, 272; Anne, vi, 
329, 387m, 421, 465, 499M; 
Rev. Barton, vi, 334; Barton, vi, 
16; Bern. de, vi, 499m, 521; 
Bridg., vii, 155”; Chas., vi, 
143 N, 329, 3307 499 n; Dorothy 
vn, 135n, 182; Edm., vi, 16; 
Edw., vii, 182, 2720; Eleanor, 
vi, 378%; Elz., vi, 328, 465m, 
555”, 559N; Ellen (de), vi, 
201 n, 465; Ellis de, vi, 4997; 
Emma (Emot) de, vi, zon, 


' 


Shuttleworth (cont.) 
512; Fleetwood, vii, 128, 182, 
272"; Geo., vi, 387, 556”; vii, 
135; Gilb., vi, 387”; Helen, 
vi, 463 #; Hen. (de), vi, 328, 329, 
388m, 393%, 410, 418, 463 n, 
499 %, 509, 510, 511 n, 512 n, 
526; vii, 18; Hugh, vi, 378 n, 
447,403 ®, 465 , 549; Humph., 
vii, 87, 148; Isabel (de), vi, 329, 
444”, 510”; Jas., Vi, 549; vil, 
128, 331”; Jame, vi, 329; vil, 
106 ; Janet, vi, 464, 495 ”, 556; 
Joan de, vi, 418, 510%; John 
(de), vi, 201”, 328, 409, 410, 
412m, 491, 494%, 495, 499%, 
507”, 508%, 510M, 526N; Vil, 
135%; Kath. (Cath.), vi, 329, 
393”; Rev. Lawr., vi, 464; 
* Lawr., vi, 336, 447, 463, 405%, 
466, 493, 494 7, 512 %, 549, 555 2, 
559”; Magot, vi, 328, 499”; 
Marg., Lady, vi, 466”; Marg. 
(de), vi, 201 n, 387, 463, 510”; 
vii, 155 ”, 272 ; Margery, Lady, 
vi, 465; Margery, vi, I5In, 
252 n, 406 n; Col. Nich., vi, 290 ; 
Nich., vi, 419, 463, 465 , 5557; 
Phil., vii, 151; Ralph, vi, 329 7, 
419; Sr Rich., vi, 280, 406”, 
404, 405, 466 n, 489, 495; Vil, 
128 n, 280 ” ; Rich. (de), vi, 151 ”, 
201 m, 252", 269”, 320, 3677, 
368 m, 410”, 444M, 447, 450 7, 
463, 489, 493 2, 494”, 495, 499, 
509 M, 510, SII M, 513 #, 556; Vil, 
35 n, 128, 195 n, 331 x; Rob. de, 
vi, 201 2, 243 m, 328, 329, 388 7, 
421, 464, 494, 499”, 510n, 
527”; vii, 106, 128, 321%”, 
331 2; Rog. de, vi, 201 2; Sibyl, 
vi, 328; Susanna, vi, 419; Thos. 
(de), vi, 151 m, 328, 444”, 463 n, 
465", 493, 494”, 510”; Vil, 
272; Ughtred (de), vi, 328, 463, 
465”, 510”; Will. vi, 387%, 
510m; vil, 155”, 272”; Col., 
vi, 236, 523; —, vi, 392, 499: 
see also Kay-Shuttleworth 
Shuttleworth Hall (Hapton), vi, 
501 n, 510 
Shuttleworth Pasture (Briercliffe), 


vi, 471 2 

Shuttlingfeld (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 
290 

Shuttlingfields estate (Brindle), vi, 
81 

Sibbarin, Rob., vi, 5 

Sicling moor (Preston), vii, 97%, 
100 ” 

Side, the (Read), vi, 503 ”, 506 ” 

Side Beet (Rishton), vi, 249, 345, 


347 
Sideley Clough (Clayton-le-Dale), 
vi, 258 
Sidenhalgh, Ellis de, vi, 506 ” 
Sidgreave (Marsden), vi, 539 ” 
Sidgreaves (Lea), vii, 129, 131, 163 ” 
Sidgreaves, Ad. de, vii, 132 7 ; Alice 
de, vii, 130”; Chris., vii, 199; 
Dav. de, vii, 130; Dorothy, vi, 
48n; Eda de, vii, 132”; Ellen 
de, vii, 132”; Emma de, vii, 
130”; Hen. de, vii, 1337; 
Jas., vi, 48; vii, 199, 2007, 
201, 206”; John de, vii, 133”; 
Ralph de, vii, 132; Rob. de, 
vil, 132”; Rog. de, vii, 130”; 
Thos. de, vii, 130”, 1337; 
_Uctred de, vii, 132 ” 
Siegrith, vii, 52 1, 166 ” 
Sigrop clough (Ribchester), vii, 36 
Sikes, see Sykes 
Silcock, Thos., vi, 369 2; Will., vii, 
245” 


INDEX 


Silk weaving, vi, 437 

Silverdale, man., vii, 35 ” 

Silvester, Col. —, vi, 149 

Simhole (Huncoat), vi, 411 ” 

Simon, vi, 499”, 503; vii, 97, 
Il6nz, 130”; abbot of Kirk- 
stall, vi, 480 ” ; chaplain of Kirk- 
ham, vii, 146”; the clerk, vii, 
100”, 252m”; the geldherd, vi, 

424, 548 

Simondiston, 
Simonstone 

Simonscroft (Winkley), vii, 13 ” 

Simonstone, vi, 349, 356 7, 357, 430, 
493, 494, 490-503, 506 n, 507 n, 
509%; man., VI, 233%, 431, 497, 

505; mill, vi, 497 ”, 498, 499 » 

Simonstone (Simondston), Ad. de, 
vi, 497 ”, 498 n, 499 m ; Agnes de, 
vi, 499”; Alan de, vi, 497%, 
498 n, 499 n; Alex. de, vi, 497 n, 
499n; Alice de, vi, 499”; 
Alyott de, vi, 497”; Cecily de, 
vi, 497 ; Eliz., vi, 500; Ellis de, 
vi, 497”, 498 n, 499 n; Hen. de, 
vi, 511”; Hugh de, vi, 497”, 
498 n ; Geoff. de, vi, 497 2, 499 n, 
503”; Godrich de, vi, 499”; 
John de, vi, 499, 499”, 5007”; 
Kath., vi, 500”; Marg. de, vi, 
331, 499”, 500”; Margery de, 
vi, 499”; Maud de, vi, 499”; 
Rich, (de), vi, 497 7, 498 n, 499 n, 
500%”, 511%; Rob. de, vi, 331, 
497 ”, 498 n, 499 N, 500 N, 503 2; 
Rog. de, vi, 498 x, 499”; Sibyl 
de, vi, 498 ”; Sim. de, vi, 498 », 
499 ; Thos. de, vi, 410 n, 497 7, 
498”, 499%, 511, 511; Uctred 
de, vi, 498”; Warine de, vi, 
498 n ; Will. de, vi, 499 ” 

Simonstone Hall (Simonstone), vi, 
498, 500” 

Simonstone moor, vi, 498 

Simpson (Simson), Anne, vi, 180 7 ; 
Edw., vi, 50; Hen., vii, 79”; 
Janet, vii, 183 2; John, vi, lon; 
vii, 136”; Lawr., vii, 127”; 
Rich., vii, 183 2; Rob., vi, 180 x ; 
Rev. Sam., vi, 283; Will., vii, 
79n; Will. W., vil, 2”, 14 

Sinclair, Emma I. H., vi, 210”; 
Sir J. G. T., vi, 210” 

Singleton, vii, 69”, 117, 143, 144, 
146”, 149, 157, 158, 166, 176, 
180, 181, 183-8; chap., vii, 
188 ; ch., vii, 187; fair, vii, 184 ; 
man., vii, 184; Rom. Cath., vu, 
188 ; 

Singleton, Gt. (Much), man., vii, 
181 

Singleton, Little, man., vi, 231; 
vii, 70”, 118, 119 ”, 185 4 

Singleton (Singilton), Ad. de, vi, 
III”, 118”, 119”, 120%, 136, 
168 n, 169”, 170 n, 208 n, 209 n, 
211, 331”; Agnes, vi, 175%; 
vii, 53 ”, III”, 112”, 119”; Sir 
Alan de, vii, 119 » ; Alan (de), vii, 
31 2, 46 N, 52, 53 M, 70, 118, 134%, 
166, 168, 168, 169, 185%”, 
196, 196 #, 197 %, 201, 207, 208 n, 
209, 211, 233, 235%, 240, 283, 
328 n, 331, 332”; Alice (de), 
vii, 49”, I1Im, 112m, 118%, 
125 n, 134”, 169”, 197, 2087, 
209, 211”, 233, 238%”, 239%”, 
307 2, 331”; Aline, vii, 112%; 
Andr., vii, 119”; Anilla, vu, 
126”; Anne (Ann), vi, 292; vii, 
23, 31”, 102m, IIIm, 112%, 
119 7, 120”, 196”, 201 n, 208 n, 
211 n, 239; Avice de, vii, 331”; 
Award, vi, 175”; vii, 238%; 
Beatrice, vii, 274”; Brian, vu, 


413 


Simondston, see 


Singleton (cont.) 


119”, 137”; Cecily (de), vii, 
136", 173”; Chris., vii, 33, 
15tm; Constance, vii, 238”; 
Cuth., vii, 119%; Dorothy, vii, 
239n; Edw., vii, I19, 120”, 
173”, 174”; Eleanor, vii, 211 ; 
Eliz., vi, 256, 393 73 vii, 106 n, 
II2", 119M, 172, 174, 211 n, 
239 n, 307%; Ellen, vii, 120”; 
Gceo., vii, 23, 119”, 131, 190%, 
230, 238, 239, 287; Gilb. de, 
vii, 53”, I18n, Lign, 125%, 
169 n, 172, 173, 175%, 185 n, 
208 n, 215 n; Grace, vi, 321; vii, 
11g”; Helen, vii, 238”; Hen. 
(dc), vii, 112m”, I1gn, 120n, 
208 n, 211 n, 213 n, 288 n, 3312; 
Hugh, vii, 231 ”; Isabel (de), vii, 
194”, 211M, 215”; Jas., vii, 
112”, 118, 119”, I20n; Jane, 
vii, 119”, I26”, 211 n, 213%, 
239”; Joan (de), vi, 104 n, 154 n, 
294; vil, 118, 119, 185, 208 n, 
210, 211 #, 247 , 272, 274, 274 nN, 
284 n, 323”; John (de), vi, 69 , 
102, 217 ”, 256; vii, 17, 17 ”, 33, 
48n, 85n, 98n, I0On, IIL 4, 
II2”, 113”, 116”, 118%, 119, 
120”, 125”, 126%, 131, 1367, 
137”, 169”, 174, 200, 208, 209, 
210, 211, 231 ”, 238, 239, 247”, 
287 n, 288 n, 307 n, 329”; Kath. 
(de), vi, 393”; vii, 52”, 118”, 
162”, 211”; Lawr., vii, 112%, 
I51 n, 2382; Lyol de, vii, 257%”; 
Mabel de, vii, 53 ”, 179, 274”; 
Marg. (de), vi, 316; vii, 17 ”, 33, 
53”, 11Q9H, 124n, 127Nn, 172 Nn, 
208 n, 212 N, 230 Nn, 238%, 239 Nn, 
288 n; Mary, vi, 377”, 394; vii, 
II2”, 190”, 211 nN, 239, 239”, 
327 ”; Maud de, vii, 169 ”, 254.7”; 
Nich. (de), vi, 294; vii, 109”, 
III”, 112”, 118”, IIQH, 124n, 
I25n, 126”, 137”, 172”, 173, 
321”; Ralph, vii, 184”; 
Randle (Ranulf) (de), vii, 53”, 
179 n, 184 ”, 208 n, 212 n, 2747N; 
Rich. (de), vi, 69”, 393”; vii, 
23M, 32, 49M, 52, 52%, 53%, 
II2m, 118, 119, I19n, 120”, 
134, 136”, 137”, 174m, 184 nN, 
196”, 211%, 213%, 223, 226%, 
238 n, 257, 2742, 331, 332%; 
Rob. (de), vi, 72”, 242”, 316; 
vil, 47”, 48m, 53”, 85, 98%, 
riz”, 118, 118m, I19, I20n, 
125 n, 126”, 128, 177n, 189%, 
I9g0”, 208, 209”, 210%, 211, 
212, 254, 287 n, 331”; Rog. 
(de), vi, 69”; vil, III m, 112%, 


134, 136”, 197”, 201, 201%, 
204, 235”; Thos. (de), vi, 
154”, 393”; vii, 48n, 53”, 
III”, I12, 118, I19, 120%, 


121 7, 131, 138, 169 n, 172 , 173, 
173”, 174 ”, 185 ”, 194”, 208 n, 
209M, 210M, 2II, 213, 213%, 
215 n, 219, 228, 231 n, 238, 239, 
247”, 261%, 272, 274, 274%, 
284 n, 288 n, 321 n, 323 N, 331%, 
332”: Thomasine, vii, 131, 239”; 
Uctred de, vi, 69”; vil, 134, 
136, 331”; Will. (de), vi, 262, 
292, 321; vil, 46n, 48m, 52%, 
70, 75, 112, 112m, 117, 118, 
11g”, 120H, 121 N, 125 nN, 126n, 
127, 136”, 137, 158”, 177M, 
185”, 193”, 196”, 200, 208 n, 
210 N, 211, 212”, 231 Nn, 233%, 
234, 238, 240M, 2572, 307%, 
327 N, 331 N, 332; —, Vl, III; 
fam., vi, 67 ”, 231; vii, 69, 199 ”, 
232, 281” 


A JTS PORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Singleton Grange (Singleton), vii, 
153, 183, 187, 278 n, 284.n 

Singleton Pool (Larbreck), vii, 183 

Singleton Thorp (Poulton-le- 
Fylde), vii, 220 

Singletun, see Singleton 

Sircliffe, see Shawcliffe 

Sired, see Syrith 

Sithsworth, Rich., vi, 67; Rob., 
vi, 677 

Siverthesargh 
103” 

Siward (Suard), vi, 76”, 258, 335, 
506 ; vu, 97 n, 98 n, I90n 

Six-acre (Marsden), vi, 539 

Six Forster Doles, see Blackwood 

Skarth (Trawden), vi, 551 

Skeffington, Mary, vi, 297 

Skelton, Rich., vii, 2587 

Skepulford (Gt. Eccleston), vii 
2770" 

Skerrett, John, vi, 153 

Skerrow, John, vi, 491 

Skillicorne (Skillicorn, Skillikorne), 
Ad. (de), vi, 57”; vii, 152%, 
177”; Agnes, vii, 177”; Alice 
(de), vil, 177m”, 210”; Anne, 
vi, 12; vii, 177”, 229; Edm. 
(de), vil, 177, 210”; Edw., vu, 
152”; Ekz., vii, 178, 229n; 
Ellen, vii, 229”; Isabel, vii, 
177"; Jas., vii, 177"; Joan, vii, 
Iuj n, 180n, 22g9n; John, vi, 
I2n; vil, 98n, 1oOn,175n, 177-7, 
17Sn, 238”; Marg, vi, 127; 
vi, 174”, 177”; Margery, vii, 
177”; Nich., vi, 99m, 1667, 
Iu7p nm, 173”, 174", 177, 178, 
175; Priscilla, vii, 178 »; Rich. 
(de), vil, 173 2, 177 n, 229, 229 n, 
z2d2n; Will, vn, 152”, 157 n, 
166 n, 107 m, 173 m, 177 n, 178 Nn, 
180 n, 329”; fam., vil, 227 

Skillington, Ad., vii, 99”; Alice, 
vil, 99” 

Skinner, Jordan the, vi, 5567; 
Rich. the, vi, 488; Rob. the, vu, 
46; Thos., vil, 99”; Will. the, 
vi, 5567 

Skippool (Poulton), vii, 226; bridge, 
vu, 183, 226; mill, vi, 268”; 
trade, vii, 226 

Skippool, riv., vii, 225 

Skipton, Maud de, vi, 366"; Rich. 
de, vi, 365 n, 366; Rob. de, vi, 
365 m, 366; Will. de, vii, 297 

Skipton Clough (Colne), vi, 524 

Skull House (Appley), vi, 169 

Slack (Briercliffe), vi, 471 ” 

Slack (Trawden), vi, 548 

Slack (Slake), Agnes, vi, 2177; 
Alice, vi, 217"; Cecily, vi, 217; 
Ellen, vi, 217 7; Joan, vi, 217 7; 
John (del), vi, 217; Marg., vi, 
217; Nich., vi, 87; Rob., vi, 
272m; Thos., vi, 217” 

Slackhall (Brindle), vi, 77 

Slade, Eleanor, vi, 17 , 65” 

Slaidburn (Yorks), vi, 233», 521” 

Slaidburn, Alice de, vu, 1517; 
John de, wii, 151 2; Will. de, vii, 
147 

Slake, see Slack 

Slate, Rich., vii, 104 » 

Slatedelph (Wheelton), vi, 36 

Slater (Schlacter, Sclater), Gilb., vii, 
113; Sir Hen., vi, 77, 777; 
Jas., vn, 44; John, vi, 4252; 
vil, 127; Marg., vi, 558 ; Rachel, 
vi, 77 »; Ralph, vi, 358”; Thos., 
vil, 113 n, 121 n; Sir T., vi, 1637; 
WilL, vi, 369; vii, 121”; —, vi, 
432 

Slater meadow (Burnley), vi, 445 

Slatter, Phil. G., vii, 205 


(Bretherton), vi, 


, 


Slene, see Slyne 
Shderforth (Hapton), vi, 511” 
Slinger, Chris., vii, 154" 
Slipper hill (Foulridge), vi, 546” 
Sltterforth (Marsden), vi, 536, 552 
Slyched (Catterall), vii, 321” 
Slyne (Slene), Alice de, wii, 253.7; 
Eva de, vii, 98; Grimbald de, 
vil, 330”; Nigel de, vii, 2537; 
Will. de, vii, 98 n, 330”, 3327” 
Smalelei, brook, vi, 317 
Smaleshagh, brook, vi, 288 
Smalldene (Whittingham), vii, 209 
Smallegh, see Smalley 
Smalley (Sunderland), vi, 318 
Smalley (Smallegh), Agnes de, vi, 
318; Alan de, vi, 318; Alice de, 
vi, 318; Annabel de, vi, 318; 
Ant., vi, 35 #; Avina de, vi, 318; 
Cecily (de), vi, 315 , 318; Edw., 
vi, 190; Geo., vi, 34”; vil, 
174; Hen., vi, 535; Jas., vii, 
174; John, vi, 342; Kath, vi, 
34”; Mary, vi, 191 »; Rob., vi, 
318; Rog., vi, 237 ”, 318; Thos., 
vi, 318; Will. (de), vi, 315 ”, 318 
Small Hazels (Habergham Eaves), 


Vi, 454 ; 

Smallshaw (Habergham Eaves), vi, 
454, 468 n : 

Smallshaw beck (Hapton), vi, 511 » 

Smallwood, Alice, vi, 612”; Thos., 
vi, 61 n; Wil, vi, 61” 

Smarshalls farmhold, — see 
Hall (Read) 

Smeathbottom 
58n 

Smeleden (Howick), vi, 60 2 

Smerdell (Westby-with-Plumptons), 
vii, 175 0 

Smcrebrook (Elswick), vii, 2847 

Smercbutts (Church), vi, 400, 
402 2 

Smerepot (Staynall), vii, 252” 

Smereshalgh (Smerleshalgh), Ad. 
de, vi, 506”; Ellis de, vi, 506”; 
John de, vi, 506”; Rich. de, vi, 
506 n 

Smcthefynee (Worsthorne), vi, 474 

Smcthes, see Smithies 

Smethurst, Rich., vi, 312 

Smewes, Rich. de, vii, 113 ” 

Smith (Smyth), Ad. the, vi, 480; 
Agnes, vil, 100 7, 106 ; Alethea, 
vi, 366; Alex., vii, 250”; 
Alice, v!, 337 3 vii, 35”, loon; 
Chas. F., vii, 165 ; Chris., vi, 303, 
354. 387", 520, 530; Dav., vi, 
392"; Edm., vi, 96, 303; 
Edw., vi, 64, 65; Ellen, vii, 
216; Fran., vi, 77”; Geo., vi, 
86; Harold, vi, 528; Hen., vi, 
107; vil, 106", 250”, 255; 
H, PiO), Vi; 80n5: Jai; Vi; 432, 
494M, 547; Vi, 147, 148 n, 2260; 
Jane, vi, 422; Rev. John, vi, 
334, 344; John (de), vi, 22, 51, 
89 n, 108n, 127n, 188 n, 269n, 
301, 387%, 447%, 471, 498 n, 
520, 536", 542; Vil, 147%, 
I5In, 156n, 2547, 259 Nn, 260; 
Jos., vii, 322; Kath. (Cath.), vi, 


Lower 
(Ribchester), 


vii, 


77", 210, 392; Lawr., vi, 
5IIm, 549; Mary., vi, 64n; 
Mary, vii, 106”; Mich., vi, 


541”; Pet., vi, 520; Rev. Rich., 
vi, 541”; Rich. (the), vi, 92%, 
147, 167", 298n, 485”; vn, 
35%, 93%, 144”, 254n; Rev. 
Rob., vi, 334; Rob., vi, 1107, 
11g m, 118m, 167", 174”, 443, 
449, 5II MN, 5167; Vil, 151 7, 
156”; Sam., vi, 128, 450n; 
Sharpee, vi, 516”; Steph., vi, 
440, 451 ”, 453 , 471 ; Steph. T., 


414 


Smith (cont.) 
vi, 471. n; Thos., vi, 192 ", 239, 
530}; Vi, 142, 147, 105m, 255, 
3lz2n; Tim., vil, 60, 67; Uctred 
the, vu, 273"; Will. (the), vi, 
39", 74, 94, 171 nN, T9QN, 416, 
q22n, YS2N, 4M, VA, 35n, 
100 n, 106 n, 128 n, 250 n, 284n; 
Wil. S., vi, 471; —, bp., vi, 
313; Mrs., vi, gon; —, wi, 
513”, 524M}; Vil, l2zi4n 
Smithicroft (Mellor), vi, 262 
Smithies (Smethes), Isabel, vi, 
556”; John, vi, 556”; Rich., 
vu, 24”; Will, vi, 556” 
Smithridding, the (Cuerden), vi, 


247 

Smith’s Height (Over Darwen), vi, 
269 

Smithy Bank (Habergham Eaves), 
vi, 450” 

Smithybottom 
58n 

Smithy Croft (Wilpshire), vi, 335 ” 

Smolley, Mary, vi, 275 

Smult, Rich., vi, 224 7 

Smyth, see Smith 

Snape (Goosnargh), vii, 198 ” 

Snape (Habergham Eaves), vi, 
450 

Snape, Will., vii, 216” 

Snart, Hen., vi, 107; 
107 ” 

Snead, see Sneyd 

Snell, Rob., vil, 196" 

Snelleshou (Whalley), see 
Hill 

Snclleshou, Ellis de, vi, 377, 387"; 
Margery de, vi, 377 

Sneyd (Snead), Hugh, vii, 223; 
Ralph, vii, 223” 

Snobbesnape, see Snubsnape 

Snodesworth, John de, vi, 4o9 

Snodsworth (Habergham Eaves), 
vi, 391”, 457, 458 

Snodworth (Billington), vi, 
339” 

Snubsnape (Leyland), vi, 14 

Snydale (Westhoughton), vi, 501 

Snydale (Yorks), vi, 479” 

Sodor and Man., bps. of, Hugh 
Hesketh, vi, 67”; John Salis- 
bury, vi, 432”; Rich. Parr, vi, 
160, 161 

Sollom (Tarleton), vi, 109 n, 115 

Sollom (Sollam), Dav., vi, 99”; 
Geo., vii, 98 n, 332”; Hen,, vii, 


(Ribchester), vi, 


Jenet, vi, 


Clerk 


325, 


332”; Rich. vi, 28m; vii, 
332"; Thos., vi, 51, 99%; vii, 
245 


Sollom moss, vi, 115 

Sollom pool bridge (Croston), vi, 
12240” 

Somerset, dks. of, vi, 255, 258, 
336; John Beaufort, vii, 303” 

Somervill, Thos., vi, 54” 

Someryate (Clayton-le-Moors), vi, 
41842 

Someter, see Sumner 

Somner’s Croft (Bretherton), vi, 
107" 

Sompner, see Sumner 

Sonerseld (Cuerden), vi, 28” 

Son of Adam, Ad., vi, 470”, 474"; 
Albred, vii, 94”; Hen, wi, 
246”; John, vi, 170”, 4519”; 
Matth., vi, 481”; vii, 318"; 
Rob., vi, 176, 253, 366”; vu, 
98n, 279n; Rog. vi, 97%, 
1oon; Sim., vi, 480”, 485%; 
WiIL, vii, 2537” 

Son of Agnes, Rog., vi, 72” 

Son of Ailsi (Eilsi, Elsi), Ad., vu, 
232, 279n; Alex., vi, 317”; 
Bern., vii, 191, 320, 321; Hugh, 


* 


Son of Ailsi (cont.) ; 

vi, 317%, 324; John, vi, 314, 
317 2; Rob., vi, 317 Mm, 320; 
Rog., vii, 279% ; Will. vi, 320 

Son of Ailward, Orm, vi, 169 

Son of Alan, Ad., vii, 134”; 

Amabil, w. of Rich., vii, 283”; 
Hen., vi, 66”; Rich., vii, 283”; 
Thos., vii, 264; Will., vi, 37, 50, 
5520; Vil, 324m 

Son of Albert, Will., vii, 166 » 

Son of Aldelin, Will., vi, 291 » 

Son of Alexander, Rob., vi, 474 »:, 
475"; Will. vii, 178 2 

Son of Alicock, Rich. vi,97" 

Son of Alot, Ad., vii, 209”; Milli- 
cent, w. of Ad., vil, 209 ” 

Son of Amery, Rich., vii, 54, 
55%, 57” re 

Son of Amice, John, vii, 272” 

Son of Andrew, Hugh, vi, 1317; 
Maud, w. of Hugh, vi, 131 ” 

Son of Arthur, Rich., vii, 132%; 
Will., vii, 132 ” 

Son of Auger, Rob., vii, 132 

Son of Austin, Rog., vi, 49” 

Son of Auti, Siward, vi, 25, 26" 

Son of Baldwin, John, vii, 226»; 
Rob., vii, 226»; Rog., vii, 100 » 

Son of Baye, Hen., vi, 301 

Son of Beatrice, Alice, w. of Rob., 
vii, 99”; Rob., vii, 99” 

Son of Belota, Rog., vii, 98» 

Son of Benedict, Hen., vi, 2041; 
Rich., vi, 544” 

Son of Bernard, Hen., vii, 45”; 
Rob., vi, 69”; vii, 134”, Igr, 
192", 194”, 308 n, 318, 318 n, 
323 %, 3247 

Son of Bimme, Rob., vii, 
Rog., vi, 290; vii, 30” 

Son of Candelay, Will., vii, 330 

Son of Cecily, Amy, w. of Rob., vii, 
97%; Rob., vii, 97 2 

Son of Christiana, Hen., vi, 538”; 
Rob., vi, 485 ”; Will., vi, 69 n 

Son of Clibard, John, vi, 338 2 

Son of Cyprus, Hen., vi, 475” 

Son of Dandy (Dande), Rob., vi, 
469; Steph., vi, 538 

Son of David, Hugh, vi, 417; 
Randle, vi, 424” 

Son of Dene, Rob., vi, 18 2 

Son of Diota, Grimbald, vii, 192 ” 

Son of Dobin, Cecily, w. of Rich., 

vii, 116 ”; Rich., vii, 116 
Son of Donote, Cecily, w. of Thos., 
vi, 393 ”; Thos., vi, 393 
Son of Duncan, Will. vi, 360 
Son of Dunning, Siward, vi, 303” 
Son of Eafward (Efward, Eward), 
Ad., vii, 172”, 173”; Gille- 
michael, vii, 177; Hen,, vii, 
171”, 173; Rob., v:i, 173; 
Og., Vil, 172, 173” 

Son of Ecke, John, vi, 336 

Son of Edith, Rich., vi, 3262; 
Uctred, vii, 130”; Will, vi, 
36n, 162 
Son of Edwin, Will., Vil, 229” 
Son of Efward, see Son of Eafward 
Son of Eilsi, see Son of Ailsi 
Son of Elfward, Torfin, vi, 538% 
Son of Ellen, Will., vii, 283 
Son of Ellis, Ad., vi, 4770; 
Christiana, w. of Hen., vi, 117; 
Hen., vi, 11”; John, vi, 485; 
Rich., vi, 469 2; Rob., vi, 387” 

Son of Elsi, see Son of Ailsi 

Son of Emma, Walt., vi, 3677” 

Son of Eustace, Rob., vi, 503 ” 

Son of Eward, see Son of Eafward 

Son of Felicia, John, vi, 203” 

Son of Finian, Rob., vi, 26” 

Son of Fulk, Will., vi, 366 ” 


30%; 


INDEX 


Son of Gamel, Ellis, vi, 506”; 
Gamel, vii, 98 x; Rob., vi, 524 ”, 
538n; Rog., see Nutshaw, Rog. 

Son of Geoffrey, John, vi, 24”; 
Pet., vii, 130; Rich., vi, 297, 
299, 350%; Rob., vi, 69 te eae 

,, 


350 M, 413; vil, 13 9; 
355 2 

Son of Gilbert, Hen., vi, 67", 335, 
475”; John, vi, 254, 480; 


Rich., vit, 3; Rob., vi, 335%; 
Siward, vi, 253; Uctred, vi, 26 

Son of Gillemichael (Gillomichael), 
Ad., vii, 131; Gospatrick, vii, 
177"; Rob., vii, 177” 

Son of Godith, Geoff., vii, 54 7 

Son of Godrich, Rob., vi, 498 

Son of Gospatric (Gospatrick), Alan, 
vi, 303 ”, 304; Rich,, vi, 303 n, 
304”; Rog., vi, 303; Thos., vi, 
509 ; Ughtred, vi, 303 ", 304” 

Son of Griffin, Rich. vi, 444%, 


470” 

Son of Grimbald, Rob., vii, 332” ; 
Will, vii, 332” 

Son of Gubalt, Rich., vi, 291 n 

Son of Hagemund, Alan, vii, 232 

Son of Hamelin, Rog., vii, 306” 

Son of Hamon, Will., vii, 113 

Son of Hartholf, Gamel, vii, 271 » ; 
Walt., vii, 271 ” 

Son of Harvey, Will., vii, 306 ” 

Son of Haward, Rog., vii, 172 

Son of Hawise (Helewise), Hen., 
vil, 46%; Will. vi, 377”; vii, 

168 2 

Son of Heardbert, Alric, vi, 349 

Son of Helewise, see Son of Hawise 

Son of Hen., Ad., vi, 131", 548; 
vii, 282”, 283”; Agnes, w. of 
Ad., vii, 283”; Alex., vi, 49 n, 
402”; Ellis, vi, 134”; Gilb., 
vi, 398”; Hen., vi, 291; vii, 
93”; Herb., vi, 131”; Hugh, 
vi, 131 ”, 201 2; John, vi, 134 n, 
201 n, 369m"; Rich., vi, 326n, 
474%, 475”, 538”; Rob., vii, 
45; Rog., vi, 202m, 301 n, 
40on; Will. vi, 26, 367” 

Son of Herbert, Ellis, vii, 1697; 
Mich., vii, 134” 

Son of Hiche, Rich., vi, 488 

Son of Hobkin, Hen., vi, 480 

Son of Hubert, Hervey, vi, 68 n, 
69n 

Son of Huck, Rob., vii, 166”; 
Siward, vii, 252 n, 254n; 
Ughtred (Uctred), vi, 314; vii, 
I17, 232 

Son of Hugh, Ailsi, vi, 314, 317, 
320, 324; Alan, vi, 411”; Hen., 
vi, 411 ; Nich., vi, 193”; Rob., 
vii, 283”; Thos., vi, 4II Nn; 
Uctred, vi, 417; Will., vi, 188 n, 
374%, 411 

Son of Hulle, John, vi, 193”; Will., 
vi, 70” 

Son of Huttemon, Rog., vi, 290 

Son of Hypper, Hen., vi, 475 

Son of James, Ad., vii, 24707” 

Son of John, Ad., vi, 24n, 548; 
Alex., vi, 224»; Geoff., vi, 480 ; 
Hen., vi, 24, 2017; John, vii, 
116”; Jordan, vi, 224 n, 3057; 
Rich., vii, 168 » ; Rob., vi, 475 n, 
548; vii, 160n; Rog., vi, 49 7, 
214%”; Will, vi, 24” 

Son of Jordan, Ad., vi, 548 ; Geoff., 
vi, 375”; Rob., vii, 158”; Will, 
vi, 506 n 

Son of Keelin, Will., vi, 428 

Son of Kenwrick, Steph., vi, 498 

Son of Kutte, Thos., vii, 27” 

Son of Lefwin, see Son of Leofwin 

Son of Leising, Ellis, vii, 54” 


415 


Son of Leofwin (Lefwin), Efward, 
vi, 291”, 320; Hugh, vi, 264, 
266, 291 m, 320, 411, 413, 414%, 


417, 424, 538 m; Swain, vi, 
303 . 
Son of Levenot, Rog., vil, 130”, 


132” 4 
Son of Lewe, Ad., vii, 283 ” 
Son of Madoc, Candelay, vii, 330” 
Son of Magnus, Orm., vii, 108, 179, 


2 

eee Margery, Ad., vil, 160”; 
Hen., vi, 391”; Marg., w. of 
Hen., vi, 391 2; Rich., vi, 339”; 
vii, 27”; Will, vi, 538” ; 

Son of Mary, Ad., vi, 05; Denise, 
w. of Ad., vi, 65 

Son of Matthew, John, vi, 480) 

Son of Maud (Matilda), Geoff, vil, 
1802; John, vi, 326 2; Rog., vii, 
331”; Siward, vi, 76" 

Son of Maulke, Ad., vi, 548 

Son of Maurice, Will., vii, 31, 31 ” 

Son of Michael, Gilb., vi, 424, 457 
Swain, vi, 70” 

Son of Mille, Rog., vii, 130” 

Son of Mirre, Hen., vii, 96", loon 

Son of Nicholas, Rob., vi, 475%, 
477”; Thos., vii, 230”; Will, 
vil, 48”, 94”, 158, 170n 

Son of Norman, Ralph, vi, 443 

Son of Olot, John, vi, 95 ” 

Son of Orm (Orme), Edw., vi, 
304”; Marg., d. of Will., vi, 
388; Rog., vi, 67; vii, 108; 
Thos., vii, 48”; Will., vi, 388 

Son of Osbert, Ad., vii, 170”; 
Swain, vii, 168”; Walt., vii, 
127, 161, 161 n, 175” 

Son of Owen, Rich., vii, 130 7 

Son of Patrick, Ad., vii, 183 

Son of Paulin (Paulinus), Ad., vii, 
192”; Will., vii, 94 

Son of Peter, Ad., vi, 546” 

Son of Philip, Ad., vi, 287; vii, 
98 n 

Son of Quenilda, Jordan, vii, 160” 

Son of Raghanald, Ravenkil, vii, 
285 

Son of Ralph, Ad., vi, 2257; vii, 
198”, 199”; Hugh, vi, 374n; 
Jordan, vii, 13”, 15”; Nich., 
vil, 13 2; Reyner, vi, 509; Rich., 
vi, 26 n, 253; Rob., vi, 307” 

Son of Ravenkil (Ranchil), Rog., 
vii, 285, 285 n 

Son of Reinfred, see Fitz Reinfred 

Son of Reyner, Gilb., vi, 4560; 
John, vi, 509 

Son of Richard, Ad., vii, 172, 
271”; Alex., vi, 503; Benet, vi, 
151m; Bern., vi, 3287; Hen., 


vi, 504m”, 505”; vill, 2097; 
John, vi, 26, I5In; Jordan, 
vu, 179”; Ralph, vii, 180 . 


Rich,, vi, 444, 469 n; Rob., vi, 
365 1, 366 n, 371 0, 475 n, 485n; 
Rog., vi, 424”; vii, 27”; Thos., 
vu, 57”; Walt., vii, 637; Will., 
Vl, 4575 vil, 35, 116 n, 160 2, 
193 ”, 2719” 

Son of Robert, Ad., vi, 227 n, 480; 
vu, 94”; Albred (Aubred), vi, 
74,927, Alice, w. of Albred, vii, 
92”; Gcoff., vi, 457, 497”; Hen. 
vil, 16”; John, vi, 224"; vii, 
45”; Kandelan, vi, 296; Rich., 
Vi, 32", 134, 1897, I99n; 
Rob., Vi, 131 #; vii, 132, 180n; 
Rog., V1, 96 7; vii, 169; Swain, 
vil, 63, 65”; Thos., vi, 3877; 
vu, 136”; Will, vi, 480; vii 
173 n, 180 n, 181 n, 268 

Son of Roger, Ad., vi, 240n; vii, 
17I” 216n, 283n; Amice, d. 


’ 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Son of Roger (cont.) 


of Rich., vi, 285 %; Avice, d. of 
Rich., vu, 2852; G:lb., vii, 153, 
300; Hen., vil, 130”; Jordan, 
vil, 273”; Marg., d. of Rich., 
vii, 285”; Marg., w. of Rich., 
vii, 214; Margery, w. of Rich., 
vil, 285”; Maud, d. of Rich., 
vii, 285; Quenilda, d. of Rich., 


vii, 285 ” ; Randle, vi, 203 ; Rich., 
vi, 103, 151m, 240”; vii, 159, 
180", 214”, 217, 228, 2297, 
249 n, 285, 289, 306 2; Rob., vii, 
94n; Rog., vi, 24%”, 240%, 
273"; Thos., vii, 173 ”; Uctred, 
vii, 132”; Victor, vi, 49”; Will, 
vi, 240”, 4057”; vi, 98 n, 331” 

Son of Rosselin, Will., vii, 45 » 

Son of Samson, Will., vi, 397 

Son of Siegrith, Hugh, vii, 52 7% 

Son of Simon, Ad., vii, 1167; 
Alan, vi, 499”; Gilb., vi, 335; 
John, vi, 503; Walt., vii, 130” 

Son of S'red, see Son of Syrith 

Son of Siward (Suard), Ad., vii, 
97”, 98n; Hugh, vi, 506; John, 
vi, 62"; Rich., vii, 190 2; Sim., 
vi, 395; Will, vi, 15”, 72n, 
2531 

Son of Steinulf, Reyner, vi, 70” 

Son of Stephen, Rob., vii, 97” 

Son of Suard, see Son of Siward 

Son of Swain (Sweyn), Ad., vii, 
285; Alan, vi, 37; Geoff., vi, 
320 n; Gospatric, vi, 303, 304”; 
Hen., vi, 103 2; Rich., vii, 166 n, 
192; Thos., vii, 63”; Uctred, 
vii, 277 , 279n; Walt., vii, 182, 
229, 276; Will., vii, 69”, 92n, 
229, 230, 241 n, 305 

Son of Syrith (Sired, Syrid), Albin, 
vi, 66”; Ellis, vi, 37” 

Son of Thomas, Ad., vii, 48, 247; 
Ellis, vi, 387 ” ; Geoff., vi, 5387; 
Hugh, vi, 373, 374"; John, vi, 
I7In; Rich., vii, 27”; Rob., 
vii, 170, 179 n; Rog., vi, 511”; 
Thos., vi, 387 n; Will, vi, 14%, 
72", 374" 

Son of Thorfin, Jordan, v.i, 295 » 

Son of Thurstan, Ad., vii, 24 n, 


29n 

Son of Uctred (Ughtred), Ad., vii, 
1262; Gamel, vi, 538; Hen., 
vi, 131”; Octepranus, vii, 65"; 
Rich., vii, 63”, 117, 134, 3257; 


Rob., vi, 72”; vil, 117”, 134, 
160 n, 325”; Thos., vi, 499”; 
Will., vi, 16”; vii, 160 n, 279Nn 


Son of Uld, Alan, vi, 314 

Son of Ulf (Ulfy), Ad., vii, 2842; 
Agnes, w. of Ad., vii, 284”; 
Hen., vii, 283 2; Rob., vil, 52 7 

Son of Ulfkil (Ulfkelf), G lb, vi, 
252; Waldeve, vi, 252, 253; 
Will, vi, 105” 

Son of Vivian, Rich., vii, 54” 

Son of Walter, Ad., vi, 4517, 
480 n, 485 7; vii, 172; Swain, 
vi, 7on; Theobald, vii, 2477; 
Will., vii, 161”, 175%” 

Son of Waltheof, Ad., vii, 132” 


Son of Warine, Alan, vi, 499”; 
Alex., vii, 132”; Hen., vi, 
402"; Rich. vi, 667, 67 nN; 
WIilL, wi, 180 


Son of Wen (Wenne), Hen., vi, 
I5I”, 170” 

Son of Will., Ad., vi, 105 ”, 107”; 
vii, 27”, 131”; Hen., vi, 503, 
505, 506”; vii, 92 2; Hugh, vi, 
201; John, vi, 53 ”, 72 ”, 355”, 
377%, 552”; Vu, 229”; Nich, 
vil, 13; Ralph, vi, 3657; Rich., 
vi, I5tm”; vii, 1797, "189 2: 


Son of Will. (cont.) 


Rob., vi, 443; vil, 48"; Rog., 
vi, 72"; Thos., vi, 117 n, 405 n, 
475"; Vu, 27"; Will, vi, 72, 


428; vii, 63" 
Son of Wlflet, Rog., vii, 217 
Soot hill (Over Darwen), vi, 269 
Soperson, Marg., vii, 136"; Will, 
vil, 136” 
Soppederahhe (Clitheroe), vi, 
Sorbi, see Sowerby 
Sotby, man. (Lincs), vi, 35” 
Sotehill, Denise de, vii, 154 ”; John 
(de), vi, 491 ; vii, 154 
Sotheryn, Sothron, see Surreys 
Sothul, Sir John de, vi, 262 
Sothworth, see Southworth 
Sough (Over Darwen), vi, 270 
Sough Lane Ends (Oswaldtwistle), 
vi, 405 
Sough tunnel (Over Darwen), vi 


365" 


270 

Sourby (Foulridge), vi, 547 

Soureby, Souribough, see Sowerby 

Souter, John the, vii, 326 

Souter hill (Trawden), vi, 552” 

Souters, —, vii, 245 ” 

South brook bridge (Croston), vi, 
122” 

Southerns, Eliz. (Old Demdike), vi 
515; see also Surreys 

Southfield (Marsden), vi, 536, 538”, 


539 
Southfield House (Marsden), vi, 


539 
South Hill (Whittle-le-Woods), vi 
6 


Southron, see Surreys 

South Shore (Blackpool), vii, 243, 
247 

South Tunley (Wrightington), vi, 
167 , 176 

Southward, Joshua, vii, 165, 204 

Southwell, Edwyn Hoskyns, bp. of, 
Vi, 452 

Southwood, Cecily, vii, 152” 

Southworth (Sothworth, Suther- 
worth), Ad. (de), vi, 263”; vii, 
268; Agnes, vi, 321; ‘Alice 
(de), vi, 261”, 305; vii, 268, 
2847; Ann (Anne), vi, 306, 383 7; 
Cecily de, vi, 305; Sir Chris., 
vi, 39”, 292, 305, 321; Chris., 
Vi, 263», 268, 306, 3067, 458; 
Edw., vi, 307, 307”; Eliz. (de), 
vi, 261, 305, 306, 378”; vii, 268, 
330; Ellen (de), vi, 261, 305 n, 
306; vii, 100 n, 268; Eva de, 
vi, 200; G'lb. de, vi, 261 n, 
262, 271M, 290, 305; vii, 62%, 
322; Hugh, vi, 261”; Isabel, 


vi, 305, 444”; Jane, vi, 261, 
306 ; vil, 106 n, 163 n; Joan (de), 
Vi, 292, 305, 458; vii, 268%, 


306 n, 322; Sir John (de), vi, 
39%, 77 N, 235, 262, 262 n, 263 n, 
267 n, 268, 271, 305, 306, 306n, 
340%”, 405%, 406”; Vil, I12, 
163”, 200”, 212”; John (de), 
vi, 261, 263”, 268, 306, 307%, 
310, 310%, 311; vii, 50”, 62n, 
284", 3067; Marg. (de), vi, 
39, 305, 306”, 310%, 3152; 
vii, 268, 269; Margery, vi, 306; 
Mary, vi, 306; vii, 150”; Maud, 


vi, 444; Nich. ‘de, vii, 268: 
Rich., vi, 261, 268, 271 n, 305, 
310, 312”; vii, 284"; Rosa- 


mund, vi, 257, 309; Sir Thos. 
(de), vi, 261”, 271, 305, 30%, 
397, 399, 319, 315, 315 ”, 3327; 
vii, 49”; Thos. (de), vi, 257, 
261, 263, 271, 304”, 305, 306, 
310m, 378, 383"; vii, 477, 
48n, 62n, I12", 152”, 268, 


416 


Southworth (cont.) 
269, 297"; Thurstan, vii, 116 n, 
285; Will. (de), vi, 305n; 
vii, 27m, 100", 177", 223, 268, 
324, 326, 330n 

Southworth Green Farm (Mellor), 
vi, 244 

Sow Clough (Newchurch in Rossen- 
dale), vi, 438 n 


Sowerbutts, Chris., vii, 34.3 Itich., 
vii, 35”; Rob., vu, 35”, 58n; 
Thos., vi, 237 ", 310"; vil, 50n, 


58n; Will, vii, 35” 
Sowerbutts Green (Samlesbury), vi, 


310 

Sowerby, Aldred 
Sowerby, Little 

Sowerby, Gt. (Inskip with Sower- 
by), vil, 274”, 279, 302m; 
char., vii, 267; fishery, vii, 
281 n; man., vii, 281-2 

Sowerby, Little (Upper Rawcliff 
with Tarnacre), vii, 260, 261 m, 
264 n, 270, 271 mM, 272-3, 274 

Sowerby, mere, vii, 281 ” 

Sowerby, riv., vii, 270” 

Sowerby, Alan de, vii, 272"; 
Amabil de, vii, 283 »; Amice de, 
vil, 272”; Hen. de, vii, 282"; 
Hugh de, vii, 282”; John de, 
vi, 73”; vil, 281”; Margery de, 
vil, 281”; Nich. de, vii, 2812”; 
Rich. de, vi, 73”; vii, 282 n, 
284; Rog. de, vii, 281 2; Thos. 
de, vi, 73»; Walt. de, vii, 268” 

Spa Clough (Habergham Eaves), 
vi, 455 F 

Spakeman, Nich., vi, 191 

Sparling, brook, vii, 127 

Sparling, John, vi, 161 

Sparrhawk (Burnley), vi, 450” 

Sparrow, —, vii, 

Snarth (Clayton- Te- oon vi, 417 

Sparth, Nearer (Old) (Clayton- -le- 
Moors), vi, 423 

Sparth House (Further Sparth), 
(Clayton-le-Moors), vi, 422 

Spartling, vi, 258, 355” 

Spa well (Woodacre), vii, 315 

Speke, Eliz., vi, 236”; John, v), 
518% 

Speke Sykes (Cliviger), vi, 481” 

Speks, Rob., vi, 339” 

Spence, the (Penwortham), vi, 61 2 

Spence moor, vi, 514 

Spencer, Ld., vii, 307 ” 

Spencer (Spenser), Rev. Abra., vi, 


(Aldrith), see 


420, 435; Ad. (le), vi, 474”, 
475”; Alice, vii, 185”, 307"; 

Cecily le, vii, 1547; Chas., vii, 
307; Edm., vi, 468n, 474%, 
475, 478 n, 485 n, 504”; Eliz., 
vii, 307, 311”; Geo., vi, 491; 

Grace, vi, 478 nN; Isabel, vi, 
478; Janet, vi, 478%, ‘Jobn 


(le), vi, 475”, 478%, 489, 5473 
vii, 166 ”, 173", 307”; Jos., vi, 
531 Nn; Marg., vi, 4781; Margery, 
vi, 511 n; Mary, vi, 516; vil, 
31im; Miles, vii, 147m; Pet., 
vi, 511 2; Rich. (de, le) ,vi, 511”; 
vii, 154, 173%; Rob. (le), vi, 


197”, 478”; Rog. le, vi, 19%, 
58n; Thos., vii, 185 n, 208 n : 
Will. (le), vi, 58”; vil, 307, 


311 n, 312; see also Despenser — 
Spenclough (Whittingham), vii, 
209 n 
Bo alow (Spendloue, Spendlove), 


Amery ( Paonia de, vii, 14”- 
15”, 597; vii, 1323 
Rob. (de), eee ”: vii, 15%, 
59”, 131 me "132 n; Rog., vii, 


131, 132”; Walt., vi, 
392 n, 397 1, 506" 


371 2, 


Spenser, see Spencer 
Spenser’s House (Hurstwood), vi, 


8 
spenythorn, Will. de, vi, 330 2 
Sperlet (Ingol), vil, 134 ” 
Spicer, John, vii, 255 ae 
Spileman, Hugh, vi, 193”; Rich., 
vi, 193 : 
Spilot, Will., vi, 208 
Spink, John, vi, 188 
Spinkholme (Habergham Eaves), 
vi, 455 7 4 
Spinster House (Goosnargh), vii, 
198 n 
Spiritualists, vii, 251 
Spitalfield (Lea), vi, 130 , 132” 
Spital Moss (Preston), vii, 79 ”, 92 
Spode, Thos., vi, 55 
Sposage, Ad. le, vii, 97 »; Hugh le, 
® “vii, 79 2, 97%; Rob. le, vii, 79 # ; 
Rog. le, vil, 79% 
Spout, the (Euxton), vi, 20% 
Spring, Bridg., vi, 295 | 
Springfield (Coppull), vi, 224 
Springfield Mills (Heath Charnock), 
vi, 213 
Springs, mineral, vi, 130, 260, 455 
Spring Vale, see Sough a 
Sprodpoolhey (Ribchester), vii, 47 
Sprodspool (Ribchester), vii, 49 ” 
Spurn Clough (Reedley), vi, 489 
Squire (Squier), John, vil, 477”; 
Rob., vi, 236 ”, 237 ”, 340 ”, 519 
Stacksteads (Bacup), vi, 437, 441 
Stafford, archd. of, vii, 177 » 
Stafford, Anabil de, vi, 3477; 
John de, vi, 369”; Rich. de, vi, 
347 n; Rob. de, vii, 217 ” 
Stainacregrene (Warton), vii, 173 
Stainall, see Stanah and Staynall 
Stainburgh, Jordan de, vii, 54”; 
Will. de, vil, 54” 
Stainer, man. (Yorks), vi, 421 
Stainer Hall (Yorks), vi, 421 
Stainford, see Stanford 
Staingate, vi, 263 
Stainhol, see Stanah and Staynall 
Staining, man. (Hardhorn-with- 
Newton), vii, 184, 231, 238-9; 
grange, vi, 281, 287; vii, 238 
Staining, Alice de, vii, 130”; 
Christiana, vii, 152; Mich. de, 
vii, 152”; Rich. vii, 1527; 
Rob. de, vii, 130 7 
Staining ditch (Little Carleton), 
vii, 229 ” 
Stainole, Stainolf, see Stanah and 
Staynall 
Stainscomb (Goldshaw Booth), vi, 
516 
Stake House Fells (Bleasdale), vii, 
141 
Stakes Hall (Livesey), vi, 284, 288 
Stalmine (Stalmine-with-Staynall), 
vii, 68, 173”, 188%, 248 n, 
251-6, 258, 274, 275”, 3062, 
332; adv., vii, 255; char., vii, 
256; ch., vii, 255; Noncont., 
vu, 256 
Stalmine, Ad. de, vii, 252 ; Adelissa 
de, vii, 252; Alan, vii, 2527; 
Alice de, vii, 252; Ellen de, 
vu, 252”; Eva de, vii, 252 n, 
254”; Geoff., vii, 252 ; Godith 
de, vii, 252”; Helen de, vii, 
250”; Hen., vii, 252 m; John de, 
vu, 252; Mabel de, vii, 252”; 
Maud, vii, 252”; Pet. de, vii, 
252; Randle de, vii, 252 ; Rob. 
de, vii, 252; Will. de, vii, 223, 
252, 255; see also Beaufront 
Stalmine Grange (Stalmine), vii, 
254 
Stalon, John, vi, 194”; Rich., vi, 
194” 


7 


INDEX 


Stamford, see Stanford 

Stammine, fishery of, vi, 67 7 

Stanah (Thornton), vii, 231”, 232, 
309 

Stanah, fam., see Staynall 

Stanall (Westby-with-Plumptons), 
vii, 175” 

Stananought, Edw., vi, 151; Hen., 
vi, 151, 181 2; Thos., vi, 151 

Stanbury (Trawden), vi, 551, 552 

Stanclif (Billington), vi, 328” 

Standen (Pendleton), vi, 230 7, 349, 
356M, 364 M, 392, 394-5; grange, 
vi, 394; man., vi, 394 

Standen, Ad. de, vi, 503”; Alice, 
vi, 390, 391, 301”; Iidm., vi, 
513”; Ellen, vii, 254”; Ellis de, 
vi, 503”; Hen. (de), vi, 364 7, 
375, 390, 395, 488 2; Hugh, 
vi, 368, 513; John (de), vi, 
399, 391, 393%, 395"; Mary. 
de, vi, 3902; Rich., vi, 3667; 
Thos. (de), vi, 304 7, 3606, 395 2; 
vil, 2542; Vivian de, vi, 395 25 
Walt. de, vi, 395 n; Will. de, vi, 


395 2” : 
Standen [olds (Pendleton), vi, 


395 2% 

Standen Hall (Pendleton), vi, 395 

Standen Hey (Pendleton), vi, 349, 
392, 395 

Standford, see Stanford 

Standish (Standish-with-Langtrec), 
vi, 1, 58 , 182-99 ; adv., vi, 187 ; 
char., vi, 191; ch., vi, 2, 183; 
man., vi, 193; Nonconf., vi, 199 ; 
Rom. Cath., vi, 199; sch., vi, 191 

Standish, Agatha de, vi, 2097; 
Sir Alex. (de), vi, 61”, 188, 
190 N, 194, 195, 209 n ; Alex. (de), 
vi, 33”, 35”, 143”, 185, 187, 


187, 188, I90”, I9I”, 193, 
195, 196, 198”, 199%, 200%, 
210, 212”, 214”, 216”; vii, 


200; Alice (de), vi, 93 ”, 95%, 
107M, 193”, 195, 198%”, 209”, 
223”, 226; Anne, vi, 19512, 
212; Arth., vii, 119”; Bridg., 
vi, 195”; Cecilia (Cecily) (de), 
vi, 193”, 194”, 196, 460”; 
Chas., vi, 187 2; Chas. H. W. L., 
vi, 196; Chas. S., vi, 196; 
Christiana, vi, 194”; Sir Chris., 
vi, 51”, 209; Chris., vi, 1077, 
198 n, 209; vii, 210”; Clemency 
de, vi, 209”, 224”; Constance 
de, vi, 194”; Edm. (de), vi, 
188 n, 193, 194”, 201 2, 2021N; 
Edw., vi, 182 », 185, 189, 192 », 
195, 196, 198 n, 199, 200, 200 n, 
201 n, 202, 208, 211, 212%, 
219”, 224, 229N, 264, 460, 
462; Edw. T., vi, 186; Eleanor 
de, vi, 193”, 194”; Eliz, (de), 
Vi, 33%, 112 n, 194 2, 195, 195 n, 
196 n, 197 N, 200 nN, 209 Nn, 210 N, 
214 n, 264, 275; Ellen, vi, 195 7; 
Emma I. H., vi, 210”; Frances, 
vi, 195; Sir Frank, vi, 33 2, 
36, 51, 146, 210, 213, 214, 
217; Frank H., vi, 14!, 210; 
Fulco (Fulk) de, vi, 93”, 95”; 
Gilb. (de), vi, 186, 188, 194%, 
21g4n, 218; Hen. (de), vi, 
134”, 188, I90m, 193M”, 194, 
197, 200”; Hen. N. W,, vi, 196; 
Hugh de, vi, 51, 142%”, 193, 
194”, 202”, 208, 209, 209”, 
214 n, 223 n, 224”; Humph.,, vi, 
211”; Isolda de, vi, 93”; Jas., 
vi, 33”, 51”, 142, 182%, I9QI, 
198 2, 202, 202”, 209, 210%”, 
211M, 212, 212%, 213, 216”; 
vii, 275; Jane, vii, 119”; Joan 
(de), vi, 145”, 194”, 212%; 


417 


Standish (cont.) 
John (de), vi, 93 7, 107, 188, 
193, 193”, 194”, 197”, 200%, 
226; Jordan de, vi, 193, 197 , 
200 n, 208, 208%, 209; Kath. 
(Cath.) (de), vi, 146, 174 2, 209 n, 
2102; Lawr. (de), vi, 188, 189 x, 
194, 198”, 199”, 200n, 201 2, 
209, 212”; Lora (de), vi, 
194”, 200”, 216”; Mabel de, 
vi, 193”; Marg. (de), vi, 189 2, 
194M, 209, 209, 210M, 212; 
vii, 169 7, 275”; Marg. L. M., 
vi, 210”; Margery (de), vi, 194, 
200 un, 204; Mary (de), vi, 146, 
1947, 195”; Matth., vi, 182 2, 
210, 211K; Miles, vi, 211; 
Nich, de, vi, 19,2”; Oliver, vi, 
200%; Pct., vi, 23; Philippa, 
Lady, vi, 197%; Sir Ralph 
(de), vi, 188”, 194; Ralph (de), 
vi, 94, 112”, 142, 174”, 176 n, 
182, 186, 187 7, 188, 188 2, 189, 
190”, I9IM, 193, 194, 194”, 
195, 196, 197”, 198%”, 2007, 
202 2, 209 N, 210, 211 n, 212 0, 
2106, 217n, 264, 265, 4607, 
462 ; Ralph T., vi, 196 ; Sir Rich., 
vi, 32, 51”, 198%, 210; Rich. 
(de), vi, 18”, 51”, 143”, 189, 
193, 200%”, 208%, 209, 209 7, 
210, 212”, 213”, 214”, 2167, 
217 N, 223 n, 224”, 391 2; Rob. 
(de), vi, 93 , 109 n, 193 ”, 194 n, 
197 %, 200N, 201 n, 202”; Rog. 
(de), vi, 160, 188, 200; Sir 
Rowland, vi, 145 ”, 209 7; Sibyl, 
vi, 195”; Siward de, vi, 197; 
Susan A. G., vi, 210 2; Sir Thos., 
vi, 52”, 146, 210”; Thos., vi, 
33”, 35%, 51M, 173n, 182n, 
189 n, 198”, 200%, 202”, 209, 
210, 213, 216, 217”, 2241, 
2937; vii, 98”, 169”, 193”, 
275”; Thos. S., vi, 196; Thur- 
stan (de), vi, 200, 212”; Rev. 
Turner, vi, 452; Sir T., vi, 452; 
Will. (de), vi, 142”, 188, 193, 
193”, 194”, 196, 200%, 208n, 
209, 209%”, 210, 212”, 2141, 
223; Will. S. C., vi, 210; —, 
Lady, vi, 192 ”; vii, 296”; fam., 
vii, 329” 

Standish Hall (Standish), vi, 196, 
462 

Standish Wood 
1977” 

Standroyd (Colne), vi, 523, 528, 543 

Standroyd Hall (Colne), vi, 528 

Stanedich, Stanedis, Stanedissh, 
see Standish 

Staneyard (Wilpshire), vi, 335 2 

Stanfield, see Stansfield 

Stanford (Stainford, Stamford), 
Agnes de, vii, 328”; Alex. de, 
vil, 223, 223 , 226”; Edusa de, 
vil, 226 2; Jas., vil, 20, 44”, 51, 
59”; John (de), vi, 303”; vii, 
325N, 326n, 328n, 329n; Lawr. 
de, vil, 328”; Maud de, vii, 
328; Ralph de, vii, 3282; Rich. 
de, vi, 303 2; vii, 325”, 3 8n; 


(Standish), vi, 


Rob. de, vii, 223 ”, 226, 425 n, 
328 n ; Thos. de, vii, 326 7, 328 1; 
Will. de, vi, 303 ” 

Stanfurlong (Longton), vi, 71, 
73.0 

Stanhill (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 405; 
ch., vi, 409 

Stanhill Hey (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 

06 n 

Stanhol, see Staynall 

Stanhope, Phil., vi, 293; Sarah, 
vi, 293 2; Thos., vii, 86 

Staniggefethir (Lea), vii, 130 2 


53 


A. HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Stanistreet, Rich., vii, 213 1; Rob., 
Vil, 2139” 

Stank Top (Barley), vi, 518 

Stanlaw (Stanlenwre), Ad. de, vi, 
506n ; Ellis (de), vi, 506; Thos. 
de, vi, 506; —, de, vi, 506n 

Stanlaw Abbey (Chesh.), vi, 48, 49, 
240, 245, 262 n, 264, 266, 271, 
279, 285, 287, 297, 297, 312, 
326 n, 328, 335, 356, 369 7, 382, 
413, 414-16, 432, 505, 534; Vil, 
45, 48, 97 n, 156m, 172, 238, 
240, 241n, 284n, 356, 383; 
Chas., abbot of, vi, 239”; 
Gregory de Northbury, abbot of, 
vi, 383 

Stanlenwre, see Stanlaw 

Stanley, Lds., vi, 458, 490, 491, 
549; vi, 280; Thos., vi, 132, 
159”, 257, 488; vii, 33, 35.” 

Stanley, Alice, vi, 293 ; Anne (Ann), 
vi, 200, 306, 401 n; vii, 278; 
Bridg., vii, 200”; Cath., vii, 
156”; Chas., vi, 627”, 71M; 
Dorothy, vii, 275 ”; Sir Edw., vi, 
142, 143, 195, 292, 322”; vii, 
5; see also Derby, earls of, and 
Mounteagle, Lds.; Edw., vi, 
110, 294; vil, 169 ”, 230 n, 288 n, 
292; Eliz., vii, 34; E. G., vii, 
73; Frances, vi, 294; Sir Geo., 
Vi, 123, 125,202; G40., vi, 321? 
Hen., vii, 275", 278"; Sir Jas., 
vi, 287; Jas., vi, 160, 41817; 
vii, 230; Jane, vi, 62", 71H, 
287, 321; vi, 163”; Sir John 
(de), vi, 40, 254, 267, 302, 321, 
498", 504; vii, I54m”, 176, 
179 n, 274; John, vi, 321; vil, 
86”; Marg., vi, 316, 321, 418; 
Mary, vi, 123, 310; vii, 278m; 
Pet., vi, 261  ; vii, 200”; Rich., 
vi, 262; vii, 278; Rob., vii, 
278; Sir Rowland, vii, 164; Sir 
Thos., vi, 159, 225, 255 , 305 n, 
330; vii, 34, 62 n, 173 2, 176 n, 
241”; see also Derby, earls of, 
and Mountcagle, Lds.; Thos., v1, 
140, 261 m, 322 n; vii, 156m, 16, 
166, 167, 183, 278; WIL, 
Vi, 2M, 213, 261 n, 316; vii, 99n, 
230; Mrs., vii, 278; fam., vi, 
203, 304; vii, 29, 102”, 173, 
283n 

Stanley Grange (Samlesbury), vi, 
312 

Stanley House (Mellor), vi, 21 

Stanning, John, vi, 5 ” 

Stanrays (Bilsborrow), vii, 332 

Stanroyd, see Standroyd 


Stansacre (Stanzaker),  (Myers- 
cough), vii, 139 
Stansfield (Stanfield, Stansfeld), 


Ellis de, vi, 511; Emma de, 
Vi, 4745 Geoff, wi, 444m, arg n; 
Giles, vi, 444. 4745 Helewise, v., 
444; Jas., v:, 444”, 474.2; Joan, 
V1, 444, 444%, 474; John de, vi, 
474”, Mabel de, vi, 332; Oliver 
de, vi, 327", 332, 444, 446, 
479, 474, 4752, 4770, 4807, 
488, 519; Rich. de, vi, 4747, 
477", 511; Will. (de), vi, roo n, 
332. 474; fam., v1, 449 


Stapleton, 


Startivant’s lands 


Hugh de, vii, 64"; 
John de, wn, 64 2; Miles de, vii, 
301 4; Sibyl de, vi, 301” 


Stark:e, Alice, v1, 500, 555”, 559; 


Anne, Vi, 500 7; vil, 259”, 329"; 
A. E. Le G., vi, 495, 514; Bar- 
bara, vil, 258”, 259; Bridz., 
vil, 259”; Edm., vi, 493, 499%, 
500, 501 7, 559”; Major Edm. 
wi. Le G., vi, 317; Edm. A. Le 
G., vi, 128, 257, 335, 501, 510; 
Eliz., vi, 30”; Ellen, vi, 559”; 
Etheldreda, vu, 121 7; Florence, 
vi, 500”; Geoff., vi, 500”; 
vi, 258 n, 259”; Grace, vi, 503; 
Hen., vii, 329m; Hen. A., vi, 
496; Hugh, vi, 500”; Isabel, 
vil, 329 2; Jas., vi, 80, 498, 500, 
559; vi, 86; Jane, vi, 500”; 
John, vi, 494”, 498 2, 499, 500, 
500%, 503, 513", 559%, Vi, 
117, 123, 329 n; Lawr., vi, 500 # ; 
Vii, 30”, 98”, I2tn, 1267; 
Le Gendre, vi, 318, 379, 501, 53, 
512, 514; vii, 136”; Col. Le 
Gendre N., vi, 495, 501; Le 
Gendre N., vi, 80, 127, 495; 
Le Gendre P., vi, 128”, 494, 
496 n, 501”; Marg., vii, 121”; 
Mary, vi, 536”; Rev. Matth. 
Y., vi, 274; Maud, vii, 100”; 
Nich., vi, 494%”, 498”, 499%, 
501, 5035 Vil, 35%, 117, 135”, 
136, 138%; Piers, vi, 20”, 257, 
317, 376, 392, 495, 4969", 499 N, 
500, 513”; Ralph vi, 5007; 
Randle, vi, 500”; Rich., vi, 30”, 
500 n; vil, 259 2; Rog., vil, 100 2; 
Sarah, vi, 559”; vii, 136”; 
Rev. Thos., vi, 560; Thos., vi, 
17”, 242, 245, 500%”, 501 Nn, 
555”, 553, 559; vii, 73, 117, 
195”, 2597; T., v1, 283”; WIL, 
Vi, 241”, 499”, 500, 501%, 
559 ; Capt., vi, 37; Col., vi, 513 1; 
Mrs., vi, 495, 500; —, vi, 368, 
392, 394. 408, 513; fam., vi, 
557 


Starling, brook, vii, 54 
Startivant (Startevant, Sturtivant), 


John, wi, 32; Rich., vi, 5; 
Rog., vu, 5, 32; Thos., vii, 32; 
fam., vil, 30 

(Whalley), vi, 
379" 


Stavenby, Alex. de, bp., vi, 240” 
Staynall 


(Stalmine-with-Staynall), 
vii, 100”, 117 Mn, 133, 231, 
245m, 251-6, 258”, 273, 274; 
mill, vii, 266 


Staynall (Stainall, Stainhol, Stainole, 


Stainolf, Stanah, Stanhol, Stay- 
nol, Staynolf, Steinhol, Steinol, 
Steynhole), Ad. de, vii, 254”; 
Alan de, vii, 235 ”; Hen. de, vii, 
254; John de, vii, 232, 234, 
235 n, 240n; Margery, vii, 234; 
Maud de, vii, 254 ”; Pet. de, vii, 
254”; Rich. de, vi, 181 7; vii, 
189 n, 234 n, 2547; Rob. de, vii, 
234n, 254”; Rog. (de), vii, 
234, 235”, 254”; Thos. de, 
vii, 189 n, 234"; WiIIL., vii, 234”, 
2357 


Stanworth (Withnell), vi, 37 72, 
39 , 47, 48, 282 

Stanworth, Ad. de; vi, 487; Hugh 
(de). vi, gon, 282 n, 342; Rog. 
de, vi. 37, 48, 49, 282, 282n; 
Thos. (de). vi, 49 n, 282 n 


Stanworth Edw: (Livesey), vi, 284 
Stanystrete, Rom. rd., vi, 257 
Stanzaker, see Stansacre 


Stapleford, Hugh de, vii, 1181; 


Rich. de, vii, 118 2 


Staynyng, see Staining 

Stede, see Stidd 

Steele, John, vi, 432 

Steeton, see Stiveton 

Steinhol, Steinol, see Stanah and 
Staynall 

Stephen, King, vii, 133 ” 


Stephen, vii, 97 ”; prior, vi, 411”; 


546; rector of Croston, vi, 87 
Stephen Hey (Briercliffe), vi, 471 2 
Stephens, Hen. J., vi, 541 


418 


Stephenson, Gro., wv, 4545 Rog., 
vi, 4002; Thos., vii, 105, 205; 
see also Stevenson 

St rclough Meadow (Wr shtington), 
vi, 17on 

Steresacre, see Stirzacre 

Stevenson, Alice, vi, 49)"; Edm, 
vi, 515", 514, 519, 521; John, 
vi, 495", 515, 517; J. C., vu, 
271; Nich., vi, §15 ", 519, §21; 
Sibyl, wi, 515”; Wl. (de), vi, 
S15 ny =) ML, 27h 3 see alsa 
Stephenson 

Stewart, Eliz., vil, 309; John, 
vii, 309 2; see also Stuart 

Stvyininges, Stcyninge, see Stain- 
ing 

Steynhole, see Stanah and Stuynall 

Stidd (Dutton), vn, 35, 4, 43, 45, 
51, 54, 153, 318; almshouscs, 
vil, 59; chap., vil, Go; man., vii, 
13, 58, 59 2 

Stidd, brook, vii, 54 

Stidd, Alex. de la, va, 
Rich. de la, vii, 59 » 

Stidd Hall (Stidd), vit, 60 » 

Stiholmes (Garstang), vii, 331 7” 

Stiholmes (Styholme), Ad. de, vii, 
52; Gilb. de, vi, 303; Rich. de, 
vi, 303 

Stiperden cross (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Stiperden moor (Stypdyne) (Clivi- 
ger), vi, 478, 486 

Stiropeclough (Dutton), vii, 65 # 

Stirrop, Rich., vii, 94 ” 

Stirzacre (Garstang), vii, 315, 318, 
319M, 321, 3233 Cross, Vii, 315 
Stirzacre (Stirzaker, Sturzaker), 
Alice, vil, 323”; Geoff. de, vil, 
323; Greg., vii, 300; Jane, vii, 
2001; Joan, vil, 323”; John, 
vii, 142”; Lawr., vii, 3237; 
Ralph de, vi, 458; vii, 325 2, 
320"; Rich. de, vii, 323, 326”; 
Rob. H. de, vii, 326”; Thos., 
vii, 329”; Will. de, vi, rogn, 

458 1; vii, 213 ”, 323 2, 320" 

Stiveton (Stecton), Ellis de, vii, 
153; Maud de, vii, 153”; Reyner 
de, vii, 153 ” 

Stock, see Stocks 

Stockbridge (Padiham), vi, 365 x, 
493 

Stockdale, Rev. Will, vi, 313; 
Will., vii, 25 

Stockenbridge (Little Carleton), vu, 
229n 

Stockenbridge (Tarnacre), vii, 267, 
272, 279 

Stockenbridge, fam., vil, 195 

Stockenpool (Hackensall), vil, 
250Nn 

Stocking (Clitheroe), vi, 365” 

Stockport, Ellen (de), vii, 159%, 
200 n, 279 n, 286 n; Joan de, vil, 
286n; Maud de, vii, 159”, 
249 n, 285; Rich. (de), vii, 200 n, 
286”; Sir Rob. de, vii, 255"; 
Rob. de, vii, 159 2, 160”, 200 n, 
228, 229, 229", 279”, 255, 
286 n, 287 

Stocks (Stock), Hen. del, vi, 438 7, 
481”; Thos. del, vi, 474%, 
485 n; Will, vi, 558 

Stocks Lane End (Catterall), vii, 
2937” 

Stodagh, John, vii, tor 2; Lam- 
bert, vii, 79 2, 138, 200”; Lawr., 
vil, 124, 138 

Stodelehurst, 
Studlehurst 

Stodfoldpool (Rossall), vii, 235 ” 

Stodilhirst, see Studlehurst 

Stodlecloch (Osbaldeston), vi, 324 # 

Stodley, see Studley 


Son, 


Stodelhurst, see 


Stodmerhalgh 
i, 488 ” 

Stodulhurst, see Studlehurst 

Stogesthol (Bleasdale), vii, 141 

Stokes, Alice, vi, 12”; Hen., vi, 
12” 

Stokkolhede (Barton), vii, 127 ” 

Stone, brook, see Stony brook 

Stone, Marmaduke, vii, 13; Thos., 
vi, 151 2; see also Stones 

Stone Benkes (Colne), vi, 525 ” 

Stone Bridge (Colne), vi, 535 


(Ightenhill Park), 


Stone Edge (Barrowford), vi, 542, 
544 

Stonehouse (Cliviger), vi, 479, 
481 2 


Stone House (Walton), vi, 296 
Stone lands (Gt. Eccleston), vii, 
2077 
Stone moor (Hapton), vi, 507 
Stone quarries, vi, 260, 326, 338, 
434, 437, 441 . 
Stonerake (Gt. Harwood), vi, 338 ” 
Stones, Andr., vi, 103, 150, 152; 
Geo. B., vii, 312 ; Hen., vi, 150”; 
John, vi, 103, 152, 432; Kath., 
vi, 152; Mary, vi, 150”; Thos., 
vi, 103, 153; Will., vi, 274, 283 ; 
see also Stone 
Stone-steghull 
vi, 418 
Stonhewer, Jane, vi, 354; John, vi, 


(Clayton-le-Moors), 


354 

Stonicausee (Little Harwood), vi, 
249 n 

Stonilode, sike of (Mellor), vi, 263 

Stonor, Chas. J., vi, 222 

Stony brook (Stonyhurst), vii, 2”, 
4n 

Stony Corthlong (Wiswell), vi, 
399 2 

Stony Edge 
Stone Edge 

Stonyford (Goosnargh), vii, 199 


(Barrowford), see 


Stony furlong (Ribchester), vii, 
43%, 547” * 

Stonygate (Preston), vii, 80 

Stonyholme (Burnley), vi, 447%, 


453 
Stonyhurst (Aighton), vii, 1, 2, 4; 
char., vii, a 7; deer park, vii, 2; 
ind., Vii, 
Stonyhurst, “ot. and Little (Aigh- 
ton), vii, 1” 
Stonyhurst, John de, vii, 4 
Stonyhurst College, vi, 381 ”; vii, 
7-12; observatory, vii, 12 
Stony Riding (Eccleston), vi, 192 ” 
Stonyway (Ribchester), vii, 45 ” 
Stonyway (Stonyhurst), vii, 4%, 


137” 

Stopford (Stopforth), Alice de, vi, 
173”; Anne, vi, 173 2; Blanche, 
vi, 102 ”, 173 2; David, vi, 91 ” ; 
Dorothy, vi, 102 ”, 173”; Hen., 


vi, Io2”; Jas., vi, 17%, 737, 
102”, Ilo”, 173%”, 296; vii, 
136”; John, vi, 91”, I02n, 
173”, 323%”; vii, 98”; Marg., 
vi, 111”; Rich. de, vi, 173%, 
175”, 179”; Rob., vi, 173%, 
177; Thos., vi, 173%, 174%, 
179”; Ursula, vi, 102 ”, 173”; 
Will, vi, 17”, 35”, 95%, 102, 
IIo”, 158, 170”, 173, 175%, 
296 ; —, vil, 213” 


Stott, Anne, vi, 167; Cath., vi, 
167”; Mary, vi, 167; Ralph, vi, 
167” 

Stourton, Cath. Stourton, Lady, 
vi, 250”, 422; Chas. Stourton, 
Ld., vi, 422 

Stourton, Kath., vii, 6” 

Stout House (Garstang), vii, 296”, 
297 2 


INDEX 


Stowell, Hugh, vi, 147”; Thos. A., 


vi, 147 

Straitbarrel (Straytbarrel), Hen., 
vi, 62”; Jas., vii, 25; Rob., vi, 
62; Thos., vi, 298”; Will. vi 
627 

Straits (Leyland), vi, 10 

Strange, le, Ladies, vi, 195; 


Charlotte, vii, 27, 194; Joan, vi, 
132, 143; Lds., vi, 132, 143, 540; 
vil, 31, 75, 154; George, vi, 
173 N, 321; Jas., vii, 27, 170”, 
I8I m, 194, 200 
Strange, John, vi, 174”; Lucy le, 
vi, 178, 179”; Margery, vi, 
174; Thos. le, vi, 178”, 179 n 
Strangeways, Agnes de, vi, 712”; 
Thos. de, vi, 71 ” 
Stratford, Nich., bp., vii, 42 2, 86” 
Straytbarrel, see Straitbarrel 
Street (Heath Charnock), vi, 216 
Street, Ad. de (del, de la), vi, 214 ”, 
216”; Alex., vi, 133”, 182n, 
216m, 217; Alice, vi, 216”; 
Anne, vi, 216”; Edw., vi, 216”; 
Ellen (de), vi, 216”; Hen., vi, 
216”; Isabel, vi, 216”; Jane, 
vi, 216”; John (de, del, de la), 
vi, 216 n, 218; Marg., vi, 189 n, 
216m”; Rich. (del), vi, 214n, 
216”; Rob. (de, del, de la), vi, 
214”, 216", 218; Thurstan 
(de), vi, 216”; Will. del, vi, 
214”, 216 
Streket croft (Whithalgh), vi, 288 
Strengfellow, Rev. Edm., vi, 299 
Strick (Freckleton), vii, 168 7 
Strickland, Cecilia, vi, 196; Ger- 
vase, vil, 194, 195”; Isabel, vi, 
720; Jas., vii, 194”; John, vi, 
69, 70, 73; Kath., vii, 193 n, 
194, 194%”, 3227; Rich., Vi;-72) 4 
Rob., vii, 309 ; Sir Rog., vii, "308 F 


Thos., vi, 196; vii, 193 ”, 194%, 
195”, 322”; Walt., vii, 308, 
309; Will., vi, 72, 72”, 73%; 
—, vi, 322” 

Strideovermoor, Hen., vi, 4747; 
Rich., vi, 474”; Thos., vi, 474 ” 


Stridthorn (Dilworth), vii, 52 

Strindefield (Haslingden), vi, 430 7 

Strinds, the (Longton), vi, 70 2 

Stringer, Rev. Will., vii, 147” 

Strong, Frances, vi, 441 

Strutwide (Colne), vi, 525 ” 

Stuart, Jos., vii, 142; see also 
Stewart 

Stubbegate (Freckleton), vii, 171 ” 

Stubbiholm (Warton), vii, 170” 

Stubbing (Briercliffe), vi, 473 

Stubbing (Dutton), vii, 55 ” 

Stubbings (Haighton), vii, 126 2 

Stubbs (Church), vi, 402 

Stubbs, Dan. H., vi, 55; Edw., vi, 


3n 

Stub Hall (Withnell), vi, 48” 

Stubhead (Clayton-le-Dale), vi, 260 

Studderd, see Stuttard 

Studholme (Marton), vii, 240 ” 

Studholme, Rob., vii, 204 

Studle-clough (Osbaldeston), vi, 
320 

Studlehurst (Osbaldeston), vi, 324 

Studlehurst (Stodelehurst, Stodel- 
hurst, Stodilhirst, Stodulhurst), 
Ad. de, vi, 324; Rich. de, vi, 
324; Rob. de, vi, 324; Rog. de, 
vi, 324 

Studley, man. (Chipping), vii, 35 

Studley (Stodley), John de, vii, 
35; Petronilla de, vil, 183 7”; 
Sim. de, vii, 183 2; Will. de, vii, 


183 7” 
Stump (Chorley), vi, 148 
Stump Cross (Cliviger), vi, 479 


419 


Stunstead (Trawden), vi, 548 

Stupelgate (Warton), vii, 172 

Sturgeon, Dav., vii, 35”; Jane, 
vii, 35” 

Sturtivant, see Startivant 

Sturzaker, see Stirzacre 

Stuteville, Helewise de, vii, 267 », 
296, 300, 321 ” 

Stuttard (Studderd), Bern., vi, 491 ; 
Hen. H., vi, 505; Joh n, vi, 
535-6; Rich., vi, 489 

Stutte, Ad., vi, 393”; Avice, vi, 
393 2; Hugh, vi, 393 ” 

Stydd, see Stidd 

Styholme, see Stiholmes 

Stypdyne (Cliviger), vi, 486 ” 

Styth, Edw., vii, 320”; Rob., vii, 
298 ; Thos., vii, 179 

Suard, see Siward 

Suartebrec, see Swarbrick 

Subsnape, see Snubsnape 

Sudall, see Sudell 

Sudbrook ridding (Mawdesley), vi 


99” 
Sudell (Sudall), Alice, vi, 69 ; Anne, 


vii, 127”; Chris., vi, 5”, 426; 
Grace, vii, 63”; Hen., vi, 48, 
261, 263; vii, 75, 127”; John, 


vi, 243 ”; vil, 138”; Lawr., vii, 
138”; Nich., vi, 342; Ralph, 
vi, 312 2; Rich., vii, 117; Rog., 
vii, 63 ”, 74, 89 n; Will., vi, 246; 
—, vi, 262; fam., vii, 102 

Suffolk, Hen. Grey, dk. of, vi, 57 ” 

Sugden, Jas., vi, 51 

Sullam (Sulam), (Barnacre), 
301 2, 318 

Sullam Side (Barnacre), vii, 315 

Summarbrook Furlong (Newton- 
with-Scales), vil, 166” 

Summerford (Chipping), vii, 31 ” 

Summers, Marg., vi, 150”; Thos., 
vi, 150” 

Sumner (Sompner, Sumpner), Agnes 
le, vi, 17”; Alice, vil, I90”; 
Anne, vi, 17”; Chris., vi, 17 7, 
22”; Clemency, vi, 17”; Edm., 
vi, 17”; Ellen, vi, 17; Jas., 
vi, 17”; Jane, vi, 17”, 261%”; 
John (le), vi, 17”, 22, 143”; 
vii, 245; Nich., vii, 190”; Rich., 
vii, 13; Tim., vi, 2619”; Will., 
vi, 10”, 13, 17 2 

Sumner’s of the "Fold (Ulnes Wal- 
ton), vi, 90” 

Sunderland (Balderston), vi, 
317, 501% 

Sunderland, brook, vi, 317 

Sunderland, Ad. de, vi, 314, 314”, 
317, 324; Christiana de, vi, 317; 
Rich. de, vii, 204; Rob. de, vi, 
314, 317 

Sunderlandesholm, see Sunderland 
Holme 

Sunderland Hall (Grange) (Balder- 
ston), vi, 317, 321; vli, 62 

Sunderland Holme (Balderston), 
Vi, 314, 317 

Sundials, vi, 22, 46, 113 », 185, 257, 
297, 355, 422, 446, 449, 503, 511, 
526, 533, 5573 Vu, 23, 123, 145, 
217, 222, 245, 290, 296, 313 

Sunnyfield (Haslingden), vi, 428 

Sunnyfield Hall (Haslingden), vi, 
4297” 

Sunnyhurst Hey (Over Darwen), 
vi, 269, 274 

Surey (Whalley), vi, 381 

Sureys, fam., see Surreys 

Surgill (Colne), vi, 524 ” 

Surreys (Sotheryn, Sothron, South- 
ron, Sureys), Agnes le, vii, 33”; 
Alice le, vii, 30”; Edusa, vii, 
46 n ; Hugh le, vii, 30 », 33, 34”; 
John le, vii, 58; Rich. (le), vii, 


vii, 


314, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Surreys (cont.) 


27, 28, 30n, yon; Rog. Ie, 
vi, 29%; Thos. (le), vi, 15 7, 
33) 34%, 57M, 132% 

Sussex, earls of, vil, 74; Hen. 
Radcliffe, vi, 405; Rob. Rad- 
cliffe, vi, 405 » 

Sussnape (Leyland), vi, 11» 

Sutcliffe, Gamaliel, vi, 543 ”; John, 


vi, 542", 543; Will, vi, 478 
Suterdale (Marton), vil, 240" 
Suthale (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 290 
Sutherworth, see Southworth 
Sutliswrthe, see Shuttlesworth 
Sutton, Avice de, vi, 110 2; Cecily 

de, vi, 285; Geoff. de, vi, 281; 

Gilb. (de), vi, 61”, 63”, Ilo n, 

117”, 204”; Joan, vi, 61%, 

117”; John, vii, 312; Marg. de, 

vi, 63 »; Rich. (de), vi, 61 #, 117, 

177”; Rob. (de), vi, r10%, 

177 n, 220"; Thos. de, vi, IIo xn, 

I7Im, 177", 204m, 285; Will. 

de, vi, Ilo, 177 n, 204” 
Sutton House (Adlington), vi, 220 
Swaghwell Syke (Preston), vii, 

97 2, 992 
Swain (Swein, Sweyn), vi, 65, 103 4, 


335; Vil, 63", 69n, 92n, 166 Hn, 
182, 192, 229, 230, 241”, 270, 
277, 279M, 285n, 305, 320; 


chaplain, v1, 7 
Swain (Swayne), Rob., 
—, Vl, 524” 
Swainson, Ant., vii, 266; Rev. 
Chris., vn, 264 ; Chris., vn, 
203, 204; John, vi, 404; vil, 266 
Swain's Platt (Colne), vi, §24 7 


vil, 260 1; 


Swanley, Rob., vi, 32 

swansey, Anne, vi, 77%; Edw., 
vi, 50”, 77H; Ellen, vi, 77%, 
142 ; Hugh, vi, 32, 35%, 50, 
77m, 1423 vil, 50%; John, vi, 
142; vil, 502; Rob., vi, 35%”, 
50”, 77", 142; Will, vi, 77H, 
142 


Swanscy House (Brindle), vi, 77 ” 

Swansey ates (Whittle-le-Woods), 
vi, 32, 29 

Swarbrick aoanlie ck) (Weeton), 
vii, 156”, 176; man., vii, 175 

Swarbrick (Swarsbrick), Ellen, vii, 
283"; Jas., vii, 178m, 18817; 
John, vii, 156, 2057, 253 n, 
309 nH; Thos, vil, 178 Hn; Will, 
Vi, 100%; vii, 283 

Swartebreke, see Swarbrick 

Swartesalt (Lytham), vil, 214 7 

Swayne, see Swain 

Swayne’s Platt, see Swain’s Platt 

Swedenborgians, vi, 248, 409, 423, 
427, 453; Vil, 104, 251 

Sweeting, John, vi, 24, 292, 293 

Sweetlove, Thos., vii, 3307 

Sweetmilk, WilL, vi, 538” 

Swein, see Swain 

Sweton (Osbaldeston), vi, 319 

Sweyn, see Swain 

Swift, Thos., vu, 2 

Swill, brook, vii, 72 », 87 n, 115 

Swillbrook (Woodplumpton), vii, 
285 

Swillington, Hugh de, vi, 443 ; Rob. 
de, vi, 443; Will de, vi, 443, 444 

ae (Marsden), vi, 447”, 470, 


477, 536, 537; Man., vi, 539, 
544.2 

Swinden, Ad. de, vi, 525”, 539; 
Uctred de, V1, 525” 


Swinden Hall (Marsden), vi, 539 
Swinden Water, vi, 468, 469, 472, 


brook, 


7 
Swincbridge (Swinebrigg), 
Vil, 214, 215” 
Swinehill ;Haslingden), vi, 428” 


Swinehurst (Shevington), vi, 202 4 
swineland (Rawcliffe), vii, 271" 
Swinesley (Swyneflet), Rich. de, v1, 


357 

Swinethwaite, Will. de, 

Swiney, Gilb. (de), vi, 
Rich. de, vi, 32” 

Swingilcar (Lea), vil, 132 4 

Swinglehurst (Burnley), see Swin- 
less 

Swinglehurst (Ribchester), vu, 50 

Swinglehurst (Swinhilhurst), Ad., 
vi, 380 2; John, vi, 543 "; Mary, 
vi, 380%; Nich., vi, 380 2; Rob., 
vi, 380”; Will., vi, 350, 397 7 

Swinless (Burnley), vi, 441 

Swinnell, stream, vi, 427 

Swinshaw, vi, 5142 

Swttellesar, see Shuttleworth 

Swyneflet, see Swinesley 

Syd, brook, vi, 106 

Sydale, Will. de, vi, 214 7 

Sydales (Clitheroe), vi, 308 2 

Syfrewast, Joan de, vii, 27 

Syke hill (Preston), vii, 97 2 

Syke meadow (Lea), vii, 130 2 

Sykes (Sikes), Edw., vii, 293 7; 
Eliz., vi, 424"; Rich., vi, 424 3; 
Will, vi, 525; —, vii, 305” 

Symonstant, Symonstone, 
moundeston, see Simonstone 

Sym Pasture (Colne), vi, 527 7 

Syon Abbey (Midd.), vi, 86, 88, 
159 n; Vii, 83, 222, 226 

Synith (Sired, Syrid), vi, 37 7, 60, 
180n 

Sythworth, Gilb., vii, 215 » 


vi, 42g" 
29H, 32N; 


Sy- 


Tabley, Lds. de, vi, 336; vii, 194, 
287 ; Geo., vi, 255, 258, 323; vil, 
286m; John, vi, 255; vil, 250 4 

Tabley Old Hall, vi, 321 ” 

Taborner, Ellen, vii, 167” 

Tadrid Ees (Altham), vi, 413 7 

Tagg, the (Cottam), vii, 130 

Taggetstone (Taghed stonc) 
Harwood), vi, 338 », 340 

Tailleur, see Taylor 

Taillourson, Will., vi, 273 ”, 277 

Tailor, see Taylor 

Talbot (Blackpool), vii, 250 ” 

Talbot, Agnes, vi, 336; Alice, vi, 
285, 510"; ‘Anne, vi, 252”, 277, 
292, 322, 346n, 366 ‘n, 420; vil, 
5, O04, 107”; Dorothy, vi, 
45 n, 255, 336, 337, 383 n, 401 2; 
Sir Edm., vi, 277, 508; Edm., vi, 
277, 316, 345, 346, 346, 347, 
509, 511; vil, 16, 41 ; Edw., vi, 
336; Eliz., vi, 278, 332, 346; 
vii, 35, 35 n, 47 n ; Ellen, vi, 222 n, 
331, 336; Geo., vi, 255, 258, 260, 
336, 378", 395”, 4oIn; vii, 
107; Giles, vi, 254”, 3937; 
see also Shrewsbury, earl of: 
Grace, vii, 49; Hen., vi, 277 n, 
278, 285; Isabel, vi, 254, 255, 
337, 3057, 508 2, 510”: vil, 
39", 98n; Jas., vi, 48n; ‘Jane, 
vi, 256%, 316; Joan, vi, 345; 
Sir John, vi, 236, 254, 255, 267, 
322, 337, 420; vii, 48”; John, 
Vl, 235”, 236, 243, 252n, 
254, 255, 256, 260, 278, 285, 332, 
335%, 336, 337, 345, 361, 365%, 
366 n, 367 n, 383 m, 393 n, goon, 
408, 488 n, 507 n, 509; vii, 39 n, 

47%, 49 2, 55%, 57 2, 59 N, 64, 
98n, 1857, 219; Lettice, vi, 
510”; Margery, vi, 254 n, 317 nu; 
Mary, vi, 48», 285. N, 336, 366 7 ; 
Milicent, vi, 278; Nich., vi, 
336, 378 nN, 395; Vii, 59 nS 


420 


(Gt. 


Talbot (cont.) 


Pet. Wi, 2229, 254 0b, 337, 330, 
393 4; Kalph, vi, 256"; Rich, 
V1, 222 1, 254, 250.4, 260, 3315 
330, 393”; vil, gt; Rob., vii, 
477, 49; Steph., VI, 330; sir 
Thos., v1, 277, 340; vu, 5; Thos., 
VI, 252, 254, 277, 278, 292, 316, 
336m, 345. 44s 340M, 4U7 H, 
412%; VI, 15, 35, 35", Will, 
Vi, 48, 254, 260, yoo, gr2n, 
5lom; vi, 41; Will. HL, vi, 158; 
W. HL, vi, 104 2; —, v1, 407, 510 

Taldeford, Emma de, vi, torn; 
Rob. de, vi, tor” 

Tapps, Geo. J., vi, 8” 


Taregarred Ake (Studlehurst), vi, 
324” 

Tarleton, vi, 1, 81, 86, 91, 92, 
10g”, 115-19; adv., vi, 115; 
chap., vi, 89; char., vi, 119; 
ch., vi, 118; man., vi, 115, 117 n; 


Nonconf., vi, 53, 119; St. Helen’s 
Well, vi, 115; Ram’s Head inn, 
vi, 115; sch., vi, 119 

Tarleton, ‘Agnes de, vi, 107 »; Alice 
Vi, (122°%:; Avice de, Vi, 117 2; 
Gilb, de, vi, 117”; Hen., vi, 


107 1; Jas., vii, 44, 55”, 887; 
Joan de, vi, 117”; John de, vi, 
116”, 117”; Kath. vi, 90, 
233”; Marg. de, vi, 117”; vii, 
277; Rich. de, vi, 117 2; Thos., 
vi, 88, 107”, 145”; Will. (de), 
vi, 107”, I1Gm, II7 Hn, 122n, 
170, 447; Vil, 233”, 277” 

Tarleton Moss, vi, 115 

Tarnacre (Upper Raweliffe with 
Tarnacre), vii, 260, 263”, 267- 
73, 274", 279m, 283n, 304; 
char., vii, 207 

Tarnacre, Alan de, vil, 271, 272, 
321”; Alice de, vii, 271; Rich. 
de, vii, 192 #, 271 m, 272, 273; 
Will. de, vii, 268, 271, 272, 321 » 

Tarnacre Hall, see St. Michael’s 
Hall 

Tarnbreck (Ribby with Wrca), vii, 


157” 

Tarnbreck Cross (Ribby with Wrea), 
vii, 157 2 

Tarumyakecr (Longton), vi, 71 ” 

Tate, Sir Hen., vi, 130 

Tatham, vii, 270 n, 326 

Tatham, John de, vii, 330 7 ; Thos., 
vi, 535; Walt. de, vii, 330”; 
Will. de, vi, 61”, 327, 362, 
400%}; vii, 69n, 235”, 322n, 


324, 325N, 320, 326, 328%, 
330, 330” : 
Tattersall, Alice de, vi, 477”; 


Chris., vi, 438, 438”; Edm., vi, 
437, 439, 4442, 407 2, 408 n, 
471; Edw., vi, 440, 4607 ”, 468 7 ; 
Eliz., vi, 407 2, 408 n; Hen. de, 
vi, 482 0; Isabel, vi, 467 1, 4087; 
Jas., vi, 447, 407 2; Jenet, v, 
444”; Joan, vi, 468n, 4717; 
John (de), vi, 438, 438 n, 439, 
444%, 447 2, 407", 47 1, 4829; 
Lawr., vi, 434, 408 n; ‘Lettice, 
vi, 4072; Marg., vi, 471"; 
Mich. (de), vi, 4757, 477%; 
Nich., vi, 467”; Pet. de, vi, 
451, 473, 482; Rich, wi, 
4467, 447, 407, 468n; Rob., 
Vi, 447, 4607”, 468n, 4827; 
Will, vi, 438”; fam., vi, 377%, 
395 2, 470, 516” ; 

Tattersall’s House (Hurstwood), vi, 
478 

Tatton, Harriet S., vi, 25, 472; 
Mary, vi, 195; Reg. A., vi, 25, 
130, 446, 469, 472, goo; T. W, 
v1, 472; Will, v1, 195” 


INDEX 


Thimelby, Margery, vii, 31 ”; Rob., 
vii, 31 ” 


Tauntaler, Thos., vii, 157” 
Taylid (Stalmine), vii, 252 
Taylor (Tailleur, Tailor), Ad. (the), 


Thornburgh (Thornborrow), Eliz., 
vii, 270; Rev. Mich., vii, 265; 


vi, 170 ”, 482 ”; Alan, vii, 175”; 
Alice (le), vi, 270”; vii, 279”; 
Anne, vii, 198 ” ; Cecily, vi, 64”; 
Chris., vi, 3; vii, 121 n, 126”; 
Ellen, vi, 217”; vii, 126n, 
198”; Geoff., vi, 438”; Gilb. 
the, vii, 114 2; Hamer, vi, 280; 
Helen, vi, 482 ”; Hen., vi, 20, 
107 n, 255%”, 259”; Vii, 98n; 
Herb., vi, 541 ; Hilda, vii, 313 2; 
Hugh, vi, 431”; Jas., vi, 331, 
438; vii, 198", 228, 2710; 
Jas. W., vi, 541; John (le, the), 
Vi, O4 2, 353, 355”, 374, 3830, 
387, 404%, 416, 540, 545”; 
vii, 89", 121”, 126n, 198n, 
292 N, 2907 N, 301 #, 313 H, 315 Nn; 
Jordan le, vi, 270”; Jos., vi, 
229; Lawr., vi, 438”; Marg. 
(le), vii, 313 », 315”; Nich., vii, 
170”; Oliver, vi, 229; Ralph, 
vi, I99n, 495; Rich., vi, 73 n, 
107”, 431”, 482; vii, 85n, 
98 n, 260 x; Rob. (the), vi, 64m, 
65, 482; vii, 19, 947, 99m, 
212m", 2847, 313; Rog., vii, 
126m, 175”, 212"; Sibyl, vi, 
482"; Thos., vi, 192, 198 n, 
199”, 371; vii, 170n, 278%; 
Thurstan, vi, 9; Will. (le, the), 
vi, 198”, 229”, 367m, 48110; 
vi, 94”, 98m”, 107m, 142n, 
227 N, 257 N, 280 2, 313 n, 3151n; 
Zachariah (Zachary), vi, 89, 381, 
382”; —, vi, 158, 312, 524, 
557; fam., vi, 73, 111; Vii, 
212 

Teanleas (Teanley) fires, vii, 27 
220 

Teinturer, Rich. the, vii, 98 » 
Telmessus, Will. G. Sharrock, bp. 
of, vii, 81 

Tempest, Alice, vi, 94, 418; vii, 
288%; Rev. Arth., vi, 344; Sir 
Chas. R., vii, 51; Eliz., vi, 419; 
Isabel, vi, 412”; vii, 280n; 
Jane, vi, 500; Sir John, vi, 
255, 418; vii, 3, 2882; John, 
vi, 372, 500”; Kath., vii, 3; 
Nich., vi, 412”; vii, 280; Sir 
Rich., vi, 375”; Sir Rob., vi, 
94H; Sir Steph., vi, 527%”; 
Steph., vi, 419; vii, 51”; fam., 
V1, 374 

Tenmarks land (Leyland), vi, 13 », 
I5n 

Tentercroft (Burnley), vi, 445 ” 
Tenterholme (Colne), vi, 527 ” 
Terleways, Little (Claughton), vi, 
266 n 

Terleways, Mickle (Claughton), vi, 
266” 

Thain, Rob. le, vi, 480 ” 

Thalwons (Over Darwen), vi, 302 


, 


Thamor, vi, 233” 

Tharilton, see Tarleton 

Thaueley, see Thieveley 

Thelwall, Agnes de, vi, 510”; Hen. 


de, vii, 28”; John de, vi, 499, 
499”; Rich. de, vi, 510” 


Thenney, see Finney 
Thetford priory (Norf.), vi, 116, 


Thompson 


Thimsacre (Preston), vii, 97 ” 

Thingeschawbroc (Walton-le-Dale), 
vi, 290 

Thirebrook (Clitheroe), vi, 365 ” 

Thirkingham (Thrikingham), Lam- 
bert de, vii, 41 

Thirlby, Thos., vii, 42 

Thirlmere aqueduct, vi, 50 

Thirse Clough (Mearley), vi, 377 2 

Thirswallhurst (Worsthorne), vi, 


477 0 
Thistelton, Thistilton, see Thistlet 
ton 
Thistleridding (Ewood), vi, 506 
Thistleridding (Mearley), vi, 375 ” 
Thistleridding close (Clitheroe), vi, 
307%” 
Thistletack (Thistletake), tax, vn, 
487 n, 488, 524 : 
Thistleton (Greenhalgh with Thistle- 
ton), vil, 146”, 176%, 179-81, 
199”, 253”, 269”, 270n, 273, 
274, 283 ~; man., vii, 180 
Thistleton, brook, vii, 181 
Thistleton (Thuesilton) Alice (Dul- 
cia), de, vii, 181”; Andr., vii, 
141 1; Hen. de, vi, 481 ~; John, 
vii, 174; Rob. (de), vii, 174, 
181 n, 198; Will. de, vii, 181 7, 
198” 
Thistleyard (Worsthorne), vi, 474 ” 
Thom, John, vi, 213, 229”; Rob. 
W., vi, 229”; Col. Will. J., vi, 
213 
Thomas, vi, 373, 374%, 387%, 
538; vii, 48, 170%”, 179n, 
3112; archbp. of York, vii, 
218; b. of Geoff., vi, 356%, 
393”; the carpenter, vi, 66”; 
the carter, vi, 431 »; chaplain of 
Bailey, vii, 19; the clerk, vi, 
IOI nw, 262, 511; the king, vi, 
14”; the priest, vi, 342; the 
priestsknave, vii, 131”; rector 
of Slaidburn, vii, 34; rector 
of Wybunbury, vi, 347”; the 
smith, vi, 364”; the tailor, vi, 
Ii” 
Thomas, Edw. H., vi, 371 ; Humph., 
vii, 265”; Jas., vii, 255 
Thomason, Geo., vii, 86; Rev. 
Will., vi, 283, 284, 319; Will., 
vii, 183 ” 
Thomeherth (Eccleshill), vi, 279 » 
Thomlinson, see Tomlinson 
Thommekar (Eccleshill), vi, 279 ” 
(Thomson, Tompson, 
Tomson), Amelia, vii, 318; Chris., 
vii, 266%; Eliz., vii, 3097; 
Fran., vii, 80; Geo., vi, 265 7”; 
Grace, vii, 175”; Helen, vi, 
533”; Hen., vi, 533”; vii, 
181 n, 183”, 190n, 259%”; Jas., 
vi, 128 ; John, vi, 486 ; vii, 181 x, 
183”; Rev. Jos., vi, 334; Marg., 
vi, 115; Mary, vi, 260; Nich., 
vil, 183”, 254”, 280”; Rich., 
vi, 355, 387; vil, 254”, 309”; 
Rob., vii, 247 2; Rev. Sam. A., 
vii, 217; Thos., vi, 128; vu, 
150”, 247"; Ven. Will., vi, 
235n; Will, vi, 191”; vii, 
181, 280n, 318; —, (Chris. 


Ralph, vi, 494, 496; Thos., vil, 
270 


Z 

Thorncroft (Burnley), vi, 447 7 

Thorndean Water, vi, 478 

Thorndeley, see Thornley 

Thornecroft (Mellor), vi, 262 ” 

Thornedelegh, see Thornley 

Thornhaugh, Col. vi, 129 

Thornhill, Brian de, vi, 545; Sir 
John de, vii, 273; John de, vi, 
510, 545; vii, 179”, 180”; 
Jordan de, vii, 180”; Quenilda 
de, vii, 180”; Rich. (de), vi, 
546; vil, 180, 273; Thos., vi, 
546 

Thornhillenge (Pendleton), vi, 393 ” 

Thornhill Holme (Habergham 
Eaves), vi, 454 

Thornhole (Hambleton), vii, 190” 

Thornhull, see Thornhill 

Thornley (Thornley with Wheat- 
ley), vii, 1, 20, 27, 28, 32-6, 
59”, 63”; char., vii, 26; man., 
vi, 232 ; vii, 32; Rom. Cath., vii, 
6 


3 

Thornley, Ad. de, vi, 223”; vil, 
32”, 33”, 34”; Avice de, vii, 
33”; Edw.,, vi, 302”; Jane, vi, 
302”; John, vii, 34”; Lawr., 
vi, 298 ; Margery de, vii, 33”; 
Ralph de, vii, 32”, 33”, 34”; 
Rich. (de), vii, 32, 32”, 58”; 
Rob., vi, 302 ”, 494; Rog. (de), 
vi, 223%”; Thos., vi, 251, 301, 
302 #; vii, 31, 32; Will. de, vii, 


327 

Thornley Hall (Thornley), vii, 34 

Thornley Sykehead (Habergham 
Eaves), vi, 457 

Thornour, Will. de, vii, 264” 

Thornthwaite, Hannah, vi, 3947; 


Sarah, vi, 394 ”; Thos., vi, 

394% . . 
Thornton, vi, 475”; vii, 106”, 

118, I19n, 131”, 182%, 219, 


222", 231-7, 242%”, 309; char., 
vii, 225; ch., vii, 237; ind., vii, 
232; man., vii, 232; Rom. Cath., 
vii, 237; sch., vii, 225, 232 
Thornton, Ad. de, vi, 205 ” ; Agnes, 
vii, 233”; Alice (de), vii, 207 ”, 
233, 241 2, 309”; Amery de, vii, 
233m, 240”, 241 2; Clarice de, 
vii, 233”, 252”; Dulcia, vii, 
236”; Eliz. vi, 218%”; vii, 
233”; Hugh, vi, 113; vii, 233”, 
236n; Jas., vil, 180”; Joan, vi, 
220; vii, 233”, 241”, 2782; 
John (de), vi, I13”, 164”, 
531%; Vil, 223”, 229”, 233, 
252 N, 254 nN, 278 n, 309 m; Kath., 
vii, 233”; Laur. de, vii, 232, 
233, 247 ”, 254; Marg. (de), vi, 
90”; vil, 233; Margery de, vii, 
233; Maud de, vii, 166 , 207 n, 
233”; Mich. (de), vii, 168%, 
169 7, 196 ” ; Olive de, vii, 273 ” ; 
Rich. (de), vi, 113, 513”; vii, 
169”, 196%”, 233%, 235, 241 7, 
254”, 273”; Rob. de, vii, 232, 
233”; Rog. de, vi, 475; Sam., 
vi, 242; Sim. de, vi, 37”; vii, 
209 nN, 240”, 241”; Thos. (de), 


116%” Southworth), vi, 306; fam., vil, vi, 113 ”, 189, 205 ; Will. (de), 
Thevethornlands (Catterall), vii, 133” vi, 218m, 220”, 475; vii, 166 n, 
323 2, 324 Thoralby, John, vi, 159 », 160 233, 235%, 278”; Will. W., vii, 


324” 

Thewlis (Thulis), Ven. John, vi, 

189 ” ; vii, 205 
Thewood, Hugh de, vi, 428 
Thickthornes (Simonstone), vi,499” Thorinton, see Thornton 
Thieveley (Cliviger), vi, 479, 482, Thorn (Rochdale), vi, 437 

485" Thornber, Chris., vi, 387; Giles, 
Thieveley Pike, vi, 230, 479 vii, 2512; Rev. Will., vii, 251 


421 


Thordkesmoor (Longton), vi, 71 7 
Thorenteleg, see Thornley 
Thoresby, —, vii, 97 ” 


312; Maj., vil, 314 
Thornton Hall (Thornton), vii, 232 
Thornton in Craven (Yorks), vi, 
383 ‘ 
Thornton in the Fylde, vi, 90 
Thornton’s House (Hesketh with 
Becconsall), vi, 113 ” 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Thorny Clough (Habergham Eaves), 
Ml, 457 


Thorny Clough (Haighton), vii, 
126" 

Thornyholme (Roughlee Booth), 
vi, 519 


Thorp (Bretherton), vi, 102, 104, 
104”; vil, 168” 

Thorp (Thorpe), Ad. de, vi, 1047; 
Alice de, vi, 105 2; Cesar de, vi, 


10g”; Dav. de, vi, tr04n; 
Gamel de, vi, Io04m, 105”, 
108”; Hugh de, vi, I05”; 


Isabel de, vi, 105”; John (de), 
Vi, 103%, 104”, I05%; Vii, 
58; Marg. de, vi, 104”; Reg. 
de, vi, 104 ” ; Ralph de, vi, 105 7; 
Rich. de, vi, 103, 104, 105 7, 
108 x; Rob. de, vi, 105”; Rog. 
de, vi, 104 2; Thos., vi, 1907; 
Warine de, vi, 105”; Will. de, 
vi, 104m, 105”, 107” 

Thorpe, man. (Yorks), vi, 421; vii, 
1557 

Thorpe, fam., see Thorp 

Thorpe Green (Brindle), vi, 75 

Threapleigh (Chipping), vi, 379 7; 
Vii, 2. 

Three bridge ;Parbold), vi, 178 2 

Three Lanes End (larleton), vi, 
119” 

Three Mile Cross (Grimsargh), vii, 
108 

Threfeld  (Threfelt) 
248, 2507 

Threlfall (Threlefal, Threlefel) (Goos- 
nargh), vii, 191, 193%, 199%, 
321m; man., vi, 194 

Threlfall, Ad. de, vu, 647”, 66n; 
Alice de, vil, 195”; Cuth., vil, 
195; Edm., vii, 66 7, 195, 1957; 
Edw., vii, 188, 195”; Eleanor, 
vil, 195”; Jas., Vi, 51, 7435 Wn, 


(Layton), vii, 


218, 218, 334”; Jenet, vi, 
173 n; John, vi, 36, 191 7, 
192m”; vu, 667, 188, 195; 
Juliana, vii, 195”; Marg., vii, 
165”: Rich. de, vii, 193 7, 


195 1; Silicia de, vii, 64”; Thos. 
(de), vii, 144, 165, 193, 1957, 
288 n; Will, vii, 173 m, 188, 191, 


1957 
Threnokedshaw (Gt. Harwood), vi, 


3392 

Threperth (Freckleton), vii, 170 

Threplands (Layton), sce Threfeld 

Threpmeadow (Broughton), vii, 
118% 

Thrikingham, see Thirkingham 

Thriseden Head (Habergham 
Eaves), vi, 457 7 

Thrunny Moor, vi, 340 

Thuesilton, see Thistleton 

Thuftthorn Furlong (Freckleton), 
vii, 1707 

Thulis, see Thewlis 

Thunley, see Towneley and Townley 

Th'urcroft, see Highercroft House 

Thumewaitacre (Little Eccleston), 
vil, 182” 

Thursbroc, see Thurse Broce 

Thursby, Eleanor M., vi, 445; 
John H., vi, 445; Sir John O.S., 
M1, 444, 445, 454, 471 2, 484; 
Rev. Will, vi, 445 

Thursden (Briercliffe), vi, 469 

Thursden Head, see Thriseden 
Head 

Thurse Broc, vi, 317 , 324” 

Thurse-Clogh (Billington), vi, 325 

Thurstan, vii, 29; archbp. of 
York, wii, 218%; the chaplain, 
vii, 247 

Thurstinton, John de, vii, 2772; 
Maud de, vii, 277” 


Thuvicarr (Stonyhurst), vii, 42 

Thuwes (Winkley), vil, 13 # 

Thwaites, Dan., vi, 252, 269; El:a, 
vi, 252”; Elma A., vi, 261; 
Rob. D., vi, 261, 263 

Thweng (Twenge), Kath. de, vu, 
301 n; Lucy de, vu, 301; Marg., 
vu, 301m; Marm. de, vii, 301, 
302 ; Rob. de, vii, 301 ; Thos. de, 
vii, 301; Will. (de), vii, 307, 
316 n, 320n; fam., vi, §4 7-57 

Thynne, Ld. John, vi, 307 ” 

Thynne, Emily, vii, 307” 

Thyring Moor, see Thrunny Moor 

Tickle Moss (Pleasington), vi, 209 

Tidiman, Rog., vi, 160 

Tildesley, see Tyldesley 

Tile manufacture, vi, 254; vii, 129 

Tillotson, John, archbp. of Canter- 
bury, vi, 492, 536 

Tilltes, Miles, vi, 530 

Tilly, Albrey de, vi, 396 

Tillyearr (Ribchester), vii, 48 ” 

Tilversheimholme Ford (Garstang), 
Vil, 3118” 

Timberhurst (Claughton), vii, 328 ” 

Tinckler, Chris., vi, to2m; vii, 
247"; Rich., vi, 102; vii, 247” 

Tindiclough (Brockhall), vi, 330 

Tingreave (Eccleston), vi, 162, 
163 ”; man., vi, 163, 164” 

Tinkerficld (Goosnargh), vii, 199 

Tinkler, brook, vi, 280 

Tinkler House (Preston), vii, 97 7 

Tipping, Thos., vi, 492; vil, 74 

Tipping Hill (Habergham Eaves), 

Tirlaweys, see Terleways 

Tite, —, vil, 2557 

Tithebarn Croft (Whittle-le-Woods), 
V1, 149 

Tittele, Thos., vil, 175 ” 

Tittrington, Oliver, vi, 128 

Tockholes, vi, 235, 280-4, 420; 
char., vi, 284; ch., vi, 283 ; man., 
vi, 281; mill, vi, 281; Nonconf., 
vi, 283; sch., vi, 284; Will., vi, 
232 

Tockholes, Ad. de, vi, 281; Elias 
(Ekke) de, vi, 251 ; Geoff. de, vi, 
251; Joice de, vi, 281 

Tockwith, man. (Yorks), vi, 421 

Todd, Hen., vi, 89”; John, vi, 89, 
127”, 162; Nich., vi, 108”; 
Rich., vi, 127” 

Todderstafle (Hardhorn-with-New- 
ton), vil, 164 », 184, 239 

Todderstaffe Hall (Hardhorn-with- 
Newton), vii, 238 

Todd Hall (Haslingden) vi, 430 

Todehole (Livesey), vi, 265 

Todgrave (Altham), vi, 413 ” 

Todmorden, vi, 479; vii, 148 n 

Tokolles, see Tockholes 

Tollerton, John de, vi, 358 

Tom Crosses (Colne), vi, 524 

Tomelay, Rich., vii, 59” 

Tomlinson (Thomlinson), Alice, vi, 
399”; Edm., vi, 127”; Eliz., 
vi, 398-9; Geo., vi, 229; John, 
vi, 69 ”, 367 ”, 399; vii, 18, 66”; 
Lawr., vii, 138 ” ; Rich., vi, 107 ”, 
164 ”; vii, 18, 107 »; Rev. Rob., 
vi, 557, 558; Rob., vii, 63, 
69 n, 190, 4007; Thos., vii, 18, 
35, 282; Thurstan, vi, 3677, 
399; vil, 18; Will, vi, 1077”, 
119 

Tompson, Tomson, see Thompson 

Toneworth, see Townworth 

Tong (Bacup), vi, 437, 439.” 

Tonge, man. (Bolton), vi, 500%, 
501 n 

Tonge (Tong), Alex. de, vi, 269; 
Ahce de, vi, 29 ; Ellis (Elias) de, 


422 


Tonge (cont.) , 
vi, 208, 269; John de, vi, 269, 
281; Kath., vi, 200; Kob., vi, 


74 

Tonghill (Pleasington), vi, 250 

Tong Meadow (Bacup), v, 441 1 

Tong Mylne /Pleasington), vi, 269 

Tongue, the (Tongues) (Preesall 
with Hackinsall), vu, 256 9”, 
259n 

Tonley, sce Townelvy and Townley 

Tonstedes (Barton), vil, 127” 

Tonworth, Elias de, vi, 332; Kech. 


de, vi, 332 
Tootell, Bridg., vi, 142"; Cath., 
Vi; 233. Chris., %1, 130} vit, 


12jn7> Edw. ‘vi; 14227 Eliz., 
vi, 142”; Hugh, vi, 18, 22”, 
30; John, vi, 142”; Matth., vi, 
403; Wilk, Vi, 130, 142, 143” 

Topeliffe, John de, vi, 357, 358; 
Rich. de, vi, 330; Rob. de, vi, 
a4 7 

Topham, Ellen, vu, 289 n 

Top of Ramsgreave (Ramsgreave), 
vi, 251 

Top o’ the Town farm (Marton), 
vii, 225 

Topping, Ad., vi, 33”; Alice, vi, 
34”; Geo., vi, 77 #; Jas., vi, 
180”; Joan, vii, 331 »; Rog., 
vii, 53”; Thos., vi, 34m; vu, 
532; WiLL, vi, 4805 vii, 200” 

Topping House (Goosnargh), vii, 


197 

Toppinghouse land (Whittle-le- 
Woods), vi, 34 ” 

Torbock, Ellen de, vi, 177 ”, 203 n, 
204 n, 223.2, 228; Sir Hen. de, 
vi, 204 ”; Hen. de, vi, 171, 171 n, 
203, 204”, 258”; Sir Rich. de, 
vi, 204”; Rich. (de), vi, 179 n, 
228, 204 

Torentem, see Thornton 

Torfot, Will., vii, 147 

Tormerehakir (Longton), vi, 72 

Torrenton, see Thornton 

Tosscts day, vii, 255” 

Tostig (Tosti), carl, vii, 2, 36, 45, 
52, 69, 72, 105, 108, 115, 117, 
124, 127, 129, 151, 101, 166, 167, 
171, 175, 176, 178, 179, 182, 
184, 188, 191, 207, 214, 226, 228, 
232, 238, 240, 246, 248, 252, 250, 
263, 267, 273, 276, 2979, 281, 
282, 285, 300, 320, 325 

Tottering, brook, vi, 260, 263 

Tottington, vi, 57 ”, 70, 429 %, 431, 
436 

Tottleworth (Rishton), vi, 
345, 346, 347, 376, 401 N 

Tottleworth, Ad. de, vi, 347%, 
goon; Agnes de, vi, 347"; 
Alice, vi, 347”; Anabil de, vi, 
347; Ellota de, vi, 347; Isabel 
de, vi, 347”; John de, vi, 347; 
Rich. de, vi, 345, 347, 400”; 
Will. de, vi, 347” 

Touchet, Joan, vi, 397; Wil, vi, 
397 

Touneley, Tounlay, Tounley, see 
Towneley and Townley 

Towers (Tour, Tours), Emma de, 
vii, 173; John, bp., vi, 54”; 
Randle de la, vii, 84; Will. de, 
vii, 173 

Town, fam., see Towne 

Town Carr (Wrightington), \), 174 

Towncroft (Claughton), vii, 326” 

Towncrofts (Cuerden), vi, 24 # 

Towne (Town), Alice del, vii, 33%, 
485; Christiana del, vii, 33"; 
John, vi, 485, 485”; Rich., vi, 
447 ; Rob. de,vii, 33." ; Rev. Will, 
vu, 82 2; Will. del, vil, 33 # 


349 


Towneley, man. (Habergham 
Eaves), vi, 391, 391”, 446, 
451", 457-61 


Towneley (Tonley, Touneley, Toun- 
lay, Tounley, Tunley), Agnes de, 
Vi, 457, 474", 477%; Alice, vi, 
458%: Alice M., vi, 460; Anne, vi, 
394%, 543; Bern., vi, 458%, 467%, 


473) 475% 477) 494%, 543”, 
Caroline L., vi, 460, 509; Cecilia 
(de), vi, 186, 187m, 196, 457, 


460 n, 508 n; ’Chas., vi, 407, 459, 
460, 461, 467 n, 473 n, 478, 483, 
504 N, 509, 512, 540”; Chas. S., 


» 461; Chris., vi, 27, 459%, 
4784, 491, 508, 525, 543, 544, 
547”; Eliz, vi, 195”, 458, 
459%, 504 2; Ellen (de), vi, 


444.2, 458 n, 478, 528”, 543; 

vii, 326, 328”; Emily F., vi, 
460 ; Frances, vi, 510”; Fran., 

vi, 460; vii, 78° Gilb. (de), vi, 
160, 458; Grace, vi, 122 n, 504; 
Helen, vi, 539”; Hen. (de), vi, 
330m, 339 2, 457, 458”, 5557; 

Isabel (de), vi, 255, 444, 457, 
458, 509 x, 5550; Isolda de, vi, 
457%; Jane, vi, 329, 459”, 
508 ; "Jenet, vi, 527”; Joan 
(Juliana) de, vi, 17 ”, 458, 5277”; 
Jonet, vi, 458”; Sir John, vi, 
329, 353, 393%, 410%”, 4447, 
456", 459, 463, 468, 472, 
475”, 481, 488, 489, 491, 510 n, 
5II nN, 527, 528, 540”; John 
(de), vi, 407, q10 , 425”, 429 n, 


458, 460, 467m”, 468%, 471, 
472%, 473) 474%, 477, 478, 
482 n, 486, 486 , 489, 490, 491, 
493", 496", 504, 508%”, 509, 
SION, 5IIM, 524, 534, 540, 
543%; vil, 49”, 55”, 64n; Kath, 
vi, 478; Lawr., vi, 4447, 458, 


475%, 491, 509%, 521, 524, 527, 
539%; vil, 19; Marg., vi, 393%; 
Mary, vi, 459, 460”, 514”; 
Nic . (de), vi, 438”, 457, 458, 
475, 481 2, 509 ; Peregrine E., 
vi, 362, 454, 460, 4677; Ralph 
S., vi, 461 ”; Sir Rich., vi, 255, 
45° 472”, 477, 489”, 5107, 
539”; Rich. (de), vi, 121%, 
380 nN, 410%, 429%, 457, 458, 
459, 460, 461, 471, 472, 474, 
475, 481”, 4937, 504%, 508, 
509, 511, 511M, 512M, 539%, 
540; vii, 477”, 55”, 647, 6672, 
193 ”, 3257, 326, 328; Rich. 
H., vi, 460 2 ; Rob. (de), vi, 17”, 
339”, 468; vii, 3; Thos., vi 
460 n, 528; Walt. de, vi, 437 n; 
Will. (de), vi, ae 457, 460 n, 
461; —, vi, 508; fam., vi, 178, 
41I, 422, 470; see also Townley 
Towneley Art Collection, vi, 460 
Towneley Hall (Habergham Eaves), 
vi, 450, 453, 454, 461-3 
Townend, fam., see Townsend 
Town End Field (Preston), vii, 79 1 
Townfield (Church), vi, 402 » 
Town Field (Ribbleton), vii, 106 ” 
Townhouse (Marsden), vi, 536, 539 
Townhouse beck, vi, 540” 
Town Lane (Whittle-le-Woods), vi, 
320 
Townley (Tonley, Touneley, Toun- 
lay, Tounley, Tunley), Abra., vii, 
56, 56; Ad. de, vi, 180”; Agnes, 
vi, 546”; Alice, vi, 308, 399 Nn, 
547; vil, 50”; Anne, vi, 25, 
446 n, 528 0, 5477; vii, 44, 
56, 193”, 3227; Barnard, vi, 
43; Bern., vi, 440 n ; Blanche, vi, 
446”; Chas. vi, 449, 546”; 
Rev. Edm., vi, 4467, 450, 453, 


? 


INDEX 


Townley (cont.) 

516; Edm., vi, 88, 411, 445, 
446, 452, 460, 471, 524m”, 528, 
539”, 549; Ellen, vi, 4o1 1%, 
477%, 547”; Emma /de, vi, 
180; Helen, vi, 538”; Hen., 
vi, 170”, 176”, 419, 481%, 
524, 544, 5473 Vil, 44%, 497, 
5 n, 56, 56n, 58, 193 7; Isabel, 

» 4442, 446%, 447, 471, 521, 
ashe Jane, vi, 547 2; vu, 50; 
Janet, vi, 544; vii, 567; joan, 


vil, 56”; Sir John, vi, 447"; 
John, vi, 446”, 447 n, 451 n, 
453, 547”; vil, 55; Kath., vi, 
446%, 447, 547%; Vil, 56”; 
Lawr., vi, 170”, 447%, 474%, 
477", 481, 481", §29, 533, 
535”, 538%, 540, 543, 544; 
544”, 547; vil, 193”; Lettice, 
vi, 51on; Lucy, vi, 547”; 
Marg., vi, 250, 445, 446, 481 7, 
543, 547). 547%; vil, 56%; 
Martha, vi, 547%”; Miles, vi, 
469n; Nich. vi, 4017, 4109, 
445, 446, 4460”, 447, 447, 


453, 469 ”, 471, 483, 490, 510”, 
521, 528, 529, 539”; Sir Rich., 
Vi, 447, 451 ; Rich. (de), vi, 170 n, 
231, 250, 330%, 398, 401%, 
445, 447, 447%, 449, 453, 481, 
528, 547; Vil, 37, 49”, 56, 56%, 
58, 59%, 193 n; Rob., vi, 446, 
481, 546”, 5472; vii, 43%, 
49”, 55”; Sarah, vi, 483, 490; 
Thos., vi, 25, 446m, 451”, 452, 
4812, 490%, 521, 524; Vil, 
322”; Thos. T. P., vi, 25; 
Will. de, vi, 176”; Mrs., vi, 547; 
—, vi, 512, 524”; vii, 1967; 
fam., vi, 380%”, 436, 532; vii, 
194”; see also Towneley 

Townley-Parker, Rob., vi, 446; 
Susannah, vi, 207”; Thos., vi, 
25; T., vi, 207 

Townsend (Attownend, Attown- 
send, Townend), Ann, vi, 378”; 
Hen., vii, 99”; Jas., vii, 166; 
Rob., vii, 99 %; Will., vii, 166 7 ; 
Mrs., vi, 37 

Townsteadfield (Altham), vi, 413 2 

Townwall Bank (Padiham), vi, 


493 
Townworth (Billington), vi, 332 
Trafford, Anne, vi, 94; vii, 333”; 
Sir Cecil, vi, 94; Sir Edm., vi, 
122m”; vil, 236; Edm., vi, 94"; 
ce de, vi, 178, 328 2 ; ; Humph., 
, 943 vii, 333”, 335%; John, 
vi, 72, 73 ‘91, 94, 96, 96 ‘n, 272, 
272%”; vil, 50”, 333”; John 
R. de, vi, 72, 93, 94; Kath., vi, 
94; vii, 333 2; Lucy de, vi, 178 ; 
Rich., vi, 94, 272”; vil, 50”; 
Sigismund C. de, vi, 95, 97; 
Thos. (de), vi, 94, 201”; Sir 
Thos. J. de, vi, 94 
Tranehole, see Trunnah 


Trappes, Cath., vi, 20”; Rev. 
Fran., vii, 36; Thos. B., vi, 341, 
419” 

Trappes-Lomax, Helen, vi, 341, 


419; R., vi, 419” 
Trathorne, the (Elswick), vii, 284 
Travers, Alex., vii, 308; Alice (de), 


vil, 180, 233, 254”, 283%, 
308; Aline, vii, 133”, 3097; 
Cecily, vii, 181”, 189, 308%; 
Edm., vii, 309; Eleanor, vil, 
309; Grace, vii, 106”; Joan, 
vii, 309”; John (de), vi, 159, 
161; vii, 106m, 1277, 133%, 
139 n, 254 n, 308, 309; Kath., 


vii, 309; Laur. (Lawr.), vi, 71 2; 
vii, 106”, IIl6m, 133”, 137%, 


423 


Travers (cont.) 
233", 254”, 308, 309; Marg., 
vii, 308”, 309; Orm., vil, 283; 
Rich., vil, 1067, 133%, 233 0, 
272 M, 309 ; Rob., vii, 309 ; Rog., 
vii, 133, 233, 309; Thos., vi, 


FIM; vil, 106, 133%”, 137%, 
181 n, 189 n, 198 Nn, 233, 2347, 
254, 283, 284, 308, 309; 
Will. (de), vii, 106”, 180%, 
181 n, 233”, 234 n, 309; —, Vil, 
283; fam., vii, 98 n, 107 
Trawden, vi, 233%, 349, 361%, 


522; 525, 528, 528 n, 530n, 536, 
538 ”, 539”, 546, 548-52; chap., 


v1, 552; ch., vi, 552; coal mines, 
vi, 523”, 548, 551; cotton 
manuf., vi, 548; cross, vi, 548, 
5513 mill, vi, 551; Nonconf., vi, 


552 
Trawden, brook, vi, 548, 551, 552 
Trawden Chase, see Trawden Forest 
Trawden Ditch (Colne), vi, 524 ” 
Trawden Forest, vi, 232, 349, 434, 
524, 529, 547, 548, 551, 552 0 


Trawden Water, see Trawden, 
brook 

Trayley, Thos., vii, 41 

Treales (Treales, Roseacre and 
Wharles), vii, 143, 143”, I44, 
144”, 146m, 149, 150, 176%, 
177, 178-9; coins, vil, 179; ch., 
vii, 179; man., vii, 178; sch., 
vii, 150” 

Treales, Lewe de, vii, 179; Rain- 


kell de, vii, 180 x; Rob. de, vii, 
173”, 180 

Trefeld, see Threlfall 

Tremouille, Charlotte de la, vii, 
2701 

Trenaker, see Tarnacre 

Trepcroft (Worthington), vi, 222 

Tresal, Ellen de, vii, 301”; Rich. 
de, vii, 301 

Treueles, see Treales 

Trewman, see Trueman 

Trigg (Trigge), Ad., vi, 208%; 
Agnes, vi, 208%; Rich., vi, 
136 ”, 143 2; Thos., vi, 140 

Trigg Hall (Chorley), vi, 135, 143 

Trimlands (Poulton), vii, 226 2 

Tristram, Jos., vii, 13 

Trochdene, see Trawden 

Troghsykes (Cliviger), vi, 485 

Troudene, see Trawden 

Trout, Janet, vii, 196; Will. vii, 


196” 

Troutbeck, Eliz., vi, 39”; John, 
vii, 887; Sir Will, vi, 39”; 
Will, vii, 147 

Trower, P. B., vii, 117 

True, John, vi, 439 

Trueman (Trewman), Chris., vi, 


526, 530; Rob., vi, 530 

Trunnah (Trunna) (Thornton), vii, 
232, 234 n, 248 n, 308 

Trussell, John, vi, 104”, 151”; 
vii, 281, 287”; Pernell, vi, 
104”, 151”; vii, 287”; Petro- 
nilla, vii, 281 ” 

Tuacr’gate (Padiham), vi, 493 » 


Tulketh (Ashton), vii, 93, 129, 
132 n, 133, 308, 309 
Tulketh, Margery de, vii, 160”; 


Rich. de, vii, 160” 

Tulketh Bank (Broughton), vii, 
120” 

Tunercrook (Colne), vi, 525 ” 

Tunges (Preesall), vii, 259 ” 

Tunley (Wrightington), vi, 169, 176 

Tunley, brook, vi, 176 

Tunley, fam., see Towneley and 
Townley 

Tunley Farm (Wrightington), vi, 
177 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Tunnison, John, vu, 272"; Rog., 
Vly 27S 

Tunstall, vi, 233 ” 

Tunstall, Ad. de, vi, 203 27; Alice 
(de), vi, 97%, 201", 259”; 
Cecily de, vi, 164”; Cuth., bp., 
vi, 150”; Fran., vil, 259”; 
Hen. de, vi, 164; vii, 212"; 
Jas., vi, 178; Joan de, vi, 1647; 
vii, 212 n; Marg. de, vi, 164"; 
Sir Marmaduke, vi, 292; vii, 
257m", 258, 259; Nich. de, 
vi, 171”; Ralph de, vi, 87, 
977”, 159, 164%; Rog. de, vi, 
97", 1647, 165"; Thos. de, vi. 
97 n, 164 n, 165 Hn; vii, 85; Will 
de, vi, 170%; vil, 212 ”; See also 
Tunstill 

Tunstead, vi, 27 ”, 233” 

Tunstead (Bacup), vi, 437, 438, 
439 

Tunstead, the (Elswick), vii, 284 ” 

Tunstead (Longton), vi, 71” 

Tunstead (Upper Rawcliffe), vn, 
2719” 

Tunstead, Old (Hapton), vi, 509 

‘Tunsteads (Barton), vii, 127 

Tunstede, see Tunstead 

Tunstill, ‘Harry, Vl, 49%, 492, 521; 
522, 540. 543; Rob. vi, 492; 
WAIL, vi, 543; see also Tunstall 

Tunworth Ww halley), vi, 382” 

Tupholme (Reedley Hallo, ws), Vi, 


491 

Turf Moor (Burnley), vi, 443 ” 

Turley Moor (Worthington), vi, 
223" 

Turmurfurlong (Elswick), vii, 284” 

Turnbuthsyke (Hutton), vi, 68 7 

Turncroft (Church), vi, 402” 

Turncroft {Over Darwen), ch., vi, 
275 

Turne Law (Over Darwen), vi. 
2720" 

Turner, Alice, vi, 4oon; Anne, vi, 
100n; vil, 264”; Chris., vii, 
283; Edm., vii, 204"; Edw., 
vii, 283 n, 296.n; Fran., vii, 200 7; 
Geo., vii, 128”; Jas., vi, 237", 
431; John, vi, 481, 533, 5343 
vii, 1logn, 284; Jos. K., vii, 
2557 J. M. W., vii, on; Marg. 
Vi, 48n, 237 25 Mary, Vi oF an = 
Matth., vi, I002; Nich., vii, 
199; Rich., vii, 1032; Rob. 
(the), vi, roo n, 128, 140 n, 284 n, 
400 2; Thos., vi, 100 #; vil, 224, 
28392; Will, bp., vii, 44 2; Will, 
vi, 77"; vii, 35”, 80, 283"; — 
vi, 288, 531”; vii, 283 

Turnlache, fam., see Turnlcey 

Turnley (Ribchester), vii, 49 ” 

Turnley (Turnlache), Ad. de, vii, 
65”; Agnes de, vu, 48, 647; 
Alice de, vil, 49; Cecily (de), 
vii, 48 n, 51 », 53; Hen. de, vii, 
65”; Isabel de, vi, 223; John 
de, vii, 48", 49”, 517, 537; 
Mabel de, vii, 65 2; Margerv de, 
vu, 65”; Rich. de, vil, 487, 
642; Rob. de, vii, 48, gon; 
Rog. de, vii, 48; Thos. de, vi, 
223%; Will. de, vii, 65n; — 
V1, 423 

Turnmoor (Longton), vi, 71 

Turnoll, see Trunnah 

Turnover Hall (Upper Rawcliffe), 
Vii; 207; 272 

Turnureacres (Longton), vi, 73 # 

Turpin, Margery, vi, 512; Will., 
vi, 512” 

Turpin Green (Leyland), vi, 10 
Turton, Ad. de, vi, 271, 279; 
Nich. de, vi, 279; Will., vi, 189 

Turnel, see Treales 


, 


Turville-Petre, Oswald H. P., vi 
112 

Tustehorn Furlong (Freckleton), 
vii, 168 

Tuyseton, sce Twiston 

Twenge, see Thweng 

Twesilton, Twisleton, tnshp., sce 
Twiston 

Twisleton, Ad. de, vi, 559 2; Alice 
de, vi, 559”; Hugh de, vi, 559, 
559; John de, vi, 559; Pet. de, 
vl, 559”; Rob. de, vi, 559”; 
Walt. de, vi, 559%; —, vi, 524 2 

Twiston, vi, 232”, 233%, 349, 
356, 375", 528", 539, 552, 
555, 556, 558-60; chap., vi, 
560; man., Vi, 232, 558; mill., 
vi, 559% 

Twiston Moor, vi, 558, 559 

Twynehoe, Etheldreda, vii, 258; 
Will., vii, 258 

Twyselton, Twysilton, tnshp., see 
Twiston 

Twythelis (Charnock), vi, 207 » 

Tyas, Jas., vi, 496 

Tyddy-clogh (Eccleshill), V1) 250% 

Tyldesley, vi, 500” 

Tyldesley (Tildesley), Ad. de, vi, 
194”, 225, 228n; Agatha, vil, 
242"; Anne, vi. 271 ”, 306; vil, 
139”, 317m"; Cuth., vi, 367; 
vii, 329"; Edm., vii, I4on; 
Edw. ay My .29ES MH BiH, 34%; 
35M, LION, 347, 139, I40, 
196, 208, 242m, 271, 317%, 
327, 332; Eliz., abbess, vii, 
139”; Eliz., vil, 139”, 140”; 
Ellen, vi, 321 ; Frances, Lady, vi, 
16”; Gabriel, vii, 190”; Hen. 
de, v1, 48, 225”, 228”; Hugh 
de, vi, 225”; Isabel, vi, 337; 
Jas., vu, 140; Jane, vii, 3327; 
John, Vil, 337; Vii, 752; Marg. 
de, vi, 1947”; Margery (de), vi, 
225”; vil, 329”; Mary, vi, 
1952: vii, 278, 332”; Rich., 
vu, 332”; Sir Thos., vi, 241 n, 
306, 321 2, 432 7; vil, 138, Igo, 
I41, 2222, 264”; Thos. (de), 
Vi, 21m, 321, 322m”; vii, 139, 
139N, 140, 160N, 197,213", 242n; 
Thurstan (de), vi, 21”, 1957; 
Vi, 139%, 100 n, 319n, 3277, 
332" 

Tynde Oak Lea (Townceley), vi, 
4591 

Tyndihevid, Rich. de la, vi, 253 , 
250n 

Tyndour, Will, vii, 223 

Tynedgreve (Eccleston), vi, 163 

Tynuldefeld (Gt. Harwood), vi, 334 

Tyrel, see Tyrrell 

Tyrer, —, vi, 90” 

Tyrrell (Tyrel), Ad. de, vii, 100 1 ; 
Sir John, vi, 180 ; Mary, vi, 180 ; 
Will. de, vii, 100 n ; —, Lady, vi, 
178 


Uchtrede’s Greave (Salesbury), vi, 
252 

Uckemons riddings (Alston with 
Hothersall), vii, 64 ” 

Uctred (Ughtred), vi, 314”, 499 2, 
538"; vii, 63”, 65”, 126n, 
131 nN, 134, 160 Nn, 325 "; clerk of 
Whalley, vi, 239”; rector of 
Brindle, vi, 79; the smith, vil, 
2737 

Uctredsgate (Fulwood), vii, 137 7 

Ugden, man., vi, 233 

Uggenhale, see Ugnall 

Ughtred, see Uctred 

Ugnall (Uggenhale), Agnes (de), vi 


135, 228; Andr., vi, 229; Hen. 


424 


Unnall (cont.) 
de, v1, 135, to5 4, 225; John 
de, vi, 225"; Rob., vi, 182 1, 
228; Rog., vi, 228"; Thos. de, 
vi, 228 n 

Ulbas, Ad. de, vi, rom, ae John 


de, vi, 16.0; Will. de, v1, 27" 
Uld, vi, 314 
Ulf (Ulty), vi, oS mp vi, 52 0, 283 4, 
284n 
UH, Isola, vii, 315"; Rich., vu, 


3i5n 

ULtkil (Ulkelf), vi, 105 m, 252 

Ulfneswalton, sce Ulnes Walton 

Clty, see Ulf 

Ulkelf, see Ulfkil 

Ulkrigee Meadow (Pilling), vit, 
333, 334 

Ulnes Walton, vi, 58, 51, 86%, 
108-11; vii, 160; char., vi, ye, 
91; crosses, vi, 108; man., v1, 
II”, 13,61», 108; Rom. coins, 
vi, 108 

Ulnes Walton, fam., see Walton 

Ulrick Meadow, see Ulkrigge 

Ulues Walton, see Ulnes Walton 

Ulvedene (Hulton), chap., vi, 09 

Ulverston, Austin de, vi, 67 ; Wald- 
eve de, vi, 67 

Ulvesbooths, Jordan, vii, 58” ; 
Rich. de, vii, 58; Thos. de, vi, 
58n 

Ulvesbothe Furlong (Ireckleton), 
vii, 168 4 

Ulvesty (Bleasdale), vii, 141 

Ulveswalton, see Ulnes Walton 

Underbank (Bacup), vi, 441 

Underhill, —, vi, 463 ” 

Unitarians, vi, 248, 299, 427, 436, 
441, 452, 496, 536; Vil, 103, 104, 
251 

Untley, see Hunteleye 

Unton, Ellen, vi, 216%”; Rob., v 
216%” 

Upholland Priory, vi, 101 ” 

Uplitherland, man., vii, 129 

Up Ratcliffe, Uproutheclyve, see 
Rawcliffe, Upper 

Upton, see Hapton 

Urchinsnape, Gt. (Shevington), vi, 
200 ” 

Urmston, Agnes, vi, 174”; Gilb., 
vi, 174 n; Will, vii, 75 

Urswick, vii, 154”, 155 1 

Urswick, Ad. de, vii, 268 , 269 n; 
Ellen (Helen) (de), vi, 33.2, 93.7, 
IOl”, 154”; Vii, 200, 269, 
3240; Isabel, vii, 269 n; Joan 
(de), vii, 269; John (de), vu, 
269”, 324”; Kath., vii, 269%, 
331”; Marg. de, vi, 315”; vil, 
268, 269; Sir Rob. (de), vi, 33”, 
305”; vii, 269, 270; Rob. de, 
vi, 101 n, 154”, 315%; vii, 268, 
269, 278; Sarah de, vii, 2687; 
Thos. (de), vi, 93; vii, 137%, 
265 n, 266, 269, 270 nN, 3247 

Urton, see Durton 

Usherwood, John, vi, 268; Rog., 
vi, 268”; Will., vi, 268 2 

Uttingesone, Thos., vu, 131 ” 

Uttingland (Staynall), vil, 252” 

Uttley, Rev. John, vi, 435 

Uvieth, vi, 537; vii, 217 


Val, Hugh de la, vi, 356, 450, 534 

Vale, the (Shevington), vi, 199 

Valence, Will. of Savoy, bp. of, 
Vii, 2647 

Valence, Aymer, vil, 146 

Valentine, John, vu, 309 ” 

Vale Rov al Atbev (Chesh.), vii, 
145, £51, 152m, 201, 210M; 


Vale Royal Abbey (cont.) 
abbots of, vii, 145, 158, 158 n, 
162, 184” 

Valoines, Geoff. de, vii, 238”; 
Phil. de, vii, 238” 

Varley, Pet., vi, 519%; Rich., vi, 
519, 531 »; Rob., vi, 519 ; Thos., 
vi, 517”, 518”, 519; Will. vi, 
519 : 

Vasey, Eliz., vii, 300; see also Vescy 

Vaudrey, Rev. Will., vi, 299 

Vaughan, Geo., vi, 528 ” 

Vavasour, Isabel, vii, 269 », 332 ”; 
Thos., vii, 103 2; Sir Walt., vii, 
67n; Will., vii, 269 n, 332” 

Veale, Ant., vii, 241”; Dorothy, 
vii, 249 n, 250; Edw., vii, 249 ” ; 
Ellen, vii, 249 ” ; John, vii, 249 n, 
250; Sarah, vii, 249 ”; fam., vii, 
231 ”, 245 

Veer, Rob. de, see Oxford, earl of 

Veevers, Ellen, v, 457; Thos., vi, 


457” 

Venables, Hugh de, vi, 76; Isabel, 
vii, 198; John de, vii, 162”; 
Kath. de, vi, 76; Ralph, vii, 
198; Rich., vii, 83 ” 

Vendkarhey (Cuerden), vi, 24 

Venus, transit of, vi, 149 

Vere, Philippa de, see Oxford, ctss. 
of ; Rob. de, see Oxford, earl of 

Verious, Ad., vii, 269 ” 

Vernon, Rich. de, vi, 301 ; Will. de, 
vii, 134%” 

Vertue, Rev. John, bp., vii, 12 

Vescy, Hen. de, vi, 208”; John de, 
vi, 208; Will. de, vi, 538; see 
also Vasey 

Veu Viver (Thornley with Wheat- 
ley), vil, 34” 

Veysey, John, bp. of Exeter, vii, 
42n 

Victoria Hospital (Blackpool), vii, 
246 

Viepens (Colne), vi, 534” 

Vilers, Beatrice de, vi, 150”; Pain 
de, vi, 112, 149 ; Rob. de, vi, 149, 
150; Thos. de, vi, 149; Warine 
de, vi, 150”, 151; Will. de, vi, 
149 

Vipont (Vipan), Edw., vi, 470; 
Eliz., vi, 470; John, vi, 470, 473 

Vivary (Vivers), the (Colne), vi, 
522”, 528 

Vivary Bridge (Colne), vi, 522, 530 

Vivian, vii, 54” 

Vyners close (Mearley), vi, 376” 


Waberthwaite, man. (Cumbs.), vii, 
269”, 270Nn 

Waddington (Wadington, Wadyng- 
ton), Alex., vi, 216; Alice, vi, 
429 n; Edm., vi, 425; Edw., vi, 
332”; Eliz. vi, 394”; Ellen, 
vi, 355”; Ellis de, vi, 366”; 
Geo., vi, 429”; Hen. de, vi, 366”; 
Isabel de, vi, 366”; Jane, vi, 
216”; Rev. J. B., vi, 371”; 
Lawr., vi, 216”, 299; Marg., 
vii, 111 n; Pet. (Piers), vi, 272 », 
277, 410”; Ralph, vi, 288 n, 
410; Rich., vi, 354, 387, 388 n, 
558; Rob., vi, 278 7, 366”, 367, 
429”, 431”; vii, 18, III”; 
Sarah de, vi, 556%; Thos., vi, 
332 n, 366”; Walt. de, vi, 366 n, 
553”, 556; Will. (de), vi, 
272, 494%”, 552”; Will. A., 
vi, 443; fam., vi, 374” 

Wade, Ant., vi, 492; John, vi, 
468”; Susan, vi, 154”; Thos., 
vi, 154”; Will. vi, 486 ” 

Wadebridge (Lea), vii, 129 


| 


INDEX 


Wadebridgegate (Lea), vii, 129 
Wadebridgeholme (Lea), vii, 130” 
Wadebridge Meadow (Lea), vii, 
130” 
Wadenmye (Longton), vi, 71 ” 
Waderode (Cliviger), vi, 480” 
Wadeson, Thos., vi, 181 
Wadfurlong, the (Elswick), 
284 n 
Wadington, see Waddington 
Wadischegreves (Leyland), vi, 58 
Wadsworth, Hugh, vii, 138 7 ; Jos., 
vii, 293 ”, 332; Rob.,, vii, 138”; 
fam., vii, 126 
Wadyngton, see Waddington 
Wagging Birch (Salwick), vii, 163 » 
Waingate (Parbold), vi, 180 ” 
Wainhouse, Rich., vi, 529 
Wainwright, Cecily de, vi, 256; 
Chas., vi, 7 ; Christiana, vii, 30  ; 
Mary, vi, 19”; Thos., vii, 265 ; 
Will. (de, the), vi, 19”, 110%, 
164”, 256; vil, 30” 
Waithman, John W., vii, 335 
Wakefield (Yorks.), vi, 314 ”, 316 n, 


vii, 


453” 

Wakefield, Will. de, vii, 41 

Waker, Ad. de, vi, 374”; Douce 
de, vi, 374" 

Wakeresale, see Whackersall 

Wakering, John, vi, 87” 

Walbanck, Walbank, see Wallbank 

Waldemuskar (Longton), vi, 71 ” 

Waldeve, Eve, vii, 170”; Rich., 
vii, 170” 

Walelega, see Whalley 

Waleton, Waleton in le Dale, see 
Walton-le-Dale 

Waleys (Waley), Ad. de, vii, 127”; 
Agnes le, vii, 249”; Alan le, vi, 
151”; Geoff. le, vii, 29”; Hen. 
le, vi, 188, 190, 223 ”; Iseult de, 
vii, 127”; Joan le, vii, 125”; 
John le, vi, 188 ”, 203 , 223”; 
Maurice le, vi, 151”; Rich. le, 
vi, 150”, I5I, I90, 203; vii, 
29n; Rob. le, vi, 150”, 151; 
Rog. le, vii, 249”; Sim. le, vi, 
188 ”, 190”; Thos. le, vi, 190», 
193”; vii, 125; see also Walsh 
and Welsh 

Walgate, see Wallgate 

Walgrave, John, vi, 557 

Walgrefe Close (Claughton), 
32772 

Walhill, Walhull, see Wallhill 

Walkandfot (Waltandefot, Wittan- 
defot), Ad., vii, 16”, 17” 

Walkden, Geoff., vi, 217, 283; 
Pet., vi, 278”; vii, 32; Thos., 
vi, 217 2, 229; —, vi, 404 ”; vii, 


vii, 


245 

Walker, Cath., vi, 539”; Hen., vi, 
128 1 ; Vil, 332 ” ; Jas., vii, 332 ”; 
John de, vi, 134 ”, 534”; Matth. 
the, vi, 528”; Mich. the, vi, 528%; 
Nich., vi, 528”; Rob., vi, 528 n, 
545”; vii, 196”; Rog. the, vi, 
539”; Syrith de, vi, 134”; 
Thos., vi, 161, 181; Rev. Thos. 
W., vi, 415 ; Will., vi, 6, 80, 358; 
vii, 152; Will. M., vii, 104”; 
—, vi, 524 

Walkerfield (Colne), vi, 525 ”, 527 ” 

Walker Fold (Chaigley), vii, 19 

Walkerholme (Garstang), vii, 314 ” 

Walkerscroft (Bispham), vi, lor n 

Walk Mill (Cliviger), vi, 479 

Wall (Walles, Wallis), Ann (Anne), 
vii, 102 ”, 211”; Ant., vii, 98 n, 
IOI m, 102”, 126n, 211; Edm., 
vii, 34”; Eliz., vii, Ioz m; Evan 
(Ewan), vii, I0I”, I02”, 123, 
318”; Jas., vii, 102”; Kath., 
vii, 135”; Lawr., vii, 56, 74, 


425 


Wall (cont.) 
IoIm, 102”; Marg., vii, 56”, 
102 n, 126”; Thos., vii, 74, 85, 
86, 87, 98”, 101; Will. vi, 


10g”, 160, 161, 164%”, 173%, 
180 n, 299 ; vii, 87 n, IOI nN, 102 n, 
126 n, 211 n; —, vii, 76 


Walland (Worsthorne), vi, 477 ” 

Wallay, see Whalley 

Wallbank (Church), vi, 400 #, 402 ” 

Wallbank (Walbanck, Walbank), 
Ad. de, vi, 241, 402”, 403%”; 
Alice de, vi, 402 ” ; Anabil de, vi, 
121”; Beatrice de, vi, 402”; 
Ellen de, vi, 402 ; Hen. de, vi, 
402 ”; John de, vi, 121 ”, 3477”; 
Rich. de, vi, 402”; Thos., vi, 
381; vii, 26%; Will. del (de), 
vi, 400 m, 402 ” 

Wall Banks (Ribbleton), vii, 106 ” 

Wallcroft (Langtree), vi, 197 ” 

Wallcroft (Wheelton), vi, 49 ” 

Wallebi, see Whalley 

Walleclough (Clayton le Moors), vi, 
4181 

Wallega, Wallei, see Whalley 

Waller, Will., vi, 160”; W., vi, 
432; —, vil, 217 

Waller tenement (Chipping), vii, 
26" 

Walles (Wallis), Will., see Wall 

Walleschaw (Cuerden), vi, 26 ” 

Wallesheved (Eccleshill), vi, 279 ” 

Wallesike (Eccleshill), vi, 279 

Walley, Walleye, see Whalley 

Wallfield (Parbold), vi, 180 ” 

Wallfurlong (Kellamergh), vii, 160n, 
I7In 

Wallgate (Cuerden), vi, 24 ”, 26” 

Wallgate (Stagnall), vii, 252 

Wallgreen (Padiham), vi, 493 

Wallhill (Walhill, Walhull, Wall- 
hull), Alice de, vi, 219”; Hen. 
de, vi, 207”, 219”; John (de), 
vi, 207”; Marg. de, vi, 207”; 
Rich. de, vi, 223 ~; Rob. de, vi, 
207”, 219”; Vii, 297”; Thos. 
(de), vi, 207 ”, 223” 

Wallshaw Dean Head (Trawden), 


V1, 552 

Wallshawsykes (Cuerden), vi, 26 ” 

Wallstreams (Worsthorne), vi, 
477 2, 485 2 

Wallsyke (Billington), vi, 330” 

Wallwork, Rev. John, vi, 452 

Walmer Bridge (Little Hoole), vi, 
69, 153, 154 

Walmsley (Walmerlegh, Walmers- 
ley, Walmesley, Walmesleye), 
Alex., vii, 49”; Alice de, vii, 
49”; Anne, Lady, vi, 499”; 
Anne, vi, 294, 329, 421; Barth., 
vi, 334%”, 422; Benj., vi, 404; 
Cath., vi, 422; Chas., vi, 192, 
421 ; Chris., vi, 285 ”; vii, 329”; 
Edw., vi, 35, 77 , 294, 421”; 
vii, 50; Eleanor, vi, 421; Eliz., 


vi, 311”, 378, 378%, 392n, 
49I1n; vii, 28", 49n, I02n, 
174m; Ellen, vi, 35”, 77%, 


250 ; vii, 121 ” ; Frances, vi, 294 ; 
Fran., vi, 422; Geo., vi, 8, 404, 
425; Gerard, vi, 77”; Helen, 
vi, 392”; Hen., vi, 421”; vii, 
13, 115, 115 #; Herman, vii, 13 ; 
Hugh, vi, 237%; Isabel, vi, 
392”; Jas., vi, 263”, 274, 
280, 415, 425, 4475 vii, 27”; 
Jane, vi, 256”; John, vi, 192, 
306 n, 421 mn, 435 ; Vii, 53”, 60 n, 
115”; Juliana (Julian), vi, 172 », 
421, 422; Leonard, vii, 49”; 
Marg., vi, 421; vii, 49”; Mary, 
vi, 421 ; Matth., vi, 311 » ; Nich., 
vi, 297, 421”; vil, 29”, 497, 


54 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Walmsley (cont.) 
1ozm; Ralph, vi, 282, 282 n, 
283, 425”; Rev. Rich., vi, 
435”; Rich., vi, 51, 172 ”, 237, 
259, 260, 282, 310, 346, 378 2, 
403, 420%, 421, 422, 423; Vil, 
4In, 49”, 51m”, 59n, 6on, 
115m, 116”; Rob., vi, 256%, 
378 n, 392, 395, 421 ”; Vil, 49”, 
50, 329”; Rog. (de), vi, 256 2, 
552”; vil, 49”; Rosamond, vi, 
294; Sir Thos., vi, 243”, 250, 
259, 278, 282, 304, 329, 332, 346, 
347”, 392, 401 nN, 421, 422, 
499"; vii, 49n, 92N, 108 n, 
114; Thos., vi, 35”, 77%, 213, 
259, 282 n, 294, 306, 310, 311 n, 
347, 306m, 367, 378 n, 389n, 
391 n, 392, 40I nN, 4ION, 4II Zn, 
420, 421, 422, 425”, 49In; 
vii, 49”, 58, 106 n, I14, 115 7, 
174”, 293”, 329n, 330, 332; 


Thos. G., Mi, 259; vi, 44”; 
Sir Will., vi, 328; Will., vi, 237, 
282, 282n, 283, 283 3 n, 311; 


vii, 63 7, 767, 3297; bp., vii, 
81 ; judge, vi, 287 , 340, 444”; 
—, vi, 513”; vii, 51; fam., vi, 
398 

Walmestey Fold (Lower Darwen), 
vi, 4219” 

Walne, see Wawne 

Walpole, Sir Edw., vii, 
Edw., vii, 311 

Walse Wytill, see Welch Whittle 

Walsh, Edw., vi, 241, 322”; Eliz., 
vi, 322 n; Hen,, vii, 250”; John, 
vii, 216”, 250”; Rich. le, vii, 
Ja 8 Rob., le, vii, 33; Rog., 

292": Will. (le), vi, 272; 

vii, 330"; "fam., Vi, 203; see also 
Waleys and Welsh 

Walsham, Rob., vii, 8 


312; 


2; fam., vi, 


354 

Walshaw (Briercliffe), vi, 469, 552 

Walshaw (Wolleshagh), Ad. de, 
vi, 469, 470; Alice, vi, 4697; 
Ellis de, vi, 469 ; John, vi, 469 7 ; 
Rob., vi, 469 ” 

Walshe Quithill, Walshe Whyt- 
hille, see Welch Whittle 

Walshman, see Welchman 

Walsingham, Sir Fran., vi, 368 

Walsley, see Wastley 

Walsoken Hospital 
378 n 

Walstreams, see Wallstreams 

Waltandefot, see Walkandfot 

Walter (Gualter), vi, 480; vii, 
161m, 172m, 175; abbot of 
Evesham, vi, 65; archbp., vii, 
333m; the chaplain, vi, 451”, 
457, 480 n, 485”; vii, 59”; the 
demand, vi, 117 

Walter (Galter, Gaulter, Gualter), 
Alice, vii, 179; Geo., vii, 250”; 
Hervey (Harvey), vii, 1567, 
179, 240, 273, 333”; Lawr., 
vii, 204; Mary, vi, 378”; 
Maud, vii, 333”; Nich., vi, 
200; Rob., vl, 250”; Theo. 
bald, ‘vi, 303; vii, 69, 83, 84, 


(Norf.), vi, 


156, 161m, 176, 178m, 179, 
179M, 222, 233, 234, 235%, 
238m, 241, 254n, 263, 273, 
333; Thos., vii, 241; Walt., vii, 


88 n; Will, vi, 378 0; vii, 266 
Waltercroft (Cliviger), vi, 481 n 
Walthall, Pet., vi, 80 
Waltheof, vii, 63 n, 132” 

Walton, "Higher (Walton-le-Dale), 

vi, 289 : ch., vi, 300 
Walton, Little (Walton- le-Dale), 

Vi, 294 


Walton (Ulnes Walton, Walton- 
in-le-Dale), Sir Ad. de, vi, 
14m; Ad. de, vi, I1n, 167, 
108, 109, I10m, 150, 150”, 
I5I n, 163", 164", 1667; vii, 
179", 249n; Agnes (de), vi, 
109”, IIon, 164", 538; vii, 
IOI n, TION, 133 nm, 272 n, 288 Nn; 
Alice de, vii, lor n, 179 n, 2497; 
Allota de, vi, 291 0; Amb., vi, 
413, 536, 540, 545; Ameria de, 
vi, 291”; Anne, vi, 539”; vii, 


IoIn, 102m, 120”, 309”; 
Avice de, vi, 69n, 164"; 
Banastre, vi, 413; Brian, bp., 


vi, 86 ; Cecily de, vi, 11 ”; Chris. 
(de), vi, 74, 90, 151m”, 295, 
538m; Dolphin de, vi, 110”; 
Dorothy, vi, 295”; Eliz., vi, 
294, 545”; Vil, 120”, 3097; 
Ellen, vi, 545”; vil, 79”, 
IorIm; Emma de, vi, 109%, 
294; Esther, vi, 216”; Geoff. 
de, vi, I1m, 24”, 291 m, 294, 
298 n, 526"; vii, IoI n, 3287; 
Geo., vii, 74, oi m; Grace, vii, 
torn; Hen. (Harry) (de, of), 
vi, Ign, 26m, 110m, 149, I51 n, 
291m, 294, 299”, 369%”, 413, 
447", 468n, 538, 538%, 539, 
540, 545”; vii, 84, 85, Torn, 
IIo n, 133”, 229”; Isabel, vii, 
200; Jas. (de), vi, 23", Iogn, 
117", 164m, 216n, 274M, 294, 
295, 438, 481 n, 525, 526 n, 538%, 
539”; vil, 75, 79”, 98m, IOI n, 


102”, 106m, 120; Jane, vi, 
294; Jankin of, vi, 299”; Joan 
(de), vi, 109, 294, 543; vii, 
IoIn; John (Johan) (de), vi, 7, 
IIn, I2n, 24n, 26n, 672, 
73%, 74, 9ON, 92 N, 93H, 109 NH, 
I5In, 291, 291m, 293", 294, 
294, 295, 298m, 299, 358, 
538”, 539”, 542; Vii, 662, 


79 n, IOI n, 107 n, 133 nN, 328 N; 
Kath. de, vi, 163”; Mabel, 
vi, Ito; Magota, vii, 85”; 
Marg. (de), vi, 109 ”, 135, I5I ”, 
153”; Margery (de), vi, 109; 
vii, 57”, 272, 288; Mary, 
vi, 413; ‘Maud de, vi, 93”, 109 ; 
vil, 57”; Priscilla, vi, 295; vii, 
2721; Rich. (de), vi, "538; vii, 
30”, 85, IOI n, 106 n, 107 n, 
116 n, 120 Nn, 133”, 212 n, 272 N, 
288 n, 331”; Rich. T. W., vi, 
413, 415”; Rev. Rich. W., 
vi, 413; Rob. de, vi, 11 n, 14, 
110”; Rog. (de), vi, 135, 174”; 
Steph. de, vi, 166”; Sir Thos., 
vi, 109”, 156, 1647, 488, 
519; Thos. (de), vi, 14, 28n, 
74”, IloOn, 164 nN, 237, 294, 
295, 520; vii, IoIm, 200n, 
272", 309”; Ulf de, vi, 108; 
Walt. de, vi, 291 2; Warine de, 
vi, 69 m, 92 n, 108, Iogn, I50n, 
158”, 162, 163”, 295; vii, 
160; Rev. Will. bp., vii, 7”; 
Will. (de), vi, 9, I1 ”, 24 n, 
26n, 28n, 67", 73, 73%, 74, 
109, I10”, 159%”, 163, 1637, 
294, 295, 298 n, 299, 525n; 
vii, 57 n, 66, 79”, 85m, IOI Nn, 
107 n, 116%, 162 n, 200 n, 212 n, 
272 Nn, 33I1n; —, vi, I51 %, 274, 
395, 5247, 545”; vii, o8n; 
fam., vi, 18. 

Walton Copp (Walton-le-Dale), 
290. 

Walton Hall (Walton-le-Dale), vi, 
43, 45, 290, 293. 

Walton - in - le - Dale, 
Walton 


vi, 


fam., see 


426 


Walton-le-Dale, vi, 24", 71 n, 235, 
289-300; Vil, 43", 72, 131; 
adv., vi, 297; bridge, vii, 76; 
char., vi, 300; ch., vi, 296; 
crosses, vi, 290; man., vi, 23, 
4Un, 260, 291; mkts. and fairs, 
vi, 291; mill, vi, 289, 291, 292 n; 
mock corporation, vi, 290; 
Nonconf., vi, 41m, 299: Ron. 
Cath., vi, 300 ; Rom. rem., vi, 
289; sch., vi, 300; ‘ Unicorn ' 
inn, vi, 290 

Walton Moss, vi, 289 

Walton Spire (Marsden), Vi, 537 

Walton Summit, vi, 289 


Walverden (Briercliffe), vi, 468 n, 
524”; mill, vi, 524, 540 

Walverden Water, vi, 524”, 536, 
540” 


Wamberge (Wambergh), Rich. de, 
vi, 87, 159; Rob. de, vi, 87; 
Thos., vii, 139" 

Wang (Clitheroe), vi, 365” 

Wanless (Barrowford), vi, 542, 544, 
548 

Wanless Water, vi, 522, 526n 

Warbreck (Layton with Warbreck), 
vii, 247-51 

Warbreck, Rich., vii, 250; Thos., 
vii, 250 

Warburton, Alan de, vii, 3137; 
Edw. de, vi, 178, 179n; Sir 
Geoff. de, vi, 77”, 179"; Geoff. 
de, vi, 77”; vii, 28n: John 
(de), vi, 178; vii, 329; Lucy 
de, vi, 178 n, I79n; Marg. de, 
vii, 313.2; Rob. de, vi, 777; 
Will. de, vii, 313” 

Warcockelowe (Over Darwen), vi, 
2720" 

Warcock Hill, see Peacock Hill 

Warcock Stone (Colne), vi, 5240 

Ward, Alex., vi, 219n; Alice, vii, 
199 n; Alina, vii, 65 n; Anne, vi, 
219n; Geo., vi, 262 | Godith; 
vii, 172 n ; Grace, vii, 44.” ; Rev. 
Hen., vii, 56”; Hen., vi, 255, 
258, 323, 330, 518 ; Jas., vi, 237 n, 
262”; Janet, vii, 56 2 ; Jennet, 
vii, 44”; John, vi, 28 n, 357, 
I2I n, 408 n; Vii, 37 , 50, 172”, 
179”, 289n; Kath., vi, 287; 
Mabel, vii, 64”, 65; Marg., vi, 
121m; Mary, vi, 35”; Maud, 
vii, 210”; Rich., vi, 16%”; vii, 
50; Rob. (le), vii, 64", 657, 
245 2, 326m"; Townley, vii, 44; 
Will. (the), vi, 16 n, 263 ”, 4057; 
vii, 27 2, 97 2, 199 n, 227 N, 257 N; 
Capt. —, vi, 182 ; fam., vi, 
2460" 

Warden, see Werden 

Ward Esebrek, John le, vi, 393”; 
Will. le, vi, 393” 

Ward Green '(Ribchester), vii, 50 

Wardle, Nich. de, vi, 362 

Wardleys (Poulton), vii, 251 

Ward’s House (Salwick), vii, 165 

Warin, Rich., vi, 208” 

Warine, vi, 402 n, 499 7; vii, 132 ”, 
180” 

Waring (Wareing, Wering), Alex., 
vii, 198, 253; Ellen, vi, 91”; 
Geo., vi, 167”; vii, 213; Hen., 
vi, 57 2, 143 1; vii, 207 n, 213 1; 
Jas, vi, 166, 166 2; Jas. T., vi, 
55; Jer., vii, 206 n: John, vi, 
17 n, 68 n, 182 n, 208; vii, 213”; 
Marg., vil, 253; Paul, vi, 299; 
Rich., vi, 99", 1677; vii, 714, 
213, 253”; Rob., vi, 143"; 
Rog., vi, 496 n ; vii, 212 n; Thos., 
Vi, 35"; vii, 44”, 298; Will, vii, 
176, 198 n, 206”, 210%, 213”, 
288n; see also Wearing 


Waringson, Joan, vi, 95”; Will. 
vi, 95” 

Warlawes, see Wharles 

Warlesmoor (Stalmine), vii, 252 ” 

Warleys, see Wardleys 

Warlowes, see Wharles 

Warmden Clough (Accrington), vi, 
423 

Warner, John, vi, 152; Marg., vi, 
152 

Warney, John W., vi, 549 

Waroxgang (Rawcliffe), vii, 271 2 

Warren, Agnes (de), vii, 253%, 
286”; Anne, vi, 149”; Vii, 


286n, 287; Anna D., vii, 
286”; Dorothy, vi, 255; Sir 
Edw., vii, 201”, 286, 287%; 


Edw., vi, 255, 272, 281, 283; 
vii, 287”; Eleanor, vii, 286; 
Eliz. H., vi, 255; vii, 286”; 
Fran., vii, 286 ; Sir Geo., vi, 260, 
272, 322", 323; vii, 58, 194, 
287"; Geo., vi, 255, 258, 281, 
323; vii, 286; Hugh, vi, 149, 
198%”; vii, 287”; Jane, vii, 194”, 
287"; Sir John, vii, 127 ”, 286, 
288n; John (de), vi, 149”, 272; 


vii, 194, I99, 200, 201, 286, 
286, 287, 288; Sir Lawr., 
vii, 286”; Lawr., vii, 127%, 


286, 287; Marg. (de), vi, 19 ”, 
IlIon, 164”, 286”; Mary, vii, 
286"; Nich., vii, 286; Pet., vii, 
286"; Sam., vi, 19”, IIon, 
164”; Sibyl, vii, 286; Susanna, 
vii, 286”; Talbot, vii, 287”; 
fam., vii, 50 ”, 285 

Warriner, Thos., vi, 371%, 534; 
— Vi, 535 

Warrington, vii, 78, 136” 

Warth, the (Colne), vi, 527” 

Warthebreke, see Warbreck 

Warthes (Layton), vii, 223 ” 

Warton, vi, 58”; vii, 118 ”, 119, 
126”, 135”, 143”, 144, 146”, 
149, 150, 160”, 163%, 165, 
166 ”, 171-4, 199”, 211 n, 229 Nn, 
274", 300; ch., vii, 174; man., 
vii, 171 ; mkt., vii, 302 

Warton, Ad. de, vii, 171”; Alice 
de, vii, 169”, 171”; Amy de, 
vii, 241”; Avice de, vil, 171”; 
Eustace de, vi, 497 2; Isabel de, 
vi, 497; John (de), vii, 169 ”, 
I7In, 172”, 241”; Quenilda 
de, vii, 168 ”, 172 ”, 173 ”; Rich. 
de, vii, 169 ”, 171 n, 172 ; Rob. 
de, vi, 497”; Rog. de, vii, 171 ”, 
229”; Siegrith de, vii, 172”; 
see also Wharton 

Warton Bank (Warton), vii, 171 

Warton Brow (Warton), vii, 171 

Warton Lees, vii, 158” 


Warton Pool (Freckleton), vii, 
168 n, 172” 7 

Washington, Agnes de, vii, 229 », 
230”, 282; Edm. de, vii, 


305 n; Marg. de, vii, 282; Rob. 
de, vii, 229 ”, 230 n, 282” 

Wastley (Walsley, Wasley, Wast- 
lei, Wastleigh), Ellen, vii, 14”; 
Joan, vi, 129, 133 ”; Oliver, vii, 
14”; Rich., vi, 14 , 143; Thos., 
vi, 129 n, 133 ”, 143 

Watchet, Will., vii, 116” 

Watelei, see Wheatley — 

Water (Newchurch), vi, 437, 44° 

Waterbarn (Newchurch), vi, 440 

Watercroft (Chatburn), vi, 373 ” 

Waterfoot (Newchurch), vi, 437, 


440-1 : 
Waterforth, Hugh, vi, 100 
Waterhouse, Mich., vi, 319 ; 
Waterhouse Green (Whittle), vi, 
32, 360. 


INDEX 


Waterings (Catterall), vii, 323 ” 
Waterloo (Blackpool), vii, 250” 
Watershackles cross (Trawden), vi, 
551 
Waterside (Colne), vi, 522 
Waterside (Eccleshill), vi, 278 
Waterside (New Laund Booth), vi, 
490, 492 
Waterside Bridge 
536 
Waterswolghe (Clitheroe), vi, 365 ” 
Waterworth, Andr., vi, 167”; Rich., 
vi, 1oon ; Thurstan, vi, 167 ” 
Waterworth dole, vii, 44” 
Watesden, Christiana de, vi, 471 ” 
Watfoth (Greenhalgh), vii, 181 ” 
Wath, Alan de, vii, 271 ~; Clarice 
(de), vii, 233 ”, 254”; Hen. de, 
vii, 4; Marg. de, vii, 4; Rich. de, 
vii, 306”; Rob. (de), vii, 233 ”, 
254”; Will. de, vii, 271 ” 
Wathew, Dorothy, vi, 228”; Eliz., 
vi, 228”; Rob., vi, 228” 
Watling Street, vi, 224; vii, 137 
Watmough, Hugh, vi, 451 », 4867; 
Jas., vi, 371; Thos., vi, 491 
Watson, Anne, vii, 18; Ant., vi, 


(Marsden), vi, 


392, 394”, 397%, 398, 550”; 
Dorothy, vi, 392, 556”; Jas., 
vi, 272”; John, vi, 330, 
485; Rich. vii, 49”; Rog., 


vii, 79”; Thos., vi, 392, 394%”, 
397, 398”, 556; —, Vii, 
78%” 

Watts, Rev. —, vii, 188 

Wawne (Walne, Wawan, Wawayn), 
Alice, vii, 35”, 212”; Anne, 
vii, 29”; Edm., vii, 29”, 347, 
212; Eliz., vii, 29”; Ellen, 
vii, 29”, 212”; John, vii, 29”, 
35”, 212”; Nich., vii, 29%, 
209”, 212”; Rich., vii, 212”; 
Rob., vii, 35”, 212”; Thos., 
vii, 29”, 36, 212”; Will., vii, 
29 Nn, 36, 212%” 

Wayte, Ad. le, vii, 226”, 227%”; 
John le, vii, 227%; Rob. (le), vi, 
I3I ”; vii, 291 

Wayward, Ad., vi, 207”; John, 
vi, 207”; Lawr., vi, 208”; 
Rich., vi, 207 2; Thos., vi, 164 7, 
207 ” 

Wearden, see Werden 

Wearing, Rev. Geo., vi, 334; Geo., 
vi, 19”, 426; see also Waring 

Wearingmoor (Kirkland), vii, 314 ” 

Webber, Jas., vii, 148 

Webster, Alice, vi, 381%”; vii, 
26”; Cath., vi, 377”; Cecily 
the, vii, 321”; Frances, vi, 
493”; Fran., vi, 377"; Jas., 
vi, 381”; vii, 26”; John, vi, 
361, 370; Margery, vi, 3957”; 
Rich., vi, 269%, 395”, 493, 
494”, 496; —, vi, 387”, 505” 

Webster’s Farm (Marton), vii, 225 


Wedacre, man. (Barnacre), vii, 
292 N, 303 M, 304, 315, 318 

Wedacre (Chaigley), vii, 1 

Wedacre (Wedaker, Westacre, 
Woodacre), Ad. de, vii, 199, 
318”; Ameria de, vi, 627; 


Christiana de, vii, 324”; Edm. 
de, vii, 268, 297”, 324”; Gilb. 
de, vii, 281”; Godith de, vii, 
281; Hen. de, vii, 114 ”, 324”; 
Hugh (de), vii, 308, 318%, 
322”, 323”, 324”; John de, 
vii, 324”; Maud de, vii, 114 2, 
330”; Paulin (Paulinus) de, vii, 
114”, 281”, 308 n, 324n, 3321; 
Rich. de, vii, 199, 318 ”, 332”; 
Rob. de, vii, 272, 308, 318, 
322”; Rog. de, vii, 28, 198 n, 
271, 272, 301, 308n, 318, 


427 


Wedacre (cont.) 
322 n, 323 N, 324 2, 328 n, 330”, 
332; Walt. de, vii, 324”; Will. 
de, vi, 62”; vii, 313 n, 3187, 


322 n, 324n; —, vii, 308%” 
Wedacre’s Place (Barnacre), vii, 
324” 


Weddehouse, Ellen del, vi, 481 2 

Wederidding (Claughton), vii, 326 ” 

Weetehead Clough (Trawden), vi, 
552 

Weetley House 
2370 

Weeton (Weeton-with-Preese), vii, 
143, 143, 144, 144”, 146%, 
149”, 153, 174, 176-9, 283”; 
burial cairn, vii, 176; ch., vii, 
178; man., vii, 176; mkts. and 
fairs, vii, 176; Nonconf., vii, 178 

Weir (Newchurch), vi, 437 

Welbury, Theodore M., vii, 148 


(Southwell), vi, 


Welch, fam., see Walsh, Welsh, 
Waleys 
Welchman (Walshman, Welch- 


mond), Hugh, vi, 237”, 263, 
311; vii, 112”; John, vii, 112” 

Welch Whittle, vi, 58 ”, 182, 187”, 
203-4; Vii, 102”; char., vi, 
90%”, I91; man., vi, I7I, 203 

Weld, Edw., vii, 7; Edw. J., vii, 
230; Eliz., vii, 7; Geo., vi, 380, 
454; vii, 7”; John, vi, 380; 
vii, 13; Jos., vii, 7”, 1897; 
Mary, vii, 7”; Matilda, vi, 380; 
Thos., cardinal, vi, 381”; vii, 
7, 17, 189”; Thos., vi, 2”, 
72) 72M, 73, 132, 143, 380, 398, 
399, 445; Vu, 7, 14, 18, 29, 55, 
58, 189”; Will., vii, 7 

Weld Bank (Chorley), vi, 129, 148 

Well, fam., see Wells 

Wellbutts (Cuerden), vi, 27 

Wellcroft (Hoghton), vi, 37 ” 

Wellgate (Clitheroe), vi, 368 

Welnebooth, man., vi, 2337” 

Wells, vi, 57”, 75, 192, 282, 524; 
vl, 2, 54, 91”, 96%, 97%, 129, 
I9I, 199, 315 

Wells (Well), John, vii, 255; Will. 
del, vii, 313 ” 

Welsell (Hapton), vi, 509 

Welsett, Geo., see Wolset 

Welsh (Welch), Hen., vi, 130, 147; 
Rev. John, vi, 440; John,. vi, 
273; see also Walsh and Waleys 

Weltden, Will, vii, 158, 184 

Wen, Hen., vi, 219”; John, vi, 
205%”, 219”; Thos., vi, 205%, 


219” 
Wende (Wendbroc), brook, vi, 314”, 
324” 
Wenden Ferrens, man. (Bucks.), vii, 


304” 
Wendeuall, Will. de, vii, 69 
Wengham, see Wingham 
Wennington, man. (Lonsdale), vi, 


377% 

Wenshead (Tockholes), vi, 283” 

Wensley Fold (Blackburn), vi, 
249 

Wensnape (Bleasdale), vii, 141 ” 

Werden (Whittle-le-Woods), vi, 
II”, 33” 

Werden, brook, vi, 29 ” 

Werden (Warden, Wearden, Wor- 
den), Arth., vi, 61 ~; Ashton, vi, 
416; vil, 134 ”, 218, 245; Edm., 
vii, 74, 75, 76 ”, IO1 n, I40n; 
Geo., vi, 61”; Hen., vi, 32”; 
Jas., vi, 61”; vii, 1o1n; Sir 
John, vi, 17”; John (de), vi, 
8n, 17”, 27”, 61 n; Lettice, vi, 
61; Marg. (de), vi, 17 n, 2627; 
Pet., vi, 61 ”; Rich. de, vi, 18; 
Rob. (de), vi, 17 , 18 n, 32, 56, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Werden (cont.) 

229; Rog. de, vi, 17", 577, 
61; Stanley, vii, 134; Thos. 
(de), vi, 17, 82, 262; vii, 
138; Will., vi, 32, 60, 61; 
vii, 133” 

Werdenheys (Cuerden), vi, 27 ” 

Wering, see Waring and Wearing 

Werlows, see Wharles 

Wernigshurst (Bilsborrow), 
3327 

Werthinton, see Worthington 

Weselbutts (Freckleton), vu, 170” 

Wesham  (Medlar-with-Wesham), 
vii, 143, 146”, 149m, 150, 151, 
153-7, 166 n, 176n, 177, 180n,; 
ch., vii, 156 ; ind., vii, 153 ; man., 
vii, 153; mill, vu, 154; Nonconf., 
vu, 156; Rom. Cath., vii, 157 

Wesham, Alex. de, vii, 154 n; John 
de, vii, 154; Rog. de, vii, 154 

Wesham Cross (Wesham), vii, 157 

Wesham Hall (Wesham), vii, 
154” 

Wesley, Agnes, vi, 220 » ; John, vi, 
278, 299, 344, 453, 535”; VU, 
26, 103 n, 312; Thos., vi, 220”; 
—) Vi, 535 

Wesleyan Reformers, vi, 453 

Wesleyans, vi, 17, 23, 36, 46, 49, 
50, 61, 74, 96, 100, 119, 128, 147, 
153, 166, 199, 200, 220, 229, 248, 


vii, 


251, 263, 275, 278, 299, 300, 
313, 336, 344, 348, 371, 372, 396, 
409, 411, 423, 427, 435, 436, 


449, 441, 453, 468, 478, 496, 512, 
513, 518, 519, 520, 535, 541, 544, 
548, 552, 558; vil, 32, 53, 103, 
137, 171, 178, 213, 218, 237; 242, 
251, 276, 279, 291, 304, 312, 332, 
335 

Wessum, see Wesham 

West, Atherton, vi, 280; Hen., vi, 
408n; Rob., vii, 114”; Thos., 
vi, 76, 170 n, 263”; Vii, I12"; 
Will, vii, 114.” 

Westacre, see Wedacre 

Westbi, see Westby 

Westbuttes end (Studlehurst), vi, 


324" 
Westby (Westby-with-Plumptons), 
Vil, 143, 143%, 144, 144 n, 146 7, 


150, 157M, 161 n, 105, 174-6, 
181m, 215m; cross., vii, 174; 
man., Vil, 162, 163, 164m, 175 

Westby (Yorks), vii, 155” 

Westby, Ad. de, vii, 155; Alice, 
v1; 1335 vil, 154; Anne, vil, 
155”, 235; Beatrice, Vi, 1543 
Bridg., vil, 155”; Cath., vi, 


317 n, 318 ; vil, 155; Elcanor, 
Vu, 238; Eliz., Vl, 395”; vil, 
140”, 1557”, 236; Ellen, vii, 
154”, 155”, 235”; Fran., vii, 
I4l nm, 155; Geo., vii, 155, 156, 
156, 238m, 271; Jocelyn T., 
see Fazakerley-Westby ; John, 
Vi, 317”; vil, 51”, 152”, 155, 
1567, 235, 236, 238 n, 719 8 a 
Mabel, vii, 154 ; Marg., vii, 155 n, 
2720"; Margery, vi, 395 n; Mary, 
vu, 155”; Matilda H., see 
Fazakeriey-Westby ; Nich., Md; 
395”, 396; Rich., vu, 2387; 
Rob., vii, 155”, 157”; Thos., 
vil, 25, I44, 154%, 155, 156, 
235m, 271, 272; Will., vi, 416; 
Vil, 153) 154, 255; 167 n, 199 7, 
228, 235”, 258; Miss, vii, 
278; Mrs., vii, 149; —, vi, 3957 

Westby Hall A estby), vii, 149 

Wi ve ‘Close (Ightenhill Park), vi 

n 

West Close Booth (Westecloos), 

349, 493, 512-13, 522 


vi, 


Westeshum, Westesom, see Wes- 
ham 

Westewode, Agnes de, vi, 315.7"; 
Phil. de, vi, 315” 

Westfield (Fishwick), vii, 116” 

Westfield (Goosnargh), vii, 198 » 

Westfield, brook, vii, 127 

Westtield, John, vii, 199” 

Westgate (Habergham Eaves), vi, 


454 

Westgrims Moss (Clifton), vii, 162 ”, 
163” 

Westhalum, Sim. de, vii, 41” 

Westhead (Croston), vi, 95 

Westhead, Thos., vi, 174” 

Westhoughton, vi, 500” 

West House (Thornley), vii, 36 

Westhusum, see Wesham 

Westleigh, John de, vi, 49”; Rich. 
de, vi »49n “3 

Westley (Lea), vii, 130” 

Westmeadowend (Gt. Eccleston), 
vii, 277” 

Westmoss (Lytham), vii, 215” 

Weston, John, vi, 7; Sir Thos., 
prior, vi, 112 

Westpool (Rawcliffe), vii, 274” 

Westrode (Downham), vi, 555” 

Westsnape (Ashley), vii, 213 ” 

Westsom, see Wesham 

Weteley, brook, vi, 253 ” 

Wetenhale, Ad. de, vi, 204 ” 

Weterode (Cliviger), vi, 480 ” 

Wetfield (Bretherton), vi, 103 ” 

Wetherby, Will. de, vi, 241, 276, 
331" 

Wetheton, see Weeton 

Weticroft Syke (Dinckley), vi, 336 

Wetridding (Chipping), vii, 27 ” 

Wetriding (Cuerden), vi, 26” 

Wetshaw, fam., vi, 228 

Wetteleye, see Wheatley 

Wettenhall, Ad. de, vi, 109”; 
Maud de, vi, 109”; Rob. de, 
vi, 109” 

Whackersall (Marsden), vi, 536, 538 

Whackersall, Mich. de, vi, 538” 

Whaley, fam., see Whalley 

Whalley, vi, 230, 234, 349-60, 
381-8, 494", 534, 554; Vil, 
222m; adv., vi, 355; battle, vi, 
235, 349; chant., vi, 359; char., 
vi, 387; ch., vi, 350- 5, 301, 369, 
381, 389 , 413, 414, 504 n, 506, 
509, 556% ; crosses, Vi, 349, 355, 
381; ind., vi, 350, 381 ; man., vi, 
382, 383 n; mts, and fairs, vi, 
368; Noncont., vi, 350, 360, 381, 
357; pk., vi, 382”; prehist. 
Tem., V1, 349; sch., vi, 360, 388 

Whalley, A. G. Rawstorne, bp. 
of, vi, 360; Geoff., dean of, 
Vi, 253 7, 258 n, 284, 303 , 326, 
355, 356%, 387n, 391, 393”, 
412, 413, 469”, 506, 511 Nn; 
vii, 13”; Hen., dean of, vi, 270, 
355, 3557; Liulph (Cutwolf), 
dean of, vi, 355; Orm, dean of, 
vl, 239”, 353”; Rob., dean of, 


vi, 355, 391; Rog., dean of, vi, 
355, 356, 356%”, 391, 444%, 
558; Spartling, dean of, vi, 
355”; Will., dean of, vi, 355 
Whalley Av. alley, Whaley, 
Whauley), Agnes de, vi, 366%, 
398”; Alice de, vi, 47, 267 n, 


268, 388 n; Ameria (Amery) de, 
vi, 270; vii, 177”; Anne, vi, 
406 2; Avice de, vi, 326, 409”; 
Eliza, vi, 354; Eliz, vi, 277, 
4067; Geoff. de, vi, 270, 326, 
409”, 475”; Gilb., vi, 198”; 
Rev. G. M., vi, 355; Hen. de, 
vl, 11m, 18, 21”, 47%, 270, 
281, 326, 356 n, 388; vii, 


428 


Whalley (cont.) 
177"; Hugh de, vi, 366" 
Jas., Vi, 343. 354, 355, 383, 387, 
399, 405, 400, 550, 557; Vii, 
158”; Jane, vi, 250; John de, 
vii, 17", 47, 204, 357, 387 n, 
400 n, 511 Nn; “Kath. de, vi, 47 n, 
198”; Lawr., vi, 251; Marg. de, 
vi, 47"; Margery de, vu, 17"; 
Oliver, vi, 267; Renald de, 
vi, 398”; Rich. (de), vi, 267 n, 
285, 356; vil, 88, 107; Rob, 
(de), vi, 47”, 271, 383n, 
387 », 398, 413%, 414m, 475m, 
511”; Roesia de, vi, 389"; 
Rog. (de), vi, 21”, 47, 250, 
267, 268, 271, 388 n, 391 Nn; 
Thos., vi, 191 m, 248”, 342, 387, 
535"; vil, 32,88; Thurstan, 
vii, 152; Will. (de), vi, 217, 
22M, 251, 352; vu, 47", 53%, 
8; —, vi, 408; vii, 149; 
fam., vi, 246 ”, 423 

Whalley Abbey, vi, 48, 49, 240, 241, 
245, 252, 264 n, 265, 298, 301, 
302", 303, 317M", 325, 3270, 
329, 330, 331, 332, 339, 359, 
356, 357, 358, 363 n, 368m, 375, 
381, 382, 383-6, 387m, 391, 
394, 397, 403", 436”, 438n, 
446, 450, 494, 504”, 505, 506m, 
530, 554, 550, 560; vii, 8, 51, 
58, 83”, 97, 174, 284; abbots 
of, vi, I2I MN, 231, 349, 371M, 
384, 389, 398, 412, 425, 443, 
451m, 457, 458, 494”, 490n ; 
vil, 42”, 46, 55%, 57, 177%, 
184; John Paslew, vi, 354, 
415, 495; Nich. de York, vil, 
65”; Ralph, vi, 250, 340, 
446”; Rob. de Topcliffe, vi, 
384; ch., vi, 384; mill, vi, 
384; prior of, vi, 354, 358" 

Whalley Field ‘(Little Mitton), vi, 
389 


Willey Nab, vi, 325, 327%, 
328 n, 339 2 
Whalley-Smythe-Gardiner, Eliz. J., 
vi, 387”; Sir Jas., vi, 354, 387; 
Sir Jas. B., vi, 387”; Sir Jo 
vi, 406”;. Sir John B., vi, 
387; Rev. John M., vi, 387"; 
Mabel K., vi, 387”; Rob., 
vi, 387; Will., vi, 354 
Wharles (Treales, Roseacre and 
Wharles), vii, 150, 178 
Wharles, Alan de, vii, 284”; Alex., 
vii, 136”; Alice de, vii, 281”; 
Cecily de, vii, 284”; Eliz., vii, 


136”; Jas., vii, 136”; Rog. 
de, vii, 281” 
Wharton, tnshp., see Warton 
Wharton, Marg., vii, 53; Thos., 


vil, 155”; see also Warton 
Wheatcroft (Haighton), vii, 125” 
Wheate (Wheat), Eliz., vi, 152; 

Sir Thos., vi, 153 ; Will. vi, 


152. 

Wheatfield (Bilsborrow), vii, 331 

Wheat Field (Osbaldeston), vi, 319 

Wheathead (Barrowford), vi, 542 

Wheathead Height, vi, 519 

Wheatholme (Hackinsall), vii, 260 

Wheatholme Carr (Hackinsall), vii, 
260n 

Wheatley (Thornley with Wheat- 
ley), vii, 20, 29 N, 32, 34; char., 
vii, 2 

Wheatley, man., vi, 232, 233” 

Wheatley, Higher (Wheatley Carr 
Booth), vi, 520 

Wheatley, Lower (Wheatley Carr 
Booth), vii, 521 

Wheatley, Upper (Wheatley Carr 
Booth), vi, 521 


Wheatley; Ad. de, vii, 57%; Alice 
de, vii, 57”; Jordan de, vii, 
34”; Rich. de, vii, 57 ”; 
Rog. de, vii, 57” 

Wheatley Booth (Barley with 
Wheatley Booth), vi, 349, 518 

Wheatley Carr (Wheatley Carr 
Booth), vi, 520 

Wheatley Carr Booth, vi, 230%, 
349, 520-1, 537”, 540”; mills, 
vi, 520, 521; Nonconf., vi, 521 

Wheatley Laith (Wheatley Carr 
Booth), vi, 520 

Wheatley Lane (Old Laund Booth), 
vi, 521 

Wheatley Upper Barn (Wheatley 
Carr Booth), vii, 521 

Wheelcroft (Wheelton), vi, 49 ” 

Wheelton, vi, 3, 6 », 37, 38”, 47 7, 


49-50, 58”; vii, 130”; Alex- 
ander House, vi, 48”; char., 
vi, 10; man., vi, 39, 41”, 49; 
Nonconf., vi, 50 

Wheelton, Ad. de, vi, 49”; Aldrit 


de, vi, 49”; Alex. de, vi, 49”; 
50”; Alice de, vi, 49 x; Amabel 
de, vi, 49”; Gilb. de, vi, 49”; 


Hen. de, vi, 49”; Hugh de, 
vi, 50”; John de, vi, 49”; 
Rich. de, vi, 49; Rob. de, vi, 


49”; Siegrith de, vi, 49” 
Wheelton Stocks (Wheelton), vi, 49 
Wheler, Sir Chas., vii, 112”; 

Dorothy, vii, 112” 

Whetelegh, see Wheatley 


Wheteleycarre, Whetley, See 
Wheatley Carr Booth 
Whinberry Clough (Goldshaw 


Booth), vi, 516 

Whineroke, riv., vi, 445” 

Whinney Edge (Blackburn), vi, 
244, 246” 

Whinney Heys (Layton-with-War- 
breck), vii, 248, 249 

Whinny Clough, man. (Goosnargh), 
vii, 198 

Whipp, Dorothy, vi, 
193%, 3227; 
John, vii, 322” 

Whitacre (Chipping), vii, 28”, 29” 

Whitacre (Dilworth), vii, 53 


389”; vii, 
Jas., vi, 558”; 


Whitacre (Greenhalgh), vii, 179”, 
180”, 181” 

Whitacre (Ightenhill Park), vi, 
487 7, 489 


Whitacre (Padiham), see Whitaker 

Whitacre (Preston), vii, 97” 

Whitacre, Nether (Worsthorne), vi, 
74% 

Whitacre, fam., see Whitaker 

Whitacreley (Whittingham), vii, 
209” 

Whitacresnape (Hoghton), vi, 37” 

Whitaker (Withnell), vi, 48” 

Whitaker (Whitacre), High (Padi- 
ham), vi, 492, 493, 494 

Whitaker (Whitacre), Ad. de, vii, 
179; Alice, vi, 391, 467, 494”; 


Anne, vi, 482 n; Bern., vi, 494, 
498 2; Chris., vi, 391 n, 494 Nn, 
498”, 499; Eliz., vi, 391 n, 


453”, 467%, 4822, 494, 498%; 
Ellen, vi, 443; Felicia, vi, 391 ; 
Geo., vi, 498 ”, 499, 557; Giles, 
vi, 410 2: Hen., vi, 391, 494, 
498; Humph., vi, 498 n; Isabel, 
vi, 467”, 494, 498%; Jas., vi, 
153, 391, 438, 438 ”, 439, 545 7; 
John (de), vi, 391, 405”, 406, 
438, 438 ”, 439, 447, 407 ”, 477 , 
493, 494, 494 ”, 498, 498 n, 499, 
500%”, 515, 518, 552; vii, 18, 
4zn; Lawr., vi, 436”, 494, 
498"; Lettice, vi, 391; Marg., 
vi, 391 ”, 482 n, 492”; Margery, 


INDEX 


Whitaker (cont.) 
vi, 498”; Mary, vi, 467”; 
Miles, vi, 490 n, 494, 498, 499 n, 
503, 540; Nich., vi, 391, 467%, 
408 n, 482 n, 493; ; Reg, vi, 
467”; Rich. (de), vi, 406, 445 ”, 
459%, 482”, 486, 491, 494”, 
498 n, 499m, 500”, 515; Rob. 
(de), vi, 239 ”, 447, 407 n, 468 n, 
482 n, 498", 499; Rev. Rob. 
N., vi, 334, 354, 355”, 359; 
Rog. de, vi, 498”, 499”; vii, 
28n, 31”; Sibyl, vi, 391; 
Thos., vi, 391”, 443, 443%, 
459 %, 482, 486, 498 », 499, 5033 
vii, 205, 330; Thos. D., vi, 
256, 257%, 351, 354, 354m! 


359, 479, 482, 486, 535, 541%; 
Rev. Thos. H., vi, 482”; Rev. 


Thos. T., vi, 426, 482”, 535; 
Thos. W., vi, 242; Will. (de), vi, 


359”, 467, 479, 482, 494”; vil, 
17Qn; oo —, vi, 333”; — 
1, 360”; fam., vi, 3606”; see 


also Whittaker 

Whitbent (Carleton), vii, 229” 

White (Albi, Whyte, Wight), Ad. 
the, vii, 100 ”, 279”; Agnes the, 
vi, 104 ”; Ant., vii, 288 ” ; Cath., 
vi, 478; Chris., vii, 196 n, 292”; 
Geo., vi, 535, 535.3 Rev. Hen., 
vi, 274; Isabel, vii, 279 ” ; John 
(le, the), vi, 7, 8, 14m, 145%, 
242}; vil, 55”, 85, 181”, 279, 
279M, 315; Marg., vii, 288”; 
Nich., vii, 278”, 279, 288”; 
Pet., vil, 220, 224; Rich., vi, 
358, 478; vil, 25, 142, 298”; 
Rob., vii, 131”, 261”, 315; 
Rog. (the), vii, 279”, 282”; 
Sim. the, vi, 104”; Thos., vi, 
486; vil, 279”; Will. (the), 
vi, 104”, 280”; vii, 100”, 279, 
2907 2; —, Vi, 535; fam., vii, 276 

White Ash (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 405, 
407, 408 : : 

White Bear (Adlington), vi, 217 


Whitebirk (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 
346, 405 

Whitebirk moss, vi, 345 

White Bull, inn (Ribchester), vii, 


45 
White Carr (Claughton), vii, 326 ”, 


3272 

Whitecarr (Heath Charnock), vi, 
216% 

Whitecarr (Ribchester), vii, 63 ” 

Whitecarr fall (Quittarfall) (Rib- 
chester), vii, 50”, 56” 

Whitechapel (Goosnargh), vii, 204 

Whitecroft (Blainscough), vi, 227” 

Whitecross (Hothersall), vii, 63 ” 

Whitefield (Ingol), vii, 134 

Whitefield (Marsden), vi, 540” 

Whitefields (Rufford), vi, 120 

Whitehalgh, see White Hough and 
Whithalgh | 

White Hall (Rawcliffe), vii, 155 », 
267, 271 

Whitehall Park (Over Darwen), vi, 


274 

Whitehead, Ellen, vii, 225; Marg., 
vi, 51”; Ralph, vii, 198 ” ; Rich., 
vi, 17”, I61; vii, 266, 2717”; 
Rob., vi, 369 ” ; vii, 190 ” ; Thos., 
vi, II4, 158, 161; vii, 2647, 
271”; Will, vi, 147”; vii, 190, 
204; —, vi, 77; Vil, 292 ”, 329” 

White Hill, man. (Goosnargh), vii, 


195 
White Hill (Over Darwen), vi, 235, 


269 

White Hough (Barley), vi, 518, 
519 

White Hough Water, vi, 518, 519 


429 


Whitekar 
339 0 

White Lea (Goosnargh), vii, 194 

White Lee (Higham), vi, 513 

Whiteley Carre, see Wheatley Carr 
Booth 

Whiteley Fall (Dilworth), vii, 52 

Whitendale, riv., vi, 247 

Whiteridding (Huncoat), vi, 411 ” 

Whiteshank, John, vii, 332 ” 

Whiteside, Alice, vii, 131 ~; Edw., 
vii, 225 ; Ethart, vii, 242 ”; Geo., 
vii, 182; Rich., vii, 131 2, 182; 
Rob., vii, 241 ; Thos., vii, 131”; 
Will., vii, 225, 2414 

White Stake (Longton), vi, 69 

Whitestanes, Gilb., vi, 6” 

White Stoup (Dutton), vii, 34” 

Whitesyke (Colne), vi, 528” 

Whiteton, see Weeton 

White Walls (Marsden), vi, 536, 552 

Whitewell, brook, vii, 330 ” 

Whitewell, fam., see Whitwell 

Whitewell Bottom (Newchurch), vi 


(Great Harwood), vi, 


440 

Whitfield (Cuerden), vi, 24 ” 

Whitfield, Jas., vi, 147 

Whithalgh (Barley), see 
Hough 

Whithalgh (Livesey), vi, 285, 288; 
Nonconf., vi, 288; Rom. Cath., 
vi, 289 

Whithalgh (Whitehalgh), Agnes de, 
vi, 505”; Alice de, vi, 5057”; 
Amery de, vi, 505”; Hen. (de), 
vi, 28n, 288; Isabel, vi, 28n, 
406 n; Jas., vi, 28, 285 n, 288, 
406 n, 408; Janet de, vi, 28 n, 
288; Joan, vi, 288; John (de), 
vi, 288, 505”; Kath., vi, 28”; 
Lawr., vi, 28”, 288; Marg., vi, 
28"; Margery, vi, 28”; Rich., 
vi, 28 n, 288, 406”, 408”; Uriel 
de, vi, 28 m, 288; Will. (de, del), 
vi, 4”, 24”, 28, 288; fam., vi, 
164, 263” 

ae House (Whithalgh), vi, 
2 

be sta Thos. Dalton, bp. of, vi, 
304 

Whithill (Wheelton), vi, 49 ” 

Whithoud, Hen., vi, 200”; Will, 
vi, 142 

Whitingham, see Whittingham 

Whitley, Ellen de, vii, 131 27; John 
de, vii, 131 ” 

Whitley Beaumont (Yorks.), vi, 389 

Whitleycarr, see Wheatley Carr 
Booth 

Whitleyford, man., vi, 233 2 

Whitley-in-Hawbooth (Barley), v: 


White 


519 
Whitlydale, Ellis de, vii, 28 
Whitmore, Dorothy, vi, 04 n; Geo., 
vii, 29, 35 %, 59, 113%, 138 
Whitney, Nich., vii, 236 
Whittaker (Whittakers), Harold H., 
vi, 416; Jas., vi, 437; John w.. 
vi, 242; Rob. (Walt.), vi 
see also Whitaker 
Whittam farm (Marton), vii, 225 
Whitter (Greenhalgh), vii, 180 2 
Whittill, Whittilles, see Whittle 
Whittingham, vi, 21”, 577, 58n; 


, : 


vil, 90”, Io2m, II2m, 1187, 
IIgn, 120%”, 126n, 143, 1447, 
146”, 156n, 162 n, 166, 167%, 
168%”, 174, I9I, 194”, 198m, 
205, 207-13, 319”; mans., vii, 
207; mill, vii, 209%, 212 2: 


Nonconf., vii, 213; Rom. Cath., 
vii, 213 
Whittingham, Nether, 
213 
Whittingham, Over, vii, 213 


vii, 208, 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Whittingham (Wittingham), Ad. 
de, vi, 164; vii, 27 n, 201, 209, 
210, 278 n, 330n; Agnes de, vii, 
54”, 210"; Alice de, vu, 27, 
209, 210”, 3280; Aline de, vu, 
209 n, 210 ; Amery de, vil, 209 ” ; 
Anne, vii, 329”; Bimme de, vii, 
27, 30Nn; Bridg., vli, 107%, 
210 ; Cecily de, vil, 209 n, 2107 ; 
Christiana de, vii, 209 ; Chris. de, 
vii, 125”; Eliz., vii, 210”; Ellen 
de, vii, 268, 330”; Geoff. de, 
vi, 164”; vii, 31m, 209, 226n, 
272 n, 278 n, 281 n, 330”; Gilb. 
de, vii, 209 n; Godf., vii, 211”; 
Hawise de, vii, 209”, 279n, 
2811; Hen. de, vi, 1647; vu, 
204”, 209”, 211; Isabel de, 
vii, 27 2, 210 n, 328; Joan, vu, 
210; John de, vil, 27, 30%, 
54”, 201, 208 n, 209, 210, 212 n, 
281 n, 283, 326n, 328"; Marg., 
vii, 210, 3287; Margery (de), 
vii, 209, 326 n; Maud de, vi, 
209 n,2I0ONn; Nich. de, vii, 328” ; 
Paul, vii, 210”; Rich. (de), vii, 
126, 208 m, 209, 210, 211, 213%, 
279 n, 281 Nn, 320 n, 328 n, 329Nn; 
Rob. (de), vil, 43, 62m, 125”, 
209 n, 210 Nn, 328; Rog. de, vii, 
204m, 209”, 210; Sim. de, vil, 


209”; Thos. (de), vii, 107 n, 
200 n, 203, 205, 208n, 209n, 
210, 211, 212”, 213, 213%, 
278, 329n; Warine de, vi, 


164  ; vii, 166 ”, 207, 209, 281 n, 
252, 283, 284; Will. de, vii, 
27 n, 28 n, 30 n, 60 Nn, 62 n, 204 n, 
208m, 209, 210, 212”, 268, 
272 n, 281 n, 325 n, 326 Nn, 328 n, 


330n; —, vu, 284” 

Whittingham’s cross (Barnacre), 
vii, 315” 

Whittington, Hen. de, vii, 228», 
229M, 230, 231, 241”, 321; 
Isoud de, vii, 229”; Rob. de, 
vii, 177 # 


Whittle (Clifton), vii, 163 n, 193” 
Whittle, Welch, see Welch Whittle 
Whittle (Whittill, Whittilles), Ad. 


de, vi, 34”; Agnes de, vi, 
34; Alice de, vi, 34m; Anne, 
vi, 515, 516; Cecily de, vi, 
34”; Chris., vi, 516; Edw., 


vi, 22197; Ellen de, vi, 34”; 
Emma de, vi, 34”; Gilb. de, vi, 
347; Hen. de, vi, 21”, 347, 
142m", 171 n, 201”; Hugh de, 
vi, 347; John de, vi, 347, 
48, 50, 171m; Jordan de, vi, 
173”; Mabel de, vi, 337; 
Margery de, vi, 34”; Nich., vi, 
142"; Oliver, vi, 34”; Pet. A., 
vii, I91; Rich. (de), vi, 34.1, 
50; Rob. de, vi, 34%, ahaa, 
Rog. de, vi, 34”; Thos. (de), vi 
33, 347; ai ,vi, 85”; Will. de, 
vl, 33 n, 34 n 

Whittlefield (Habergham Eaves), 


vi, 454, 487 
ae Gieen (Welch Whittle), vi 


Whittle Green (Whittle-le-Woods), 


Vi, 35% . 

Whittle-le-Woods, vi, 3, 6”, 32-6, 
37, 58"; Vu, 273, 274”; char., 
V1, 103 ch., vi, 36; ind., vi, 32; 
man., vi, 33, 38, 39; 3 Nonconf., 
vi, 36; Rom. Cath., vi, 36; sch., 
vi, 36; springs, vi, 32 

Whittle Water, vi, 182 

Whitton, vii, 1262” 

Whitwell (Yorks.), vi, 369, 370 

Whitwell (Whitewell), Rev. Chris., 
vi, 334; Will. vii, 24 


Whitwham, Bern., vi, 471; 
vi, 478 

Ww hitworth (Dutton), vii, 57” 

Whitworth, Jas., vi, 147; Lettice, 
v1, 439; Rich., vi, 438n, 439; 
—, vi, 5240 

Whorlaw, vi, 454 

Whritynton, see Wrightington 

Whyman, —, Vi, 449 

Whyte, see White 

Whytenhull, see Withnell 

Whythill in the Wode, see Whittle- 
le-Woods 

Wiatt (Wyot), Ad., vi, 374; Guy 
de, vi, 373; Mary, vi, 19; Thos., 
vi, I9m, 110”, 164”; see also 
Wyatt 

Wich, see Wych 

Wicklesworth, Avice de, vii, 657; 
John de, vii, 65” 

Wicks, Gilb., vii, 42 

Wicoller, see Wycoller 

Widdington, Mrs. J. C., vi, 471 ” 

Widdop (Briercliffe), vi, 552; cross, 
vi, 469 

Widdrington, Ld., vi, 460 

Widdrington, Mary, vu, 7”; Pere- 
grine, vii, 7” 

Widetun, see Weeton 

Widow Green (Bnercliffe), vi, 469 

Wigan, vii, 78, 79” 

Wigan (Wigans), Ad. de, vi, 216”; 
Beatrice del, vi, 216; Cecily de, 
vi, 2167; Jas.., vi, 216N; John, 
vi, 51, 210; Marg, vi, ‘2162: 
Rich. (de), vi, 2167; Thos., vi, 
110%; Will. de, vi, 216”; vii, 
79%, 947, 99n 

Wigan Lane House (Standish with 
Langtree), vi, 192 

Wigans, see Wigan 

Wight, see White 

Wignall, John, vi, 116 » ; Thurstan, 
vi, 116” 

Wikestubbing (Gt. Harwood), vi, 


Lawr., 


339 

Wilbraham, Rich., vii, 224 

Wilcock (Wilcocks), John, vi, 50, 
237"; Thos., vi, 68 n; vii, 320: 
Will, vi, 1181 

Wilcock Acre (Ingol), vii, 134” 

Wilcocks, see Wilcock 

Wilcockson, Alice, vii, 51 1 ; Chris- 
tiana, vii, 2607; Maud, vii, 
2607; Wiil., vii, 260 n 

Wild, Isabel, vi, 34n 

Wildbore, Augustine, vi, 642,657; 
vii, 86, 298; Eliz., vii, 273 ; Jane, 
vi, 647; Dr., vii, "273, 296n 

Wilding, John, vi, 69”, 73N; 
Lewis, vi, 69”; Rich. , Vii, 144”; 
Thos., vi, 69 n, 118%; fam., vi, 
73 

Wildman, Maj. John, vii, 164 ” 

Wile, Will, vii, 43” 

Wilfchristheland (Read), vi, 506 ” 

Wilfrid, St., vii, 72, 79 N, 82 

Wilkins, Rich., vii, 144”; Thos. R., 
vi, 70 n, 72, 154 

Wilkinson, Chris., vi, 452; vii, 29, 
557; Edm., vil, 25; Eleanor, vi, 
270; Ellen, vi, 478 2: vii, 29 Nn, 
36, 190%, 329 0; Gabriel, vii, 
181 1; Geo., vii, 75, 121”; Gilb., 
vii, 179"; Grace, vii, 75, 1037; 
Hen., vii, 2132; Jas., vil, 14; 
Rev. "Jas. Ww. , Vi, 435; Janet, vii, 


3297; John, vi, 26", 27%, 
447", 478n; vii, 36n, 183, 
232m”, 283; Lawr., vii, 126, 


329 Nn; Marg., vii, 190 n, 2137; 
Rich., vi, 473; vii, 190”; Rob., 
vi, 517; Vii, 33, 34m, 1797, 
329 n; Thos., vi, 27 7; vii, 190 n, 
+ 238m, 273, 329; Thos. J., vi, 


430 


Wilkinson (cont.) 

27; Thos. T., vi, 443; Will, 
vii, 1832; —, vi, 512” 

Willacy (Willasey), ’Rob., 
Thos., vii, 289" 

Willacy’s tenement (Elston), vii, go 

Willasey, see Willacy 

Will croft Napa ara vii, 209 n 

Willeriddings (Dutton), vii, 57 

William, vi, 475 ”, 503, 506, 5520; 
vii, 48 7, 84, 94”, 131", 179n; 
the baker, vii, 254”; the c n- 
ter, Vi, 205”; vii, 98 ; the chap- 
lain, vi, 180 n, 181 2; Vii, 140; 
the clerk, vi, 253; vii, 63m, 
180 n, 192 n, 254, 324n; the 
cook, vii, 189; curate of Low 
Chapel, vi, 299; the fisher, vi 
166”; the greve, vi, 217; 
the harper, vi, 60”, 347n, 
457"; the marshal, vi, 377; 
the mercer, vi, I4”; the 
monk, vii, 238”; the mustard- 
maker, vi, 372; the palfrey- 
man, vii, 160; the parker, 
vi, 472”; the parson, vi, 177"; 
the porter, vi, 365”; prior of 
Pontefract, vi, 546”; rector of 
Garstang, vii, 297, 308 2; the 
reeve, vii, 130”; the sauser, 
vii, 117; of Savoy, rector, vii, 
264; the tailor, vii, 98, 107”; 
the villein, vii, 115»; the ward, 
vii, 27” 

Williamcroft (Lea), vii, 130” 

Williams, Bennett, vii, 245; Edw., 
vi, 431”; John, vi, 23 

Williamson, Hen., vii, 92”; Mary, 
vi, 34”; Nich., vi, 34”; vii, 
92” 

Willis, Anne, vi, 215”; 
215; Rich., vi, 215; 
vi, 215, 215”, 217 

Willisill (Hapton), vi, 458 

Willisill, Edw., vi, 538”; Hen., 
vi, 540; Jas., vi, 468”, 493 n, 
494”; John, vi, 468%; Thos., 
vi, 540 

Willison, see Wilson 

Willock, Rev. Borlase, vi, 344 

Willoughby, Esther, Lady, vi, 
216”; Lds., vi, 229”; Chas., 
vi, 216”; Hugh, vi, 216” 

Willoughby, Walt., vi, 459 

Willows (Kirkham), vii, 150 

Wills, Gen., vi, 290; vii, 77, 104” 

Willworth (Little Harwood), vi, 251 

Willy Moor, vi, 536, 548 

Willy Moor Clough (Trawden), vi, 


552 
Willy Moor Hill Nook (Trawden), 
vi, 552 
Wilmescroft (Dutton), vii, 54” 
Wilmescrofte-walle (Dinckley), vi 


vii, 218; 


Dan., vi, 
Thos., 


336 | : 
Wilpshire, vi, 222, 23 5, 334-6, 
393”, 421, 555%; Vu, 29”, 


man., vi, 232, 335; Nonconf., vi, 


336 

Wilpshire, Ad. de, vi, 335; Dav. 
de, vi, 335, 335”; Gilb. de, 
vi, 335; Hen. de, vi, 335, 511”; 
Rich. de, vi, 335; Rob. de, vi, 
335, 511m; Sim. de, vi, 335; 
Siward de, vi, 335; Swain de, 
V1, 335 : 

Wilpshire Moor, vi, 334 

Wilpshireregge (Wilpshire), vi, 


335% 
Wiulshers (Tarleton), vi, 116 ” 
Wilson (W illison), ‘Anne, vi, 444; 
Anne S., vi, 322, 323; Dan., vi, 


286, 323 n; Edw., vi, 176 n; 
vii, 121; Eliz., vi, "286, 540N | 
vii, 225; Ellen, vi, 540”; 


Wilson (cont.) 
Geo., vi, 322, 323”; Hen., vi, 
gon, 541”; Hen. F., vii, 121 ; 
Isabel, vi, 539”; Jas. vi, 
539”, 544; Rev. John, vi, 283; 
John, vi, 52, 177, 538%, 549, 
542”, 544; vii, 200”; John 
W. R., vii, 121; Lawr., vi, 
540”; Martha, vi, 5307; 
Matth., vi, 530”; Rich., vi, 36, 
36n, 176n, 1807, 237 0; vii, 
46”, 48”; Rob., vil, 330”; 
Rog., vi, 323%, 535; vii, 48”; 
Rog. C., vii, 87, 88; Thos., vi, 
169”, 176m, 279, 371, 558; 
vii, 275”; Will, vii, 200; 
W. W.C., vii, 87; Mrs., vi, 288 ; 
—, vi, 524”; vii, 193”; fam., 
vi, 252”; vii, 262, 263 

Wilson-Patten, Eliz., vii, 308; 
Ellinor, vii, 308; Emily, vii, 
307%”; Eustace J., vil, 307”; 
John, vii, 300, 307, 308, 310; 
John Bue vii, 307”; see also 
Patten 

Wilstrop, man. (Yorks.), vi, 421” 

Wilton, Thos., vi, 283; Walt. de, 
vii, 240 n 

Wimark (Wimarca), d. of Ad., 
vii, 282 ”; w. of Ailsi, vi, 317 ” 

Wimark (Wymark), Edw., vii, 


333% 

Wimarke-riding (Clayton-le-Dale), 
vi, 258” 

Wimbish, Frances, vi, 4597”; 
Mary, vi, 459” 

Wimerleg, see Winmarleigh 

Wimode, Wimot, see Wymot 

Winchester, bps. of, vii, 84%, 
376”; Aymer de Valence, vii, 
146”; Steph. Gardiner, vi, 
160” 

Winckley (Aighton), see Winkley 

Winckley (Winkedley, Winkley), 
Ad. de, vi, 267, 314, 317; vii, 
47, 13, 281 n, 323; Agnes de, 
vi, 267; Alex. de, vii, 4, 13; 
Alice de, vi, 266, 267; Amery de, 
vii, 13, 16; Anne, vii, 14%, 18, 
gon; Ant., vii, 14, 18; Cecily 
(de), vii, 13, 14”; Edw., vi, 
294; Eliz., vi, 328; Ellis (de), 
vii, 4,13”; Frances, vii, 112”; 
Geoff., vii, 14; Hen. (de), vii, 
13, 14”, 323”; Isabel (de), 
vi, 294, 365”; vii, 13, 14; Jane, 
vii, 14; Joan, vii, 13 ”, 14, 567; 
John (de), vi, 266, 266, 267; 
vii, 13, 102 2, III #, 112 nN, 123 n, 
322 n, 323”; Jonathan, vii, 36; 
Jordan de, vi, 365”; Kath. de, 
vii, 323”; Marg. (de), vii, 13, 
13”, 14, 322%; Margery de, 
vii, 13; Martha, vi, 172”; vii, 
14”; Matilda (Maud) (de), vi, 
267, 506”; vii, 13; Nich., vii, 
14, 90”, 322”; Rich. (de), vi, 
420, 506; vii, 13, 321 ”, 322 n, 
3232; Rob. de, vii, 13; Rog., 
vi, 172”; vii, 14, 18, 56”; 
Rosamond, vi, 294; Thos. (de), 
vi, 236”, 294, 208 n, 318, 328, 
389”; vii, 13, 13”, 14, 89n, 
III, 112, 112”; Will. (de), 
vi, 237”, 2904; VU, 4, 13, 13%, 
I4, I 

Winckley’s Place (Catterall), vi, 420 

Winder, Edm., vi, 256-7; John, 
vi, 256; vii, 164”; Rob., vi, 
256; Rev. Thos., vi, 318; Will., 
vi, 490 

Windhills (Bowland), vi, 380 2 

Windle (Windhill, Windhull, Wyn- 
nel), Ad. de, vi, 469 ; Agnes de, 
vii, 45; Alan de, vii, 45, 45”; 


INDEX 


Windle (cont.) 


Alice (de), vi, 76, 471»; Amabel 
de, vii, 45; Avice de, vi, 476; 

Geoff., vi, 470 n, 476 nN, 47725 

Geo., vi, 490”; Hen. de, vi, 
469, 477; John (de), vi, 470 2, 
471 2, 474 0, 475 0, 476 2, 477 2; 
Maud de, vi, 469 n; Rich. de, 
vi, 469”, 4717; Rob. de, vi, 
471”; Rog. de, vi, 477”; Will. 
(de), vi, 474”, 475”, 470%, 


477” 
Windle House (Briercliffe), vi, 469, 


470 

Windress, Will., vii, 304 ” ; —, vii, 
305” 

Windsor, Sir Will. de, vii, 62”; 
Will. de, vii, 62 ” 

Windy Bank (Newchurch), vi, 437 

Windybank, Ad. de, vi, 291 n 

Winemenke, John, vi, 253 ” 

Winewall (Trawden), vi, 233%, 
463", 548, 549, 552; bridge, vi, 
551; ind., vi, 548; quarries, vi, 
548 

Winewall Water, vi, 551 

Wingham (Wengham), Hen. de, 
bp., vii, 146; Will. de, vii, 84 

Wingives Holme (Clayton-le-Dale), 
vi, 258 

Winkedelega (Aighton), see Winkley 

Winkedley, fam., see Winckley 

Winkley (Aighton), vii, 1, 13, 14”; 
mill., vii, 14; prehist. rem., 
vii, 2 

Winkley, fam., see Winckley 

Winkley Hall (Aighton), vii, 14 

Winkley’s Place (Catterall), vii, 
323 Nn 

Winmarleigh, vii, 288”, 291, 293, 
305-8, 309, 317”; ch., vii, 308 ; 
ford, vii, 308 ” ; man., vii, 303 7, 
306 ; Rom. Cath., vii, 310 

Winmarleigh, John, Ld., vii, 300, 
307, 308, 310 

Winmarleigh, Alice de, vii, 3067”; 
Avice de, vii, 254”, 306%; 
Christiana de, vii, 306 ; Greg. de, 
vii, 254”, 306”; Hugh de, vii, 
306 ; Joan de, vii, 306; John de, 
vii, 306 ”; Rich. de, vii, 306”; 
Rob. de, vii, 254”, 306, 306”; 
Rog. de, vii, 306; Thos. de, vii, 
306 2; Will. de, vii, 306” 

Winmarleigh House (Winmarleigh), 

Winmerly, see Winmarleigh 

Winstanley, Alice de, vi, 197”; 
Edw., vii, 65; Fran., vii, 181; 
John, vii, 181 ; Margery, vii, 65; 
Pet., vii, 181 ; Rob. de, vi, 197 ”; 
Rog. de, vi, 97”; Will., vi, 27”; 
vii, 16; Will. A., vii, 16 

Winter, Aug. M., vi, 55; Will., vii, 


79 

Winter Hill (Tockholes), vi, 275, 
280, 284 

Winwick, John de, vi, 87”; Maud 
(de), vii, 166”, 167%, 207%, 
233, 282, 323%; Rob. de, 
vii, 232, 233; Walt. de, vii, 
323 2, 325 0, 328 n, 330”; Will. 
de, vii, 166%, 167”, 207%, 
282 0, 3232; fam., vi, 93” 

Wirksworth (Derb.), vii, 80 

Wise, Thos. le, vii, 24 

Wiseman, Rob., vi, 189 ” 


Wiswall, Wiswalle, fam., see Wis- 


well 


Wiswell (Wisewell), vi, 349, 356, 


357, 396-9, 417, 507, 513; 
char., vii, 20”; cross, vi, 396; 
grange, vi, 398; man., vi, 396; 
mill., vi, 397”; Nonconf., vi, 
399; quarry, vi, 396; Rom. 


431 


Wiswell (cont.) 
Cath., vi, 399; sch., vi, 399; 
tumulus, vi, 396 

Wiswell (Wiswall, Wiswalle), Ad. 
de, vi, 279 2, 397 2, 398 m, 556% ; 
Anne, vi, 997”; Cecily de, vi, 
308 2; Ellis de, vi, 398”; Emot 
de, vi, 398 ” ; Gilb. de, vi, 398 » ; 
Hen. ‘de, vi, 397%, 398, 398 n | 
John, vi, 99; Margery de, vi, 
3982; Rich. de, vi, 397%, 3987: 
Rob. de, vi, 397 2, 398 n, 5507; 
Swain de, vi, 398 

Wiswell Eaves (Wiswell), vi, 396, 
397 ”, 399 ” ; 

Wiswell Hall (Wiswell), vi, 398, 


399 
Wiswell Moorhouses (Wiswell), vi 
396 
Wiswell Shay (Wiswell), vi, 396 
Witchcraft, vi, 361, 492, 515, 520, 


537) 542 
Witch’s Stone (Woodplumpton), 
vii, 285 
Witekerbrook, riv., vii, 52” 
Witesstanes Furlong (Lea), vii, 
132” 
Withalgh, see Whithalgh and White 
Hough 
Withens (Clitheroe), vi, 368” 
Withens (Croston), vi, 95 ” 
Withenslack (Habergham Eaves), 
V1, 457 
Withinbutts (Colne), vi, 525 ” 
Withinenge (Pendleton), vi, 393 ” 
Withington, see Weeton 
Withinhead (Welch Whittle), vi, 


203” 
Withinlache (Dutton), vii, 43%, 


54” 

Withinlache, Rich. de, vi, 499”; 
Will. de, vi, 499 ” 

Withinreap (Thorley), vii, 34 ” 

Withnell, vi, 3, 6”, 36%”, 39n, 
47-9; vii, 126”; ch., vi, 49; 
man., vi, 41 ”, 47; Nonconf., vi, 
49; Rom. Cath., vi, 49 

Withnell, Ad. de, vi, 38 ”, 47 ”, 48, 
48n, 49”; Agnes de, vi, 477”; 
Alan de, vi, 49 7; Amery de, vi, 
47”; Hen. de, vi, 38”, 477”, 
48”; John (de), vi, 47”, 149; 
Margery de, vi, 47”, 49”; 
Rich. de, vi, 47 ”, 49 ; Rog. de, 
vi, 37”; Thos. de, vi, 49”; 
Will. de, vi, 47 ”, 48”, 49” 

Withnell Fold (Withnell), vi, 47 

Withnell House (Withnell), vi, 


48n 
Withnell Mill (Withnell), vi, 49 
Withroom (Layton), vii, 250” 
Withull, see Welch Whittle 
Witingheham, Witingeheim, see 
Whittingham 
Witley House (Trawden), vi, 551 
Wittandefot, see Walkandfot 
Witte (Wittie), Edm., vi, 2017”; 
Emma, vi, 201”; Hen., vi, 
201m; Margery, vi, 2017; 
Ralph, vi, 88 ”; Will., vi, 201 2 ; 
fam., vi, 200 
Wittingham, see Whittingham 
Witton, vi, 235, 263-6; vii, 34”; 
ch., vi, 265 ; man., vi, 264 
Witton, John de, vi, 264 ; vii, 187; 
Rich. de, vi, 264; Rog. de, vi, 
409”; Thos., vi, 285”; —, vii, 


123 

Witton Hall (Witton), vi, 264 

Witton Park (Witton), vi, 263 

Witton Stocks (Blackburn), vi, 
263 

Wivers (Clitheroe), vi, 366 

Whfiet, vii, 217 ” 

Wilgarheved, vii, 325 ” 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Wlipschyre, Wlipscire, Wlipshire, 
see Wilpshire 

Wlveley, brook, vii, 330” 

Wodacre, see Wedacre 

Wode, see Wood 

Wodebridde, Ad., vii, 166 ; Alice, 
vii, 166 

Wodeplumpton, see Woodplumpton 

Woderofe, see Woodroffe 

Woderowe (Wooderowe), Ad., vii, 
116”; Alex., vii, 116  ; Amabel, 
vii, 116 ” 

Wolf, vi, 475” 

Wolf, Will., vi, 357, 358 

Wolfage (Northants), vi, 195 

Wolfenden (Newchurch), vi, 434, 
437-8, 439 ” 

Wolfenden, Ad., vii, 265 

Wolfenden Booth (Newchurch), vi, 
233", 437; mill, vi, 438; sch., 


vi, 441 
Wolferichscales (Clitheroe), vi, 366” 
Wolferstone, see Wolverton 
Wolfet, see Wolset 
Wolfgeat, vi, 65 
Wolfhall (Chipping), vii, 26, 27 
Wolfhamdene, see Wolfenden 
Wolfhouse, see Wolfhall 
Wolflet, see Wolset 
Wolfshaw, see Wilshers 
Wolf Stones (Colne), vi, 230, 524, 


551 

Wolfsty Fell, vi, 230 

Wolfsykes (Oswaldtwistle), vi, 405 ” 

Wolfwin, vi, 537” 

Wolleshagh, see Walshaw 

Wollo, John, vi, 528 

Wolpitgreave, Margery de, vi, 480 

Wolset (Welsett, Wolfet, Wolflet, 
Wrlsett), Geo., vii, 25, 25 ”, 42 

Wolstenholme, Jas., vi, 129 

Wolton, Jas., vi, 395; John, vi, 
395, 395”; Ranald, vi, 395 

Wolvemoor, Alan de, vi, 1707; 
Alice de, vi, 170 

Wolverden (Marsden), vi, 539 

Wolverton (Wolferstone), Chas., 
vii, 178; Edm., vii, 1787; 
John, vii, 178 ; Rob., vii, 178 » 

Wolvetscholes (Clitheroe), vi, 366 

Wombwell, John, vi, 92 

Wood (Wode), Ant., vi, 2277; 
Chas., vi, 468; Elias, vi, 331; 
Emma del, vi, 270”; Geo, vi, 
180n; Hen. del, vi, 15”; 
Isabel, vii, 5; Jas., vi, 458”; 
John (del), vi, 52, 270; Mar- 
gery del, vii, 31”; Randle del, 
vii, 328; Rich. (del), vi, 227 n, 
343, 447 2; vil, 328”; Rob. del, 
vi, 15”; Walt. del, vii, 328”; 
Sir Will., vi, 493”; Rev. Will, 
vi, 414; Will. (del), vi, 416; vii, 
31 n, 123, 328 n; see also Boys 
and Woods 

Woodacre, see Wedacre 

Woodcock, Ad., vi, 27”; Alex., 
vi, 298; Alice, vi, 27 n, 291; 
Dorothy, vi, 27; Eliz., vi, 22; 
Fran., vi, 27; Gilb., vi, 26m, 
291”; Hugh, vi, 60n, 69n; 
Jas., vi, 237"; vii, I20n; 
Ven. John, vi, 27; John, vi, 3 n, 
26m, 27, 27, 28, 237, 282, 
288, 296, 298; vii, 55; Rich., 
vi, 24”, 26, 27; vii, 120n; 
Rob., vi, 24, 26, 27; Rog., 
vi, 24, 26m; Seth, vi, 5”, 7, 
177"; Thos., vi, 23, 26”, 27, 
28, 77; Will, vi, 24, 26n, 27, 
65, 252, 288; fam., vi, 36 

Woodcock Hall (Cuerden), vi, 27, 28 

Woodcock Holme (Pleasington), vi, 
2677 

Woodcock’s charity, vi, 148 


Wood Crook (Whittingham), vi, 
313; vil, 44, 90n 

Wooderowe, see Woderowe 

Woodfields (Aighton), vii, 1, 13 ” 

Woodfold Hall (Mellor), vi, 261 

Woodfold Park (Mellor), vi, 261, 


303 

Woodhey (Shevington), vi, 173, 
2018” 

Woodholme (Preston), vii, 79%, 
97”, 100” 

Woodhouse, Alice, vii, 182, 272”; 
Eliz., vii, 234; John (de), vi, 
369”; vii, 182, 272"; Pet., vii, 
182, 234”; Sarah, vii, 182; 
Walt. de, vii, 41 ; Will., vii, 182 

Woodiraw (Hapton), vi, 510” 

Woodley (Walton), vi, 296 

Wood Newton, Barth. de, vi, 127 

Woodnook (Accrington), vi, 423 

Woodplumpton, vii, 90”, 117, 
120, 129, 135, 150%”, 159%, 
173 , 174, 200, 253 ”, 260, 261 n, 
264 n, 272 n, 282 n, 284-91, 3252; 
char., vii, 267; ch., vii, 289; 
man., vii, 285; mill, vii, 287”, 
288n; Nonconf., vii, 291; Rom. 
Cath., vii, 291 ; sundials, vii, 290 

Woodplumpton, brook, vii, 285, 
289 

Woodplumpton, Amuria, vii, 172 » ; 
Marg., vii, 172 2; Quenilda, vii, 
172”; Rich. of, vii, 97”; Rog. 
of, vi, 103; vii, 97, 172” 

Woodroffe (Woderofe, Woodroff, 
Woodruff), Chris., vi, 303”; 
Isabel, vi, 444”; Janet, vi, 491; 
Jenet, vi, 444”; Joan, vi, 4687; 
John, vi, 151”, 298%, 303n, 
407, 4441, 447, 4477, 459%, 
468", 471, 473, 475, 477%, 
491; Rich., vi, 303”, 444”, 
445, 468n, 519; vii, 55”; 
Rob., vi, 28 n, 303, 444”, 445 7, 
468"; Thos., vii, 82” 

Woods, I., vii, 290 ; John, vii, 297 ; 
Rev. —, vi, 128, 333”; see also 
Boys and Wood 

Woodscales (Thornley), vii, 26” 

Woodscholes, John del, vii, 357; 
Rob. del, vii, 35 ” 

Woodsfold (Woodplumpton), vii 
285 

Woodslac (Kirkland), vii, 313 ” 

Woodstow House (Chipping), vii, 
26n 

Woodward, Ad. the, vi, 1437”; 
Alex., vi, 200”, 202, 202”; 
Amery (the), vi, 143”, 227”; 
Eliz., vii, 107”, 213”; Ellen, 
vi, 179”; Ellis, vi, 140n; 
Hen. the, vi, 227”; Hugh, vi, 
182, 202”; John, vi, 2027; 
Nath., vii, 213”; Ralph, 
vi, 202; Randle, vii, 223; 
Rich., vi, 179; Rob. (le), vi, 
7, 14”, 15”; vii, 97; Rog. 
(the), vi, 140”; vii, 977; 
Will. (the), vi, 133 2, 140, 140 n, 
143”, 227”; vii, lo7n 

Woollen manuf., vi, 434, 436, 437, 
442; vii, 7 

Woollin, John, vi, 242, 243 

Woorowe (Clitheroe), vi, 367 ” 

Worcester, Jas. Fleetwood, bp. of, 
vi, 59 n 

Worden (Leyland), vi, 10, 12, 57, 
63 

Worden, fam., see Werden 

Worden Hall (Leyland), vi, 12, 


, 


14 
Worden Old Hall (Leyland), vi, 14 
Workedel, see Worsley 
Worlington, see Worthington 
Wormeleve (Huncoat), vi, 410 ” 


432 


Wormley Eaves (Marsden), vi, 539 » 

Wormstall, Marg. de, vil, 17”; 
Will. de, vii, 17 # 

Wormstall Bottom (Trawden), vi, 


551 
Worple hills, vi, 252 ” . 
Worsaw End (Worston), vi, 373 
Worsley (Workedel), Agnes, vi, 
555”; Alice (de), vi, 559; vii, 
227; Anne, vi, 94; Cecily de, 
vi, 112 n; Eliz., vi, 555”; Ellen 
de, vi, 112 »; Hen. (de), vi, 194 », 
376, 521, 559m; vii, 2277; 
Isabel, vi, 555”; Jas., vii, 25; 
Jenet, vi, 96”; Joan (de), vi, 
194", 376, 528m, 559”; vii, 
269”; John, vi, 376, 555%, 
559”; vii, 269; Kath., vii, 
280; Marg. (de), vi, 96”; vii, 
329; Maud (Matilda), vi, 
315”; vii, 226”; Rich., vi, 
376, 463, 555”, 559”; vii, 
226; Sir Rob., vi, 39”; Rob., 
vi, 315 ”, 376, 555", 559, 559M; 
vii, 263”, 265”; Seth, vi, 
94”; Thos., vi, 96”, I91n; 
vii, 280; Thurstan de, vii, 
329n; —, Vi, 3762 
Worsley-Taylor, Hen. W., vi, 331, 
8 


3 

Waratioue (Worsthorne’ with 
Hurstwood), vi, 349, 356”, 
418, 441, 442, 443, 447%, 450, 
453%, 454, 459, 469, 473-8; 
chs., vi, 478; man., vi, 232, 
444, 474 ; mill, vi, 477; 
Nonconf., vi, 478; Rom. rem., 
V1, 474 ; 

Worsthorne, Ad. de, vi, 397%, 
474”, 475”; Alex. de, vi, 474 n, 
475", 477%; Dolphin de, vi, 
475; Gilb. de, vi, 397 ”, 474, 
475"; Hen. de, vi, 397%, 
474”, 475”; John de, vi, 
475”; Matth. de, vi, 475”, 
477”; Nich, de, vi, 475”; 
Osbert de, vi, 475”; Pet. de, 
vi, 475”; Reynold de, vi, 475”; 
Rich. de, vi, 475 », 485; Rob. 
de, vi, 474, 475”, 477, 481; 
Siward de, vi, 481; Thos. de, 
vi, 475”, 485”; Westmund 
de, vi, 475 n; Will. de, vi, 475” 

Worsthorne Hall (Worsthorne), vi, 

6 

Waretlionie Wood (Worsthornc), 
vi, 477” 

Worston, vi, 232, 349, 356 ”, 372 n, 
373-5, 3707, 392M, 552, 553, 
555; ch., vi, 361, 375; man., 
vi, 361 ”, 373, 489; man. house, 
vi, 233 ”, 374; mill, vi, 374 

Worston, Ad. de, vi, 373, 373”; 
Guy de, vi, 373; Hugh de, vi, 
374", 375”; Ido (Wido) de, 
vi, 373%; Ralph de, vi, 374”, 
375n; Will. de, vi, 375” 

Worston Common, vi, 374”, 379” 

Worston Greyne (Worston), vi, 374 

Worswick, Eliz., vii, 239; Rich., 
vii, 239”; Rob., vii, 239” 

Worthington, vi, 182, 187 », 222-4; 
man., vi, 222; mill, vi, 183 

Worthington, Agnes (de), vi, 198 n, 
220 n, 227%; Alan de, vi, 223; 
Alex., vi, 202; Alice de, vi, 
223”, 227; Vil, 44”; Anne, 
vi, 220, 228; vii, 2787; 
Barth., vii, 89”; Chris., vi, 
136", 2207; vii, 2337; 
Dionysia de, vi, 223; Dorothy, 
vi, 220 n, 228 n, 410; Edw. (de), 
vi, 185, 208, 223m", 224, 227, 
227; vii, 144, 1880; Eleanor 
de, vi, 227”; Eliz., vi, zo2z"; 


Worthington (cont.) 
Ellen de, vi, 223 n, 228 n; 
Emma de, vi, 201”; Gilb. de, 
vi, 227"; Hen. de, vi, 212%, 
223", 227”; Hugh (de), vi, 
131 ”, 223, 225%, 228n; Isabel 
(de), vi, 77", 227; Jas. (de), 
vi, 227; vii, 233, 278”; 
Jane, vi, 223”; Joan de, vi, 
134-5, 218 n, 219 n, 220 N, 2272; 
vii, 233”; John de, vi, 208n, 
223, 227, 283”; Kath. de, 
vi, 227”; Lawr., vi, 213, 217 ”, 
220, 227; vii, 180"; Mabel 
de, vi, 209 n, 218 n, 219 n, 223 0; 
Marg. (de), vi, 106 m, 202 n, 226, 
228”; vii, 236; Matth., vi, 
II4, 237”; vii, 291; Nich. 
(de), vi, 182 ”, 198 n, 202, 218 n, 
219 n, 223, 227; Pet. (de), vi, 
176", 227, 227, 229, 285n; 
Ralph de, vi, 227”; Rev. Rich., 
vi, 344; Rich. (de), vi, 72”, 
106 n, 182 n, 208 n, 223 n, 224 Nn, 
226, 227, 227m”, 228n, 2290, 
229 n, 285 , 343; Rob. (de), vi, 
3m, 193%, 201 nm, 202”, 209”, 
222, 223, 227", 241"; Thos. 
(de), vi, 77m”, 136, 219n, 
220M, 222, 223, 223 m, 224, 227, 
227, 228, 229m, 301, 410; 
vii, 174”, 233”, 236; Will. 
(de), vi, 77 , 135, 182, 209 n, 
212", 218, 219MN, 222, 223, 
223, 225n, 226n, 227, 228, 
228 n, 311m; —, vi, 122 n, 416, 
426 

Worthington Hall (Worthington), 
vi, 183, 223 

Worthington House (Brindle), vi, 
77% 

Worton, Tom, vi, 322” 

Wower, John le, vii, 160”; Will. 
le, vii, 160 

Wra, the (Blainscough), vi, 227” 

Wra, Wraa, fam., see Wray and 
Wrea 

Wrampool (Pilling), vii, 333” 


Wray (Weeton-with-Preese), vii, 
177" 

Wray, Geo., vii, 151”; see also 
Wrea 


Wrdeston, see Worsthorne 

Wrea (Ribby-with-Wrea), vii, 149”, 
157-8, 160”, 163%”, 171, 173%, 
184; man., vii, 157 

Wrea (Wra, Wraa), Ad. de (del), 
vii, 157”, 158; Agnes de, vii, 
157%; Gerard de, vii, 157”; 
Hen. del, vii, 987; John de, 
vii, 157; Jordan del, vii, 157”; 
Marg. de, vii, 157”; Margery de, 


vii, 157”; Rich. del, vii, 98 n, 
157; Will. de, vii, 157”; see 
also Wray 


Wrea Green, see Wrea 

Wrennall, Hugh, vi, 177; 
vi, 177”; Rog., vii, 205 

Wrichtington, Wrictinton, see 
Wrightington 

Wridelesford, John de, vi, 471”; 
Samson de, vi, 471” 

Wrigan, Oliver, vii, 138 

Wright, Alice, vi, 402 »; Anne, vi, 
31”; Benj., vii, 165, 205; Rev. 
Chas., vii, 10 ” ; Cecily, vii, 29 ” ; 
Eliz., vi, 311”; Ellen, vi, 35%, 
402 ”; Ellis, vi, 96”; Fran., vi, 
31”; Geo., vi, 317”; Hen. 
(the), vi, 35%”, 201”, 237%, 
311”; vii, 29”; John (the), vi, 
31, 128 ; vii, 291, 328%”; Kath., 
vi, 14; Mary, vi, 311; Rich., 
vi, 557; Rob. (the), vii, 328 n, 
402; Rog., vi, 55; Thos. iy vi, 


7 


Rich., 


INDEX 


Wright (cont.) 
95.m, 317n; Will. vi, 
201 n; vil, 26", 147” 

Wrightington, vi, 38”, 68%, 155, 
169-78; vii, 53 ”, 157 ”, 193%, 
274, 321”; char., vi, 90%, 
QI n, 161 ; ch., vi, 169, 178 ; man., 
vi, 169, 547; Nonconf., vi, 178 ; 
Rom. Cath., vi, 178 

Wrightington, Ad. de, vi, 101%, 
171m; Agnes (de), vi, 171%, 
332 ; Alex. (de), vi, 171 m, 172”; 
vii, 222”; Alice de, vi, 171”; 


22 n, 


Amb. de, vi, I71 ”, 177 7; 
Anne, vi, 172; Bern. de, vi, 
171m; Sir Edw,, ,vi, 172 n, 
186; Edw., vi, 177%”, 200%, 
293”; Ellen de, vi, 171”; 
Geoff. de, vi, 169”, 170”, 171, 
199”, 201”, 203, 204”; Hen. 
de, vi, Io1m, 171”; John, vi, 
I7I, 172, 172”, 175”, I76n, 
20I n, 202, 204n; vii, 222 n, 
224m; Kath. de, vi, 171%”; 
Mabel de, vi, 171”; Marg., vi, 
171m; Mary, vi, 172”; Rich. 
de, vi, 170”, 171”, 174%, 


222%; Rob. (de), vi, 170”, 171, 
I7I n, 174 n, 199 n, 204 Nn, 206 2; 
Rog. de, vi, 171”; Thos. (de), 
vl, 155, 171, 171”, 177, 177%, 
204”, 227; Vii, I119n; Will. 
ie vi, IoI”, 171”, 172; vii, 


Wrightington Hall (Wrightington), 
vi, 172, 181 n 
Wrigley, Jos. H., vi, 371 
Writhisthorn, see Worsthorne 
Written Stone Farm (Dilworth), 
vii, 51 
Writtyngton, see Wrightington 
Wroe (Wrooe), Cecily, vii, 158; 
Mary, vi, 413 ”; Pet., vii, 158”; 
Rev. Rich., vi, 413; Rich., vii, 
74”, 298, 299; Rev. Thos., vi, 
413 2; see also Rowe 
Wrstincton, see Wrightington 
Wrtheston, Wrthiston, see Worston 
Wryghtington, Wrythinton, Wry- 
thtynton, Wrytinton, see Wright- 
ington 
Wulnesbooth, Rich. de, vii, 58 » 
Wursthorn, see Worsthorne 
Wurston, Wurtheston, see Worston 
Wurthington, see Worthington 
Wyardburn (Wyarde Burn) (Dut- 
ton), vii, 57”, 58” 
Wyatt, Lewis, vi, 25; 
Wiatt 
Wych (Wich), Ad. (de, del), vii, 
79 n, to1 n; Alice del, vii, 101 2; 
Ellen del, vii, tor %; John (de, 
del), vi, 60”; vii, 92”, 94n, 
torn; Marg., vi, 267; Rog. 
(de, del), vi, 267; vii, 92 , IoI n 
Wycoller (Trawden), vi, 523, 548, 
549, 552 
Wycoller, Nether and Over (Traw- 
den), vi, 233 ”, 549 
Wycoller, brook, vi, 548, 551 
Wycoller Causeway, vi, 544” 
Wycoller Hall (Trawden), vi, 549 
Wyke, Edw., vi, 1467 
Wylot, Ad., vi, 7 
Wylpshire, see Wilpshire 
Wylsett, see Wolset 
Wyman, Rob., vi, 189 
Wymark, see Wimark 
Wymcoock, Edw., vii, 259 ” 
Wymerlay, see Winmarleigh 
Wymmen, fam., vi, 471 
Wymondeslegh, Ellen, vi, 
John de, vi, 485” 
Wymondhouses (Pendleton), vi, 
392, 394, 396, 416” 


433 


see also 


485 n; 


Wymondhouses (Wymundham), 
John de, vi, 394; Mary de, Joan, 
d. of, vi, 394”; Ralph de, vi, 
546; Will. de, vi, 394 

Wymott (Hutton), vi, 66 ” 

Wymott (Wymoth), brook, vi, 
67 n, 108 

Wymott Moss (Hutton), vi, 67 », 68 

Wymundehus, Wymundeshoues, 
Wymundham, Wymundhouses, 
see Wymondhouses 


Wynant, Hen., vi, 215”; Ralph, 
vi, 215” 

Wyndebonkfeld (Walton-le-Dale), 
vi, 290 


Wynermerisle, see Winmarleigh 

Wynhalgh (Welch Whittle), vi, 204” 

Wynhart, Alice, vii, 58%; Thos., 
vii, 58” ° 

Wynkydele, see Winkley 

Wynnel, see Windle 

Wynnemerley, see Winmarleigh 

Wynniva, d. of Godwin, vii, 45” 

Wynomerislega, see Winmarleigh 

Wynwell, see Winewall 

Wyot, see Wiatt and Wyatt 

Wyre, riv., vii, 68, 70, 129, 139, 
143, 181, 182, 183, 186, 188, 
190, 219, 220, 270, 273, 276, 300, 
311; fishery, vii, 274” 

Wyresdale, Nether, vii, 182, 269 n, 
270, 272%, 291, 292, 293, 300- 5; 
313; char., vil, 300; ch., vii, 
304; Man., vii, 271, 292 n, 206, 
300, 305 , 309, 317; mills, vii, 
302 n; Nonconf., vii, 304; Rom. 
Cath., vii, 304, 305”; sch., vii, 


305 

Wyresdale Court (Wyresdale), 
3181 

Wyresdale Park (Nether Wyres- 
dale), vii, 304 

Wyreside (Nether Wyresdale), vii, 
304 

Wysewale, see Wiswell 

Wythenull, see Withnell 

Wytheton, see Weeton 

Wythineheved (Gt. Harwood), vi 
339 

Wythinton, see Weeton 

Wythyn-greve (Eccleshill), vi, 279 n 

Wythull, see Whittle-le-Woods 

Wytingham, see Whittingham 


vii, 


Yallam Bridge (Trawden), vi, 551 

Yarburgh, see Yerburgh 

Yarrow, riv., vi, 18, 81, 91, 108, 
129, 162 

Yarrow Bridge Hotel (Chorley), vi, 
129 

Yarrowdale, Will. de, vi, 
vii, 3 

Yarsmoor (Stalmine), vii, 252 ” 

Yate, tnshp., see Yate Bank 

Yate (Porta, Yates), Ad. (atte, del), 
vi, 485”, 511”; Anabel atte, 
vii, 63”; Anne, vi, 141; Dyke del, 
vi, 480 ; Eliz. , vi, 261 ; Geoff., vi, 
2167; Geo.,. vi, 273; vii, 255; 
Giles, vi, 273, 274; Hen. del, vi, 
511 Nn; Jas., vi, 273, 274, 280; 
Joan del, vi, 511”; John (del), 
vi, 272", 274, 280”, 480; vii, 
192”; Lawr., vi, 277%; Lydia, 
vi, 50”, I51 4”; Maghull 
(Maile), vi, 261; Rich. (del), vi, 

127", 280n, 481”, 511”; Vii, 

192; Rob. (atte), vi, 273, 274; 

vii, 63”; Sam., vi, 141; Thos., 

vi, I50n, I51”, 284m, 495; 

Tristram, vi, 495; Will. (atte), 

vi, 158, 161, 261, 273, 274, 277 , 

280 n ; vii, 63 n; +, vi, 161, 


55 


1319”; 


A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 


Yate (cont.) 
—, vi, 235; vii, 322; fam., vi, 
240n 

Yate Bank (Yate and Pickup Bank), 
vi, 230 n, 235, 280 

Yatefield (Habergham Eaves), vi, 
467 

Yates, fam., see Yate 

Yealand, Ad. de, vii, 146m, 172; 
Alice de, vii, 172; John de, 
vii, 134"; Will. de, vii, 134” 

Yellow Hill (Pleasington), vi, 266 

Yelverton, Sir Hen., vii, 75 

Yeomans (Briercliffe), vi, 470 

Yerburgh (Yarburgh, Yerdeburgh), 


Yerburgh (cont.) 
Elma A., vi, 261; John de, vii, 
41, 85; Rob. A., vi, 261; Mrs. 
vi, 252 

Yngtonthintill (Garstang), vii, 316" 

Yolrungegreve, vii, 69 

Yombergh, Thos. de, vii, 92 » 

Yordrawes, Ad. de, vii, 52”; 
Margery de, vii, 52; Thos. de, 
vii, 52” 

York, vii, 69 

York, archbps. of, vi, 555”; vil, 
83n, 84n, 128m, 297, 3037; 
Walt. de Grey, vii, 146; Thos., 
vii, 218”; Thurstan, vii, 215"; 


434 


York (cont.) 

Tobias (Toby) Matthew, vii, 14 - 
Jas. Harrington, dean of, vi, 321 

York, John, vii, 55; Nich. de, vii, 
65"; Thos., vi, 375; Will. de, 
vii, 146, 151” 

Yorker, —, vl, 543” 

Young, Arch., vi, 432 ; Brigham, vi, 
74”; Ellen, vii, 88; Hen., vi, 
52; John, vi, 80, 518; vii, 88 n, 
224; Maud, vii, 88n 

Yowcles, riv., vii, 270n 


Zechariah, brook, vi, 251 


CORRIGENDA 


Vol. VI, page 19, note 2, line 10, for ‘ p. 361’ read ‘ p. 65.” 


- » 29, line 5, for ‘ Laylonschire ’ read ‘ Leylondshire.’ 
vi » 430, 4 lines from end, for ‘ south-east ’ read ‘ south-west.’ 
- » 444, line 4, for ‘internal’ read ‘ external.’ 


5 » 440, line 1, for ‘ 13 ft.’ read ‘ 18 ft.’ 

ms .. 750, line 26, for ‘Howarth’ read ‘ Haworth.’ 

bs » 76, note 15, for ‘ Charles William Compton ’ read ‘ Charles Compton William.’ 
Fe » 904, line 8, for ‘ souls’ vead ‘ soul.’ 

mn ,, 15§8a, line 9 from end, for ‘ 1827‘ read ‘ 1829.‘ 

2 » 232, line 22, for ‘ Birtwistle’ yead ‘ Birtwisle.’ 

Pe » 268, note 24, for ‘ her cousin ’ vead ‘ Mary Butler’s cousin.’ 

: » 3150, line 7, for ‘ then’ read ‘ afterwards.’ 


- » 36a, line 35, for ‘ Osbaldeston ’ read ‘ Balderston.’ 
- » 3170, line 5 from end, for ‘ Major’ read ‘ Captain.’ 
3 » 326a, line 10, delete ‘ the homes of the Blackburn Orphanage . . . in this township.’ 


ss 5, 3314, line 25, for ‘ the present owner ’ yead ‘ who sold it to the Lancashire Inebriates Board.’ 
ss » 3380, line 5, for ‘ All Springs ’ read ‘ Allsprings.’ 
se » 3414, line 4, for ‘ youngest son’ read ‘ third son.’ 


sis » 341a, line 6, for ‘leaving daughters .. . (Mrs. David Howell)’ vead ‘ without issue, and was 
succeeded by Helen (Mrs. Trappes-Lomax) daughter of his youngest brother 
Thomas and Helen Mary Maxima (Mrs. David Howell), daughter of Mary 
(Mrs. W. F. Segar) daughter of the same Thomas Lomax.’ 


i » 3430, line 47, for ‘ Herris’ read ‘ Herries.’ 

“5 » 4190, line 17 from end, for ‘ Thomas Grimshaw ’ read ‘ Thomas Lomax.’ 

m7 » 4344, line 24, for ‘ Crawshall’ read ‘ Crawshaw.’ 

if », 500, note 38, line 38, for ‘ great-grandmother ’ vead ‘ second wife of great-grandfather. 
is » 559, note 18, for ‘ Alice’ read ‘ Anne.’ 


Vol. VII, page 30, note 40, line 45, for ‘ Galland’ read ‘ Gallard.’ 
os », 136, note 78, line 12, for ‘ Valentine’ read ‘ Henry.’ 
4 » 142), line 25, for ‘ Shilleto ’ read ‘ Shillito.’ 


435